期刊论文详细信息
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Overcoming phase 1 delays: the critical component of obstetric fistula prevention programs in resource-poor countries
L Lewis Wall1 
[1]Department of Obstetrics & Gynecology, School of Medicine, Washington University in St. Louis, Campus Box 8064, 660 South Euclid Avenue, St. Louis, MO, 63110, USA
关键词: Trust;    Phases of delay;    Obstructed labor;    Vesicovaginal fistula;    Obstetric fistula prevention;   
Others  :  1152637
DOI  :  10.1186/1471-2393-12-68
 received in 2012-03-22, accepted in 2012-06-30,  发布年份 2012
PDF
【 摘 要 】

Background

An obstetric fistula is a traumatic childbirth injury that occurs when labor is obstructed and delivery is delayed. Prolonged obstructed labor leads to the destruction of the tissues that normally separate the bladder from the vagina and creates a passageway (fistula) through which urine leaks continuously. Women with a fistula become social outcasts. Universal high-quality maternity care has eliminated the obstetric fistula in wealthy countries, but millions of women in resource-poor nations still experience prolonged labor and tens of thousands of new fistula sufferers are added to the millions of pre-existing cases each year. This article discusses fistula prevention in developing countries, focusing on the factors which delay treatment of prolonged labor.

Discussion

Obstetric fistulas can be prevented through contraception, avoiding obstructed labor, or improving outcomes for women who develop obstructed labor. Contraception is of little use to women who are already pregnant and there is no reliable screening test to predict obstruction in advance of labor. Improving the outcome of obstructed labor depends on prompt diagnosis and timely intervention (usually by cesarean section). Because obstetric fistulas are caused by tissue compression, the time interval from obstruction to delivery is critical. This time interval is often extended by delays in deciding to seek care, delays in arriving at a hospital, and delays in accessing treatment after arrival. Communities can reasonably demand that governments and healthcare institutions improve the second (transportation) and third (treatment) phases of delay. Initial delays in seeking hospital care are caused by failure to recognize that labor is prolonged, confusion concerning what should be done (often the result of competing therapeutic pathways), lack of women’s agency, unfamiliarity with and fear of hospitals and the treatments they offer (especially surgery), and economic constraints on access to care.

Summary

Women in resource-poor countries will use institutional obstetric care when the services provided are valued more than the competing choices offered by a pluralistic medical system. The key to obstetric fistula prevention is competent obstetrical care delivered respectfully, promptly, and at affordable cost. The utilization of these services is driven largely by trust.

【 授权许可】

   
2012 Wall; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
20150406203003729.pdf 311KB PDF download
【 参考文献 】
  • [1]Neilson JP, Lavender T, Quenby S, Wray S: Obstructed labour. Brit Med Bull 2003, 67:191-204.
  • [2]AbouZahr C: Global burden of maternal death and disability. Brit Med Bull 2003, 67:1-11.
  • [3]Wall LL: Obstetric vesicovaginal fistula as an international public health problem. Lancet 2006, 368:1201-1209.
  • [4]Yeakey MP, Chipeta E, Taulo F, Tsui AO: The lived experience of Malawian women with obstetric fistula. Cult Health Soc 2009, 11:499-513.
  • [5]Wall LL: Fitsari ‘Dan Duniya: An African (Hausa) praise-song about vesico-vaginal fistulas. Obstet Gynecol 2002, 100:1328-1332.
  • [6]Vangeenderhuysen C, Prual A, Ould el- Joud D: Obstetric fistulae: incidence estimates for sub-Saharan Africa. Int J Gynecol Obstet 2001, 73:65-66.
  • [7]Tebeu PM, de Bernis L, Doh A, Sama A, Rochat CH, Delvauz T: Risk factors for obstetric fistula in the Far North Province of Cameroon. Int J Gynecol Obstet 2009, 107:12-15.
  • [8]Emmet TA: Vesico-Vaginal Fistula from Parturition and Other Causes: with Cases of Recto-Vaginal Fistula. William Wood, New York; 1868.
  • [9]Arrowsmith S, Hamlin EC, Wall LL: Obstructed labor injury complex: Obstetric fistula formation and the multifaceted morbidity of maternal birth trauma in the developing world. Obstet Gynecol Surv 1996, 51:568-574.
  • [10]McCarthy J, Maine D: A framework for analyzing the determinants of maternal mortality. Stud Fam Plann 1992, 23:23-33.
  • [11]Tsui AO, Creanga AA, Ahmed S: The role of delayed childbearing in the prevention of obstetric fistulas. Int J Gynecol Obstet 2007, 99(Suppl 1):S98-S107.
  • [12]Fortney JA: The importance of family planning in reducing maternal mortality. Stud Fam Plann 1987, 18:109-114.
  • [13]Fortney JA: Antenatal risk screening and scoring: A new look. Int J Gynecol Obstet 1995, 50(Suppl 2):S53-S58.
  • [14]Yuster EA: Rethinking the role of the risk approach and antenatal care in maternal mortality reduction. Int J Gynecol Obstet 1995, 50(Suppl 2):S59-S61.
  • [15]Prual A, Toure A, Huguet D, Laurent Y: The quality of risk factor screening during antenatal consultations in Niger. Health Policy Plan 2000, 15:11-16.
  • [16]Dujardin B, Clarysse G, Mentens H, De Schampheleire I, Kulker R: How accurate is maternal height measurement in Africa? Int J Gynecol Obstet 1993, 41:139-145.
  • [17]Dujardin B, Van Cutsem R, Lamrechts T: The value of maternal height as a risk factor of dystocia: a meta-analysis. Trop Med Int Health 1996, 1:510-521.
  • [18]Moller B, Lindmark G: Short stature: an obstetric risk factor? A comparison of two villages in Tanzania. Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand 1997, 76:394-397.
  • [19]Zaretsky MV, Alexander JM, McIntire DD, Hatab MR, Twickler DM, Leveno KJ: Magnetic resonance imaging pelvimetery and the prediction of labor dystocia. Obstet Gynecol 2005, 106:919-926.
  • [20]Awonuga AO, Merhi Z, Awonuga MT, Samuels TA, Waller J, Pring D: Anthropometric measurements in the diagnosis of pelvic size: an analysis of maternal height and shoe size and computed tomography pelvimetric data. Arch Gynecol Obstet 2007, 276:523-528.
  • [21]Kasongo Project Team: Antenatal screening for fetopelvic dystocias: A cost-effectiveness approach to the choice of simple indicators for use by auxiliary personnel. J Trop Med Hyg 1984, 87:173-183.
  • [22]Ronsmans C, Etard JF, Walraven G, Hoj L, Dumont A, de Bernis L, Kodio B: Maternal mortality and access to obstetric services in West Africa. Trop Med Int Health 2003, 8:940-948.
  • [23]Paxton A, Maine D, Freedman L, Fry D, Lobis S: The evidence for emergency obstetric care. Int J Gynecol Obstet 2005, 88:181-191.
  • [24]Thaddeus S, Maine D: Too far to walk: Maternal mortality in context. Soc Sci Med 1994, 38:1091-1110.
  • [25]Gabrysch S, Campbell OMR: Still too far to walk: Literature review of the determinants of delivery service use. BMC Pregnancy Childbirth 2009, 9:34. BioMed Central Full Text
  • [26]Bartlett LA, Mawji S, Whitehead S, Crouse C, Dalil S, Ionete D, Salama P, the Afghan Maternal Mortality Study Team: Where giving birth is a forecast of death: maternal mortality in four districts of Afghanistan, 1999–2002. Lancet 2005, 365:864-870.
  • [27]Gabrysch S, Cousens S, Cox J, Campbell OMR: The influence of distance and level of care on deliver place in Rural Zambia: A study of linked national data in a geographic information system. PLoS Med 2011, 8(1):e1000394.
  • [28]Greenwood AM, Greenwood BM, Bradley AK, Williams K, Shenton FC, Tulloch S, Byas P, Oldfield FSJ: A prospective survey of the outcome of pregnancy in a rural area of the Gambia. Bull World Health Org 1987, 65:635-643.
  • [29]Essien E, Ifenne D, Sabitu K, Musa A, Alti-Mu’azu M, Adidu V, Golji N, Mukaddas M: Community loan funds and transport services for obstetric emergencies in northern Nigeria. Int J Gynecol Obstet 1997, 59(Suppl 2):S237-S244.
  • [30]Shehu D, Ikeh AT, Kuna MT: Mobilizing transport for obstetric emergencies in northwestern Nigeria. Int J Gynecol Obstet 1997, 59(Suppl 2):S173-S180.
  • [31]Samai O, Sengeh : Facilitating emergency obstetric care through transportation and communication, Bo, Sierra Leone. Int J Gynecol Obstet 1997, 59(Suppl 2):S157-S164.
  • [32]Danel I: Maternal Mortality Reduction, Honduras, 1990–1997: A Case Study. The World Bank, Washington, DC; 1998.
  • [33]Pathmanathan I, Liljestrand J: Martins JM, Rajapaksa LC, Lissner C, de Silva A, Selvaraju S, Singh PJ: Investing in maternal health: Learning from Malaysia and Sri Lanka. The World Bank, Washington, DC; 2003.
  • [34]Sorenson BL, Elsass P, Nielson BB, Massawe S, Nyakina J, Rasch V: Substandard emergency obstetric care: A confidential enquiry into maternal deaths at a regional hospital in Tanzania. Trop Med Int Health 2010, 5:894-900.
  • [35]Sundari TK: The untold story: How the health care systems in developing countries contribute to maternal mortality. Int J Health Serv 1992, 22:513-528.
  • [36]Gohou V, Ronsmans C, Kacou L, Yaou K, Bohoussou KM, Houphouet B, Bosso P, Diarra-Nama AJ, Bacci A, Filippi V: Responsiveness to life-threatening obstetric emergencies in two hospitals in Abijan, Cote d’Ivoire. Trop Med Int Health 2004, 9:406-415.
  • [37]Kilpatrick SJ, Crabtree KE, Kemp A, Geller S: Preventability of maternal deaths: Comparison between Zambian and American referral hospitals. Obstet Gynecol 2002, 100:321-326.
  • [38]Lewis G: Reviewing maternal deaths to make pregnancy safer. Best Pract Res Clin Obstet Gynaecol 2008, 22:447-463.
  • [39]Okon P, Byamugisha J, Mirembe F, Byaruhanga R, Bergstrom S: Audit of severe maternal morbidity in Uganda: Implications for quality of obstetric care. Acta Obstet Gynecol 2006, 85:797-804.
  • [40]Chamberlain J, McDonagh R, Lalonde A, Arulkumaran S: The role of professional associations in reducing maternal mortality worldwide. Int J Gynecol Obstet 2003, 83:94-102.
  • [41]Klufio CA, Kwawukume EY, Danso KA, Sciarra JJ, Johnson T: Ghana postgraduate obstetrics/gynecology collaborative residency training program: Success story and model for Africa. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2003, 189:692-696.35.
  • [42]Kongnyuy EJ, Mlava G, van den Broek N: A criterion based audit of the management of obstructed labour in Malawi. Arch Gynecol Obstet 2009, 279:649-54.
  • [43]Shiffman J: Generating political priority for maternal mortality reduction in 5 developing countries. Am J Pub Health 2007, 97:796-803.
  • [44]Shifffman J, Smith S: Generation of political priority for global health initiatives: a framework and case study of maternal mortality. Lancet 2007, 370:1370-1379.
  • [45]de Bono E: Serious Creativity: Using the Power of Lateral Thinking to Create New Ideas. HarperBusiness, New York; 1992:58.
  • [46]Korell AN, Argenta PA, Strathy JH: Prolonged obstructed labor causing a severe obstetric fistula: A case report. J Reprod Med 2007, 52:555-556.
  • [47]Allen AM, Lakin T, Shobeiri SA, Nihira M: Transmural vaginal-to-bladder injury from an obstructed labor pattern. Obstet Gynecol 2011, 117:468-470.
  • [48]Wall LL, Karshima JA, Kirschner C, Arrowsmith SD: The obstetric vesicovaginal fistula: Characteristics of 899 patients from Jos, Nigeria. Am J Obstet Gynecol 2004, 190:1011-1019.
  • [49]Muleta M, Rasmussen S, Kiserud T: Obstetric fistula in 14,928 Ethiopian women. Acta Obstet Gynecol 2010, 89:945-951.
  • [50]Lewis A, Kaufman MR, Wolter CE, Phillips SE, Maggi D, Condry L, Dmochowski RR, Smith JA: Genitourinary fistula experience in Sierra Leone: Review of 505 cases. J Urol 2009, 181:1725-1731.
  • [51]Hilton P, Ward A: Epidemiological and surgical aspects of urogenital fistulae: A review of 25 years’ experience in southeast Nigeria. Int Urogynecol J 1998, 9:189-194.
  • [52]Sjoveian S, Vangen S, Mukwege D, Onsrud : Surgical outcome of obstetric fistula: a retrospective analysis of 595 patients. Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand 2011, 90:753-760.
  • [53]Janzen J: The Quest for Therapy: Medical Pluralism in Lower Zaire. University of California Press, Berkeley; 1982.
  • [54]Sargent CF: The Cultural Context of Therapeutic Choice: Obstetrical Care Decision Among the Bariba of Benin. D. Reidel, Boston; 1982.
  • [55]World Health Organization: Educational Material for Teachers of Midwifery: Midwifery Education Modules: Managing Prolonged and Obstructed Labour. 2nd edition. World Health Organization, Geneva; 2008.
  • [56]Graham EJ, Bell JS, Bullough CHW: Can skilled attendance at delivery reduce maternal mortalilty in developing countries? Stud Health Serv Org Policy 2001, 17:97-129.
  • [57]Scott S, Ronsmans C: The relationship between birth with a health professional and maternal mortality in observational studies: a review of the literature. Trop Med Int Health 2009, 14:1523-1533.
  • [58]Prevention of Maternal Mortality Network: Barriers to treatment of obstetric emergencies in rural communities of West Africa. Stud Fam Plann 1992, 23:279-291.
  • [59]Douglas M, Wildavsky A: Risk and Culture: An Essay on the Selection of Technical and Environmental Dangers. University of California Press, Los Angeles; 1982.
  • [60]Douglas M: Risk and Blame: Essays in Cultural Theory. Routledge, New York; 1992.
  • [61]Obermeyer CM: Risk, uncertainty, and agency: Culture and safe motherhood in Morocco. Med Anthro 2000, 19:173-201.
  • [62]McCourt : Childbirth, Midwifery and Concepts of Time. Berghahn Books, New York; 2009.
  • [63]Schauberger CW: False labor. Obstet Gynecol 1986, 68:770-772.
  • [64]Anonymous: World Health Organization partograph in management of labour. Lancet 1994, 343:1399-1404.
  • [65]Mathai M: The partograph for the prevention of obstructed labor. Clin Obstet Gynecol 2009, 52:256-269.
  • [66]Caughey AB: Is there an upper time limit for the management of the second stage of labor? Am J Obstet Gynecol 2009, 201:337-338.
  • [67]Davis-Floyd RE, Sargent CF: (Editors): Childbirth and Authoritative Knowledge: Cross-cultural Perspectives. University of California Press, Los Angeles; 1997.
  • [68]Adetunji JA: Church-based obstetric care in a Yoruba community, Nigeria. Soc Sci Med 1992, 35:1171-1178.
  • [69]Udoma EJ, Asuquo EEJ, Ekott MI: Maternal mortality from obstructed labor in south-eastern Nigeria: the role of spiritual churches. Int J Gynecol Obstet 1999, 67:103-105.
  • [70]Wall LL: Hausa Medicine: Illness and Well-being in a West African Culture. Duke University Press, Durham, NC; 1988.
  • [71]Omorodion FI: The socio-cultural context of health behavior among Esan communities, Edo State, Nigeria. Health Transit Rev 1993, 3:125-136.
  • [72]Wilson M: Rituals of Kinship Among the Nyakyusa. Oxford University Press for the International African Institute, London; 1957.
  • [73]Allen DR: Managing Motherhood, Managing Risk: Fertility and Danger in West Central Tanzania. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor; 2002.
  • [74]Chapman RR: Family Secrets: Risking Reproduction in Central Mozambique; Nashville. Vanderbilt University Press, TN; 2010.
  • [75]Berry NS: Unsafe Motherhood: Mayan Maternal Mortality and Subjectivity in Post-War Guatemala. Berghahn Books, New York; 2010.
  • [76]Anderson BA, Anderson EN, Franklin T, Dzib-Xihum de Cen A: Pathways of decision making among Yucatan Mayan traditional birth attendants. J Midwifery Womens Health 2004, 49:312-319.
  • [77]Ityavyar DA: A traditional midwife practice, Sokoto State, Nigeria. Soc Sci Med 1984, 18(6):497-501.
  • [78]Kamatenesi-Mugisha M, Oryem-Origa H: Medicinal plants used to induce labour during childbirth in western Uganda. J Ethnopharmacol 2007, 109:1-9.
  • [79]Dujardin B, Boutsen M, De Schampheleire I, Kulker R, Manshande JP, Bailey J, Wollast E, Buekens P: Oxytocics in developing countries. Int J Gynecol Obstet 1995, 50:243-251.
  • [80]Sharan M, Strobino D, Ahmed S: Intrapartum oxytocin use for labor acceleration in rural India. Int J Gynecol Obstet 2005, 90:251-257.
  • [81]Tahzib F: Vesicovaginal fistula in Nigerian children. Lancet. 1985, 2:1291-1293.
  • [82]Tukur J, Jido TA, Uzoho CC: The contribution of gishiri cut to vesicovaginal fistula in Birnin Kudu, northern Nigeria. Afr J Urol 2006, 12:121-125.
  • [83]Okojie CEE: Gender inequalities of health in the Third World. Soc Sci Med 1994, 39(9):1237-1247.
  • [84]Doyal L: Gender equity in health: debates and dilemmas. Soc Sci Med 2000, 51:931-939.
  • [85]Murphy EM: Being born female is dangerous for your health. Am Psychol 2003, 58:205-210.
  • [86]Riyami A, Afifi M, Mabry RM: Women’s autonomy, education and employment in Oman and their influence on contraceptive use. Reprod Health Matters 2004, 12(23):144-154.
  • [87]Upadhyay UD, Hindin MJ: Do higher status and more autonomous women have longer birth intervals? Results from Cebu, Philippines. Soc Sci Med 2005, 60:2641-2655.
  • [88]Duze MC, Mohammed IZ: Male knowledge, attitudes and family planning practices in northern Nigeria. Afr J Reprod Health 2006, 10:53-65.
  • [89]Audu B, Yahya S, Geidam A, Abdussalam H, Takai I, Kyari O: Polygamy and the use of contraceptives. Int J Obstet Gynecol 2008, 101:88-92.
  • [90]Evans-Pritchard EE: An Alternative Term for "Bride-Price.". Man 1931, 31:36-39.
  • [91]Goody J: Tambiah SJ: Bridewealth and Dowry. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge; 1973.
  • [92]Wall LL: Dead mothers and injured wives: The social context of maternal morbidityand mortality among the Hausa of northern Nigeria. Stud Fam Plann 1998, 29:341-359.
  • [93]Delaney C: The Seeds and the Soil: Gender and Cosmology in Turkish Village Society. University of California Press, Berkeley; 1991.
  • [94]Papanek H: Separate worlds and symbolic shelter. Comp Stud Soc History 1973, 15:289-325.
  • [95]VerEecke C: “It is better to die than to be shamed” – Cultural and moral dimensions of women’s trading in an Islamic Nigerian society. Antrhopos 1993, 88:403-417.
  • [96]Callaway BJ: Ambiguous consequences of the socialization and seclusion of Hausa women. J Mod Afr Studies 1984, 22:429-450.
  • [97]Solivetti LM: Marriage and divorce in a Hausa community: A sociological model. Africa 1994, 64:252-271.
  • [98]Hill P: Hidden trade in Hausaland. Man, n.s 1969, 4:392-409.
  • [99]Pittin R: Women, work and ideology in Nigeria. Rev Afr Political Econ 1991, 52:38-52.
  • [100]McAlister C, Baskett TF: Female education and maternal mortality: A worldwide survey. J Obstet Gynecol Canada 2006, 28:983-990.
  • [101]Harrison K: The importance of the educated healthy woman in Africa. Lancet 1997, 349:644-647.
  • [102]Weeks A, Lavender T, Nazziwa E, Mirembe F: Personal account of ‘near-miss’ maternal mortalities in Kampala, Uganda. BJOG 2005, 112:1302-1307.
  • [103]Kyomuhendo GB: Low use of rural maternity services in Uganda: Impact of women’s status, traditional beliefs and limited resources. Reprod Health Matters 2003, 11(21):16-26.
  • [104]Trevitt L: Attitudes and customs in childbirth amongst Hausa women in Zaria City. Savannah 1973, 2:223-226.
  • [105]De Muylder X: Caesarean section morbidity at district level in Zimbabwe. J Trop Med Hyg 1989, 92:89-92.
  • [106]Kwawukume EY: Caesarean section in developing countries. Best Pract Res Clinical Obstet and Gynaecol 2001, 15:165-178.
  • [107]Oladapo OT, Lamina MA, Sule-Odu AO: Maternal morbidity and mortality associated with elective caesarean delivery at a university hospital in Nigeria. Austral NZ J Obstet Gynaecol 2007, 47:110-114.
  • [108]De Muylder X, de Waals P: Poor acceptance of caesarean section in Zimbabwe. Trop Geograph Med 1989, 41:230-233.
  • [109]Chigbu CO, Ilobachie GC: The burden of caesarean section refusal in a developing country setting. BJOG 2007, 114:1261-1263.
  • [110]Onah HE: Formal education does not improve the acceptance of cesarean section among pregnant Nigerian women. Int J Gynecol Obstet 2002, 76:321-323.
  • [111]Onah HE, Nkwo PO: Caesarean section or symphysiotomy for obstructed labour for developing countries? Need to ascertain women’s preferences. J Obstet Gynaecol 2003, 23:594-595.
  • [112]Parkhurst JO, Rahman SA: Life saving or money wasting? Perceptions of caesarean sections among users of services in rural Bangladesh. Health Policy 2007, 80:392-401.
  • [113]Kowalewski M, Jahn A, Kimatta SS: Why do at-risk mothers fail to reach referral level? Barriers beyond distance and cost. Afr J Reprod Health 2000, 4:100-109.
  • [114]Asuquo EEJ, Duke F: Staff attitude as barrier to the utilization of University of Calabar Teaching Hospital for obstetric care. Afr J Reprod Health 2000, 4:69-73.
  • [115]Grossman-Kendall F, Filippi V, De Koninck M, Kanhonou L: Giving birth in maternity hospitals in Benin: Testimonies of women. Reprod Health Matters 2001, 9(18):90-98.
  • [116]Kongnyuy EJ, Mlava G, van den Broek Nynke : Criteria-based audit to improve women-friendly care in maternity units in Malawi. J Obstet Gynaecol Res 2009, 35:483-489.
  • [117]Phillips D: Medical professional dominance and client dissatisfaction: A study of doctor-patient interaction and reported dissatisfaction with medical care among female patients at four hospitals in Trinidad and Tobago. Soc Sci Med 1996, 42:1419-1425.
  • [118]Miller S, Cordero M, Coleman AL, Figueroa J, Brito-Anderson S, Dabagh R, Calderon V, Caceres V, Fernandez AJ, Nunez M: Quality of care in institutionalized deliveries: The paradox of the Dominican Republic. Int J Gynecol Obstet 2003, 82:89-103.
  • [119]Mayi-Tsonga S, Oksana L, Ndombi I, Diallo T, de Sousa MH, Faoundes A: Delay in the provision of adequate care to women who died from abortion-related complications in the principal maternity hospital of Gabon. Reprod Health Matters 2009, 17(34):65-70.
  • [120]Jaffre Y, Prual A: Midwives in Niger: An uncomfortable position between social behaviours and health care constraints. Soc Sci Med 1994, 38:1069-1073.
  • [121]Ozumba BC, Anya SE: Maternal deaths associated with cesarean section in Enugu, Nigeria. Int J Gynecol Obstet 2002, 76:307-309.
  • [122]Short SE, Zhang F: Use of maternal health services in rural China. Popul Stud 2004, 58:3-19.
  • [123]Abel-Smith B, Rawal P: Can the poor afford ‘free’ health services? A case study of Tanzania. Health Policy Plan 1992, 7:329-342.
  • [124]Kowalewski M, Mujinja P, John A: Can mothers afford maternal health care costs? User costs of maternity services in rural Tanzania. Afr J Reprod Health 2002, 6:65-73.
  • [125]Su TT, Kouyate B, Flessa S: Catastrophic household expenditure for health care in a low-income society: a study from Nouna District, Burkina Faso. Bull World Health Org 2006, 84:21-27.
  • [126]Borghi J, Hanson K, Acquah CA, Ekanmian G, Filippi V, Ronsmans C, Brugha R, Browne E, Alihonou E: Cost of near-miss obstetric complications for women and their families in Benin and Ghana. Health Policy Plan 2003, 18:383-390.
  • [127]Borghi J, Ensor T, Neupane BD, Tiwari S: Financial implications of skilled attendance at delivery in Nepal. Trop Med Int Health 2006, 11:228-237.
  • [128]Nahar S, Costello A: The hidden cost of ‘free’ maternity care in Dhaka, Bangladesh. Health Policy Plan 1998, 13:417-422.
  • [129]Houweling TAJ, Ronsmans C, Campbell OMR, Kunst A: Huge poor-rich inequalities in maternity care: an international comparative study of maternity and child care in developing countries. Bull World Health Org 2007, 85:745-754.
  • [130]Storeng KT, Baggaley RF, Ganaba R, Ouattara F, Akoum MS, Filippi V: Paying the price: The cost and consequences of emergency obstetric care in Burkina Faso. Soc Sci Med 2008, 66:545-557.
  • [131]Borghi J, Sabina N, Blum LS, Hoque HE, Ronsmans C: Household costs of healthcare during pregnancy, delivery, and the postpartum period: A case study from Matlab, Bangladesh. J Health Pop Nutrition 2006, 24:446-455.
  • [132]Say L, Rainse R: A systematic review of inequalities in the use of maternal health care in developing countries: Examining the scale of the problem and the importance of context. Bull World Health Org 2007, 85:812-819.
  • [133]Afsana K: The tremendous cost of seeking hospital obstetric care in Bangladesh. Reprod Health Matters 2004, 12(24):171-180.
  • [134]Mbugua JK, Bloom GH, Segall MM: Impact of user charges on vulnerable groups: The case of the Kibwezi in rural Kenya. Soc Sci Med 1995, 41:829-835.
  • [135]Nanda P: Gender dimensions of user fees: Implications for women’s utilization of health care. Reprod Health Matters 2002, 10(20):127-134.
  • [136]Xu K, Evans DB, Kadama P, Nabyonga J, Ogwal PO, Nabukhonzo P, Aguilar AM: Understanding the impact of eliminating user fees: Utilization and catastrophic health expenditures in Uganda. Soc Sci Med 2006, 62:866-876.
  • [137]Kruk ME, Mbaruku G, Rockers PC, Galea S: User fee exemptions are not enough: out-of-pocket payments for ‘free’ delivery services in rural Tanzania. Trop Med Int Health 2008, 13:1442-1451.
  • [138]Lewis M: Informal payments and the financing of health care in developing and transition countries. Heal Aff 2007, 26:984-997.
  • [139]Khan A, Aman S: Costs of vaginal delivery and Caesarean section at a tertiary level public hospital in Islamabad, Pakistan. BMC Pregnancy Childbirth 2010., 10 BioMed Central Full Text
  • [140]McIntyre D, Thiede M, Dahlgren G, Whitehead M: What are the economic consequences for households of illness and paying for health care in low- and middle-income country contexts? Soc Sci Med 2006, 62:858-865.
  • [141]Ronsmans C, Holtz S, Stanton C: Socioeconomic differentials in caesarean rates in developing countries: a retrospective analysis. Lancet 2006, 368:1516-1523.
  • [142]Russell S: Ability to pay for health care: concepts and evidence. Health Policy Plan 1996, 11:219-237.
  • [143]Gilson L: Trust and health care as a social institution. Soc Sci Med 2003, 67:1452-1468.
  • [144]Shore D: A (Editor): The Trust Crisis in Healthcare: Causes, Consequences, and Cures. Oxford University Press, New York; 2006.
  • [145]Gilson L, Palmer N, Schneider H: Trust and health worker performance: exploring a conceptual framework using South African evidence. Soc Sci Med 2005, 61:1418-1429.
  • [146]Harrison KA: Child-bearing, health and social priorities: A survey of 22,774 consecutive hospital births in Zaria, northern Nigeria. Brit J Obstet Gynaecol 1985, 92(Suppl 5):1-119.
  • [147]Ekele BA, Audu LR, Muyibi S: Uterine rupture in Sokoto, northern Nigeria: Are we winning? Afr J Med Med Sci 2000, 29:191-193.
  • [148]Diab AE: Uterine ruptures in Yemen. Saudi Med J 2005, 26:264-269.
  • [149]El Jould DO, Prual A, Vangeenderhuysen C, Bouvier-Colle MH, the MOMA Group: Epidemiological features of uterine rupture in West Africa (MOMA Study). Paed Perinat Epidemiol 2002, 16:108-114.
  • [150]Chuni N: Analysis of uterine rupture in a tertiary center in Eastern Nepal: Lessons for obstetric care. J Obstet Gynaecol Res 2006, 32:574-759.
  • [151]Mishra SK, Morris N, Uprety DK: Uterine rupture: Preventable obstetric tragedies? Austral NZ J Obstet Gynaecol 2006, 46:541-545.
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:0次 浏览次数:11次