2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.06.023
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Improving poor women's access to maternity care: Findings from a primary care intervention in Burkina Faso

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Cited by 54 publications
(80 citation statements)
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“…4,5 To increase coverage, countries in Africa and other low-income areas have focused on expanding the primary care system, typically through outpatient clinics staffed with nurses and midwives who can provide basic obstetric care. 6,7 These clinics represent the base of a service pyramid in which most women deliver at first-level clinics and women with high-risk pregnancies or those who develop complications are referred to hospitals. This service delivery model is supported by global policy guidance.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…4,5 To increase coverage, countries in Africa and other low-income areas have focused on expanding the primary care system, typically through outpatient clinics staffed with nurses and midwives who can provide basic obstetric care. 6,7 These clinics represent the base of a service pyramid in which most women deliver at first-level clinics and women with high-risk pregnancies or those who develop complications are referred to hospitals. This service delivery model is supported by global policy guidance.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Examples include voucher schemes for maternal services in Bangladesh 19 and Korea, 20 community-wide vitamin A treatment of children in Nepal, 21 improving poor women's access to institutional delivery in Burkina Faso, 22 equity-focused maternal and child health programs in Cambodia, 23 and free access to antiretroviral treatment for HIV in Brazil. 24 Growing availability of data from low-and middle-income countries allowed us to test the hypothesis in national surveys that provided information on socioeconomic position and on the proportion of births occurring in a health facility (institutional delivery coverage).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, normative socio-cultural beliefs and social roles interact and shape reproductive health behaviors, choices and demand among women in West Africa. There is evidence that social norms and culture influence women's Chapter 7 perceptions of needs as well (Bove et al, 2012;Brazier et al, 2009;. As discussed in Chapter 5, intentions of young women for contraceptive use in the future depend on social and group norms.…”
Section: Discussion Of Statementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The situation of reproductive health services is especially challenging in countries recovering from civil war and instability, such as Senegal, Sierra Leone among others, while countries with political stability and continuous economic growth, like Burkina Faso, Ghana and Nigeria, have achieved political commitment and progress in improving these services. (Bove, Vala-Haynes, & Valeggia, 2012;Brazier et al, 2009;. Wealth, education, residence type, and age disparities however remain the greatest influencing factors introducing disparity in any context (Jacqueline Darroch & Singh, 2013;Kirk & Pillet, 1998;Loaiza & Blake, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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