Still too far to walk: Literature review of the determinants of delivery service use
University of London · London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine
Abstract
Skilled attendance at childbirth is crucial for decreasing maternal and neonatal mortality, yet many women in low- and middle-income countries deliver outside of health facilities, without skilled help. The main conceptual framework in this field implicitly looks at home births with complications. We expand this to include "preventive" facility delivery for uncomplicated childbirth, and review the kinds of determinants studied in the literature, their hypothesized mechanisms of action and the typical findings, as well as methodological difficulties encountered.
We searched PubMed and Ovid databases for reviews and ascertained relevant articles from these and other sources. Twenty determinants identified were grouped under four themes: (1) sociocultural factors, (2) perceived benefit/need of skilled attendance, (3) economic accessibility and (4) physical accessibility.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 48.13
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 78
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Childbirth
- Attendance
- Residence
- Health facility
- Context (archaeology)
- Service delivery framework
- Health services research