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Availability and Utilization of Emergency Obstetric Care Services in Three Communities in Kaduna State, Northern Nigeria


K Odogwu
O Audu
S Baba-Lafia
U Bawa
B Tukur
C Ejembi
S Adaji
O Shittu

Abstract

Maternal mortality ratios often reflect on the quality and availability of emergency obstetric care (EmOC) services. Ten health facilities in Kaduna State were assessed to determine their capacity to provide EmOC. Each community had the recommended number of both primary and secondary health facilities per population. All secondary health facilities had 24-hour services staffed by at least one doctor and one nurse/midwife per shift, and were able to perform most signal functions of EmOC in the three months preceding the survey. However, no primary health centres (PHC) were open 24 hours, and their performance of EmOC in the three months preceding the survey was near zero. Thus the presence of functional secondary hospitals is not enough to reduce maternal mortality in communities where women have to overcome numerous barriers to reach a hospital. If shortages of personnel, equipment and supplies in PHCs were resolved, 24-hour services could lead to a sharp reduction in maternal and infant mortality among rural women in northern Nigeria (Afr. J. Reprod. Health 2010; 14[3]: 83-88).

Key words: Emergency obstetric care, primary health care, maternal mortality, rural communities, northern Nigeria.


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eISSN: 1118-4841