Obstetrics care in Indonesia: Determinants of maternal mortality and stillbirth rates

Wenang, Supriyatiningsih and Emilia, Ova and Wahyuni, Alfaina and Afdal, Andi and Haier, Joerg (2024) Obstetrics care in Indonesia: Determinants of maternal mortality and stillbirth rates. PLoS ONE, 19 (7 July): e0303590. ISSN 19326203

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Abstract

Problem The Indonesian Healthcare Program starting in 2014 enabled access to healthcare delivery for large population groups. Guidance of usage, infrastructure and healthcare process development were the most challenging tasks during the implementation period. Due to the high social impact obstetric care and related quality assurance require evidence-based developmental strategies. This study aims for analysis of outcome and maternal health care utilization, as well as differences related to demographic and economic subgroups. Methods For univariate group comparison ANOVA method was applied and combined with Scheffé procedure and Bonferoni correction for post-hoc tests. Meanwhile, multivariate approaches through regression analysis based on insurance reimbursement data antenatal, perinatal and postnatal care were performed at the province level. Maternal mortality (MMR) and stillbirth rates were used for outcome. Demographic characteristics, availability of obstetricians (SPOG), midwifes and healthcare infrastructure were included for their determinants. Results Specialized hospital facilities (type A/B) for advanced care covered a large part of uncomplicated cases (~35). Differences between insurance membership groups (poor, non-poor) were not seen. Availability of human resources (SPOG, midwifes) (R2 = 0.728; p<0.001) and rural setting (R2 = 0.288; p = 0.001) are correlated with reduced insufficient referral. Their presence within provinces was related to lower occurrence of complicated cases (R2 = 0.294; p = 0.001). However, higher SPOG rates within provinces were also related to high C-section rates (p<0.001). MMR and stillbirth rates can be predicted by availability of human resources and C-section rates explaining 49.0 of variance. Conclusions Improvement of perinatal outcome should focus on sufficient referral processes, availability of SPOG in provinces dominated by rural/remote demography and avoidance of overtreatment by high C-section rates. It is very important to regulate the education of obstetricians and gynecologists in Indonesia as well as distribution arrangements regarding to solve the problems with pregnancy complications in remote and rural areas. Copyright: © 2024 Wenang et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: Cited by: 0; All Open Access, Gold Open Access
Uncontrolled Keywords: Adult; Female; Humans; Indonesia; Maternal Health Services; Maternal Mortality; Obstetrics; Pregnancy; Prenatal Care; Rural Population; Stillbirth; Young Adult; Article; birth rate; cesarean section; disease free survival; disease specific survival; female; gynecologist; health care access; health care delivery; health care utilization; health insurance; health program; human; hysterectomy; immune system; Indonesia; maternal age; maternal mortality; maternal welfare; obstetric procedure; obstetrics; outcome assessment; outpatient; overtreatment; patient satisfaction; post hoc analysis; postnatal care; prenatal care; rural area; stillbirth; stillbirth rate; vaginal delivery; adult; epidemiology; Indonesia; maternal health service; obstetrics; pregnancy; rural population; young adult
Subjects: R Medicine > RG Gynecology and obstetrics
Divisions: Faculty of Medicine, Public Health and Nursing > Surgical Divisions
Depositing User: Yulistiarini Kumaraningrum KUMARANINGRUM
Date Deposited: 08 Nov 2024 05:00
Last Modified: 08 Nov 2024 05:00
URI: https://ir.lib.ugm.ac.id/id/eprint/10689

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