BMJ Open (Oct 2023)

Inequalities in adequate maternal healthcare opportunities: evidence from Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey 2017–2018

  • Bright Opoku Ahinkorah,
  • Joshua Okyere,
  • Md Injamul Haq Methun,
  • Sutopa Roy,
  • Md Ismail Hossain,
  • Iqramul Haq,
  • Shatabdi Shamrita Ume,
  • Md Kamrul Hasan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2022-070111
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 10

Abstract

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Objectives This study investigated the inequalities in access to maternal healthcare services in Bangladesh.Design and setting This study used cross-sectional data from the nationally representative Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey conducted in 2017–2018. The survey encompassed diverse regions and households across Bangladesh. The study used the Human Opportunity Index (HOI) and Shapley’s decomposition technique to measure the inequality in access to maternal healthcare opportunities.Participants This study included 20 127 women aged 15–49 years. Among them, 5012 women had live births in the preceding 3 years of the survey, forming the study sample.Primary and secondary outcome measures This study has no secondary outcome variable. The primary dependent variable is ‘adequate maternal healthcare’, a dichotomous variable.Results Household wealth status contributed the highest to inequality in accessing adequate maternal healthcare services (41.4%) such as receiving at least four antenatal care (ANC) visits (39.7%), access to proper ANC (50.7% and 44.0%) and health facility birth (43.4%). Maternal educational status contributes the second highest inequality among all factors in accessing adequate maternal healthcare (29.5%). Adequate maternal healthcare presented the lowest coverage rate and opportunity index among all (approximately 24% with HOI=17.2).Conclusions We found that attained adequate maternal healthcare had the lowest coverage and widest dissimilarity, while wealth index, education and place of residence are the major factors that contribute to inequalities in accessibility to maternal healthcare services in Bangladesh. These findings underscore a need for pro-poor interventions to narrow the economic inequalities between the poor and rich in terms of accessibility to maternal healthcare services. The results indicate the need for the Bangladeshi government and its health department to strengthen their commitment to improving female education. Investments should be made in initiatives that facilitate the proximity of maternal healthcare services to women in rural areas.