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CSU 81/2011: DISTANCE TO HEALTH CARE FACILITIES AND CHILD MORTALITY, RURAL BURKINA FASO

Tuesday, 8th of March 2011 Print


From the
American Journal of Epidemiology, Schoeps and colleagues write on‘The Effect of Distance to Health-Care Facilities on Childhood Mortality in Rural Burkina Faso’ adds to our knowledge on how proximity to health care predicts child survival. Remember last month’s update on relative mortality in Nairobi slums and rural Kenya. Even urban slumdwellers, confronting formidable social and economic barriers to health care access, may be more likely to survive than the populations of deep rural communities. Distance predicts mortality.


The Effect of Distance to Health-Care Facilities on Childhood Mortality in Rural Burkina Faso

1.   Anja Schoeps*,

2.   Sabine Gabrysch,

3.   Louis Niamba,

4.   Ali Sié and

5.   Heiko Becher

1.   *Correspondence to Anja Schoeps, Institute of Public Health, University of Heidelberg, Im Neuenheimer Feld 324, 69120 Heidelberg, Germany (e-mail: schoeps@uni-heidelberg.de).

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Abstract

This study aims to investigate the relation between distance to health facilities, measured as continuous travel time, and mortality among infants and children younger than 5 years of age in rural Burkina Faso, an area with low health facility density. The study included 24,555 children born between 1993 and 2005 in the Nouna Health and Demographic Surveillance System. The average walking time from each village to the closest health facility was obtained for both the dry and the rainy season, and its effect on infant (<1 year), child (1–4 years), and under-5 mortality overall was analyzed by Cox regression. The authors observed 3,426 childhood deaths, corresponding to a 5-year survival of 85%. Walking distance was significantly related to both infant and child mortality, although the shape of this effect varied distinctly between the 2 age groups. Overall, under-5 mortality, adjusted for confounding, was more than 50% higher at a distance of 4 hours compared with having a health facility in the village (P < 0.0001, 2 sided). The region of residence was an additional determinant for under-5 mortality. The findings of this study emphasize the importance of geographic accessibility of health care for child survival in sub-Saharan Africa and demonstrate the need to improve health-care access to achieve the Millennium Development Goals.



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