AI Article Synopsis

  • The fee exemption policy for EmONC in Mali is intended to make maternal care more affordable by reducing financial barriers to accessing caesarean sections.
  • A study involving 190 women evaluated the direct and indirect costs linked to these caesarean interventions, revealing that most women still incurred significant expenses despite the fee exemption.
  • Key findings included that 91% of women ended up paying for treatment, with major expenses arising from medications and that those in rural areas or with complications faced even higher costs, highlighting ongoing disparities in access to care for lower-income women.

Article Abstract

The fee exemption policy for EmONC in Mali aims to lower the financial barrier to care. The objective of the study was to evaluate the direct and indirect expenses associated with caesarean interventions performed in EmONC and the factors associated with these expenses. Data sampling followed the case control approach used in the large project (deceased and near-miss women). Our sample consisted of a total of 190 women who underwent caesarean interventions. Data were collected from the health workers and with a social approach by administering questionnaires to the persons who accompanied the woman. Household socioeconomic status was assessed using a wealth index constructed with a principal component analysis. The factors significantly associated with expenses were determined using multivariate linear regression analyses. Women in the Kayes region spent on average 77,017 FCFA (163 USD) for a caesarean episode in EmONC, of which 70 % was for treatment. Despite the caesarean fee exemption, 91 % of the women still paid for their treatment. The largest treatment-related direct expenses were for prescriptions, transfusion, antibiotics, and antihypertensive medication. Near-misses, women who presented a hemorrhage or an infection, and/or women living in rural areas spent significantly more than the others. Although abolishing fees of EmONC in Mali plays an important role in reducing maternal death by increasing access to caesarean sections, this paper shows that the fee policy did not benefit to all women. There are still barriers to EmONC access for women of the lowest socio-economic group. These included direct expenses for drugs prescription, treatment and indirect expenses for transport and food.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4500844PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10995-015-1687-0DOI Listing

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