Maternal Health Care Service Utilization in the Post-Conflict Democratic Republic of Congo: An Analysis of Health Inequalities over Time

Dieudonne Bwirire*, Inez Roosen, Nanne de Vries, Rianne Letschert, Edmond Ntabe Namegabe, Rik Crutzen

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

This study assessed inequality in maternal healthcare service utilization in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, using the Demographic and Health Surveys of 2007 and 2013–2014. We assessed the magnitude of inequality using logistical regressions, analyzed the distribution of inequality using the Gini coefficient and the Lorenz curve, and used the Wagstaff method to assess inequality trends. Women were less likely to have their first antenatal care visit within the first trimester and to attend more antenatal care visits when living in eastern Congo. Women in rural areas were less likely to deliver by cesarean section and to receive postnatal care. Women with middle, richer, and richest wealth indexes were more likely to complete more antenatal care visits, to deliver by cesarean section, and to receive postnatal care. Over time, inequality in utilization decreased for antenatal and postnatal care but increased for delivery by cesarean sections, suggesting that innovative strategies are needed to improve utilization among poorer, rural, and underserved women.
Original languageEnglish
Article number2871
Number of pages25
JournalHealthcare
Volume11
Issue number21
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2023

Keywords

  • Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)
  • health inequalities
  • inequality measurement
  • maternal health care service utilization
  • post-conflict
  • trends

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