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Measuring Maternal Health in a Post-MDG World

As the international development community looks back on the Millennium Development Goals and ponders what remains to be done under the proposed Sustainable Development Goals, the maternal health field has some reflecting to do, said Dr. Ana Langer, professor and director of Harvard鈥檚  at the 浪花直播 Center on December 1.

鈥淲e used to have, or still have, one goal for maternal health鈥nd we now face some challenging global policy situations,鈥 Langer said. 鈥淭he challenges are huge, in terms of indicators, sources of info, the tools we use, the way we frame the question.鈥

Contact or Content?

Recent studies have been trying to better understand what maternal health indicators actually measure and how well, said Dr. Stephen Hodgins, a senior technical advisor with .

There is concern, for example, about how the presence of a skilled birth attendant, a common indicator of professional care, is used. Surveys typically count the presence (鈥渃ontact鈥) of a skilled birth attendant rather than the quality of care they provide (鈥渃ontent鈥). While a skilled birth attendant is certainly preferable to an unskilled attendant, it can be unclear how helpful they actually are in preventing complications for mother and child. In one study conducted in Bangladesh, Hodgins and his team predicted a rapid increase in the presence of skilled birth attendants would result in rapid decreases in neonatal mortality rates. Instead, they found mortality rates actually decreased at a slower rate when a skilled birth attendant was present.

Results like this are causing experts to re-evaluate what kind of indicators they use as they move into the next era of development goals. 鈥淭he contact does matter as an important process dimension, but not as an overall measure of program performance,鈥 Hodgins said. 鈥淪o I would suggest that rather than tracking [skilled birth attendants] that we track institutional delivery rating.鈥

Dr. Jim Ricca, a senior advisor to USAID鈥檚 , had similar concerns about common indicators, noting that researchers often rely what鈥檚 easiest to measure. 鈥淭he fact that it鈥檚 easy to measure doesn鈥檛 mean it鈥檚 the right thing to measure,鈥 he said. The 鈥渃ontent鈥 of an interaction with a health system may be a better indicator than the frequency of interactions.

At the same time, the best ways to measure quality can be hard to define and agree on. 鈥淧eople say we need to measure the quality of care, which certainly we do,鈥 Ricca said. 鈥淏ut a lot of times that discussion gets bogged down into very detailed sorts of quality methodologies which probably don鈥檛 belong in a conversation of what we track on an ongoing basis.鈥

How Accurate Is the Data?

Poor data and data from varied, hard-to-compare sources can also complicate efforts to understand the maternal health environment, said Ann Blanc of the . She and colleague Charlotte Warren recently conducted a study with the support of the  to try to understand how well certain indicators are reported.

Speaking to women who delivered in facilities in Kenya and Mexico, researchers asked women in face-to-face interviews about the type of care they received prior to, during, and after birth. These answers were compared to documentation by trained third-party observers in the facilities. In comparing how women remembered things versus what the observers saw, they hoped to identify 鈥渧alid indicators,鈥 which were reported accurately and give a meaningful reflection of care.

Questions involving the administration of medicine or drugs were among the most inaccurately reported and considered invalid, as most women could not identify the type of medicine that was asked about or whether or not they had received it during their time in the facility. The questions that were most accurately answered included what type of facility the mother gave birth in and whether or not the baby had skin-to-skin contact with the mother immediately after birth.

The results of the study confirmed some of the most commonly used indicators, such as the presence of a skilled birth attendant, are often validly reported, but that validity can depend on the context and wording of questions asked to patients, which has important implications for measuring quality of care.

Setting Expectations

Maternal health needs to be part of the Sustainable Development Goals and these discussions around how to measure where we are and where we need to go are crucial, said Tom Pollum, director of research at the  and a member of the UN .

Pollum and other experts have been meeting since April 2013 to craft new targets for the post-2015 agenda as well as discuss strategies to achieve those targets. Targets are important not only because they require some specificity about what to accomplish and a timeframe, but because they mobilize policymakers and donors.

The most prominent indicator for measuring maternal health has been maternal mortality ratio 鈥 the number of deaths per 100,000 live births. Between 1990 and 2013, the world鈥檚 maternal mortality ratio dropped , from 380 to 210 per 100,000 live births. By 2030, said Pollum, the new target is to bring that number down to 70. A secondary target will be to ensure countries with the highest maternal mortality ratios do not exceed 140, or twice the global level. In order to meet these goals, the global maternal mortality rate will need to be reduced at a rate of 5.5 percent a year.

These are ambitious goals, Pollum said, as the countries with the highest maternal mortality rates must reduce their rates fastest but are often the most difficult places to work. In addition, all countries, regardless of development status, must actively focus on their most vulnerable subpopulations 鈥 those remaining areas where services have not reached.

Maternal mortality ratio remains a central focus because it is shaped by many of the other indicators like quality of care, access to care, and the presence of skilled birth attendants, Pollum said. But the role of other indicators in the SDGs is still up for debate. Langer pointed out that traditional birth attendants are still staples in many places, especially in the poorest areas, despite the fact their presence and effect are rarely noted. She suggested this should change. 鈥淲e should analyze very seriously what could be done to strengthen [traditional birth attendants鈥橾 abilities or how to make them productive members of the health system, maybe for some limited roles, but for some very important roles as well,鈥 she said.

Blanc added that there are other macro-level trends that deserve attention, such as the fact that neonatal and maternal mortality rates don鈥檛 always decline in tandem.

But all the panelists agreed that quality of care deserves a bigger conversation and more study. 鈥淭o our knowledge [our research is] the only validation studies of maternal health indicators that have been done,鈥 Blanc said. 鈥淲e sort of couldn鈥檛 believe that was true.鈥

Event Resources:

Written by Linnea Bennett, edited by Schuyler Null.

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Maternal Health Initiative

Housed within the 浪花直播 Center's Environmental Change and Security Program, the Maternal Health Initiative (MHI) leads the 浪花直播 Center鈥檚 work on maternal health, global health equity, and gender equality.   Read more

Maternal Health Initiative