The Bixby Center for Population, Health, and Sustainability
  • About
    • About
    • Mission
    • Vision
    • Goals
    • Where We Work
    • Careers
  • People
    • Team
    • Archive
  • What We Do
    • Core Research
      • Global Population
      • Family Planning
      • Maternal Health
      • Safe Abortion
    • Special Programs & Initiatives
      • The OASIS Initiative
      • Girl-Child Education Initiative
      • Adolescent Reproductive Health
      • Women’s Health and Empowerment
      • Evidence for Development (E4D)
    • Opportunities
      • Internships
      • Volunteering
      • Fellowships
      • Mentorships
    • Teaching
      • Online Courses
      • Past Courses
    • Collaborations
    • Careers
    • Special
  • Publications
  • VSI Archive
  • News
    • News
      • In the Media
      • Press Release
      • Stories from the field
      • Newsletters
    • Events
      • Upcoming Events
      • Past Events
  • Contact

Publications
Setting priorities for safe motherhood interventions in resource-scarce settings

March 3, 2015 / bixby

Prata N, Sreenivas A, Greig F, Walsh J, Potts M

Health Policy, 2010

Objective: Guide policy-makers in prioritizing safe motherhood interventions.

Methods: Three models (LOW, MED, HIGH) were constructed based on 34 sub-Saharan African countries to assess the relative cost-effectiveness of available safe motherhood interventions. Cost and effectiveness data were compiled and inserted into the WHO Mother Baby Package Costing Spreadsheet. For each model we assessed the percentage in maternal mortality reduction after implementing all interventions, and optimal combinations of interventions given restricted budgets of US$ 0.50, US$ 1.00, US$ 1.50 per capital maternal health expenditures respectively for LOW, MED, and HIGH models.

Results: The most cost-effective interventions were family planning and safe abortion (fpsa), antenatal care including misoprostol distribution for postpartum hemorrhage prevention at home deliveries (anc-miso), followed by sepsis treatment (sepsis) and facility-based postpartum hemorrhage management (pph).

Conclusions: The combination of interventions that avert the greatest number of maternal deaths should be prioritized and expanded to cover the greatest number of women at risk. Those which save the most number of lives in each model are ‘fpsa, anc-miso’ and ‘fpsa, sepsis, safe delivery’ for LOW; ‘fpsa, anc-miso’ and ‘fpsa, sepsis, safe delivery’ for MED; and ‘fpsa, anc-miso, sepsis, eclampsia treatment, safe delivery’ for HIGH settings. Safe motherhood interventions save a significant number of newborn lives.

Published in Health Policy, 94 (2010) 1–13.

Download PDF

Export Citations:

RISBibTexAPA

Bixby, Journal

Family Planning, Maternal Health, Misoprostol, Postpartum Hemorrhage (PPH), Safe Abortion, LDCs

Share this:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)
  • Click to print (Opens in new window)
  • More
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window)
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)

    Browse by Organization

    Browse by Document Type

    Browse by Topic

    Browse by Year

    Browse by Country

    Browse by Author



    Filter Publications

    Recent News

    • Quote: Ndola Prata

      Climate–Poverty Connections: Opportunities for synergistic solutions at the intersection of planetary and human well-being

      April 18, 2022
    • Ndola Prata’s Video Presentation: Innovation through Telemedicine to Improve Medication Abortion Access in Musanze, Rwanda

      April 15, 2022
    • a nice woman professor looking at you smiling wearing glasses with curly hair

      Ndola Prata on Tuesday, March 15, 2022, 11:40 am – 12:30 pm PDT

      March 11, 2022
    • Description of Bixby Center's summer internship 2022 and a female student with brown hair sitting and smiling next to the description.

      Bixby Center Summer Internships 2022: application is closed

      January 30, 2022

    Quick Links

    • What We Do
    • Announcements
    • Events
    • Opportunities
    • Careers
    • Stories from the Field

    About

    The Bixby Center for Population, Health, and Sustainability is dedicated to helping achieve slower population growth within a human right framework by addressing the unmet need for family planning. Learn more

    Connect

    University of California, Berkeley
    2121 Berkeley Way West, Suite 6100
    Berkeley, CA 94720-7360
    Contact | Map

    Follow @BixbyCenter

    View Bixby's group on LinkedIn

    ©2021 Bixby Center for Population, Health & Sustainability. All Rights Reserved.
    Web Design by HelloARI
    SPH Berkeley