Accessibility of pregnancy-related point-of-care diagnostic tests for maternal healthcare in rural primary healthcare facilities in Northern Ghana: A cross-sectional survey

Heliyon. 2019 Feb 19;5(2):e01236. doi: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2019.e01236. eCollection 2019 Feb.

Abstract

Background: Improving access to maternal healthcare in resource-limited settings plays a critical role in improving maternal health outcomes and reducing maternal deaths. However, barriers and challenges may exist in rural clinics and could affect successful implementation. This study assessed the current accessibility of pregnancy-related point-of-care (POC) diagnostic tests for maternal healthcare in rural primary healthcare (PHC) clinics in northern Ghana.

Method: We randomly selected 100 PHC clinics providing maternal healthcare from a total list of 356 PHC clinicss obtained from the Regional Health Directorate. Selected clinics were surveyed from February to March 2018, using an adopted survey tool. We obtained data for clinic-level staffing, availability, usage, and desired POC diagnostic tests. Stata 14 was used for data analysis.

Findings: Majority (64%) of the respondents were midwives. The mean ± standard deviation (SD) years of work experience and working hours per week were estimated at 5.6 years ± 0.4 and 122 hours ± 5.2 respectively. Average antenatal clinic attendance (clinic census) per month was 65 ± 67 pregnant women (Range: 3-360). The mean ± SD POC tests available and use was 4.9 tests ± 2.2. POC tests for malaria, HIV, urine pregnancy, and blood pressure monitoring devices were available in most clinics. POC tests requested by the clinics to assist them care for pregnant women included: Glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (95%); hepatitis C (94%); sickling (91%); tuberculosis, blood glucose and blood type (89%) each; urinary tract infection (87%); urine protein (81%); hepatitis B (78%); haemoglobin (76%); and syphilis (76%).

Interpretation: There is poor accessibility to pregnancy-related POC diagnostic tests for maternal healthcare due to low availability (≤5 tests per PHC clinic) of POC tests in rural PHC clinics in northern Ghana.

Keywords: Health profession; Obstetrics and gynecology; Public health; Reproductive medicine.