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Geographic information system for improving maternal and newborn health: recommendations for policy and programs

Geographic information system for improving maternal and newborn health: recommendations for policy and programs
Geographic information system for improving maternal and newborn health: recommendations for policy and programs
This correspondence argues and offers recommendations for how Geographic Information System (GIS) applied to maternal and newborn health data could potentially be used as part of the broader efforts for ending preventable maternal and newborn mortality. These recommendations were generated from a technical consultation on reporting and mapping maternal deaths that was held in Washington, DC from January 12 to 13, 2015 and hosted by the United States Agency for International Development’s (USAID) global Maternal and Child Survival Program (MCSP). Approximately 72 participants from over 25 global health organizations, government agencies, donors, universities, and other groups participated in the meeting.

The meeting placed emphases on how improved use of mapping could contribute to the post-2015 United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), agenda in general and to contribute to better maternal and neonatal health outcomes in particular. Researchers and policy makers have been calling for more equitable improvement in Maternal and Newborn Health (MNH), specifically addressing hard-to-reach populations at sub-national levels. Data visualization using mapping and geospatial analyses play a significant role in addressing the emerging need for improved spatial investigation at subnational scale. This correspondence identifies key challenges and recommendations so GIS may be better applied to maternal health programs in resource poor settings. The challenges and recommendations are broadly grouped into three categories: ancillary geospatial and MNH data sources, technical and human resources needs and community participation.
Maternal, newborn, mortality, GIS, mapping
1471-2393
1-7
Molla, Yordanos B
787f358b-5d6e-4943-98f9-d0f76e86b9df
Rawlins, Barbara
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Makanga, Prestige T
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Cunningham, Marc
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Avila, Juan EH
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Ruktanonchai, Cori
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Singh, Kavita
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Alford, Sylvia
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Thompson, Mira
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Dwivedi, Vikas
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Moran, Allisyn
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Matthews, Zoe
ebaee878-8cb8-415f-8aa1-3af2c3856f55
Molla, Yordanos B
787f358b-5d6e-4943-98f9-d0f76e86b9df
Rawlins, Barbara
58e9f145-1d45-453b-a21d-830facd6c2a2
Makanga, Prestige T
a8ff41d0-5ac9-401c-9be3-f5721b4ea04b
Cunningham, Marc
7380df16-7ac4-4d79-b0d6-61505bf4a78f
Avila, Juan EH
4317637d-a29b-4f90-bdab-ab17584cc5e0
Ruktanonchai, Cori
a576fb11-a475-4d48-885a-85938b60a7a8
Singh, Kavita
5591257d-3090-48da-af9e-e6b3a16be624
Alford, Sylvia
95b6ecb9-1ed6-484a-a2f6-6869a8e21091
Thompson, Mira
3a302674-640e-4ce0-835f-28312a866e5e
Dwivedi, Vikas
b90cf113-f639-4071-829f-2908db5fe552
Moran, Allisyn
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Matthews, Zoe
ebaee878-8cb8-415f-8aa1-3af2c3856f55

Molla, Yordanos B, Rawlins, Barbara and Makanga, Prestige T et al. (2017) Geographic information system for improving maternal and newborn health: recommendations for policy and programs. BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, 17 (26), 1-7. (doi:10.1186/s12884-016-1199-y).

Record type: Article

Abstract

This correspondence argues and offers recommendations for how Geographic Information System (GIS) applied to maternal and newborn health data could potentially be used as part of the broader efforts for ending preventable maternal and newborn mortality. These recommendations were generated from a technical consultation on reporting and mapping maternal deaths that was held in Washington, DC from January 12 to 13, 2015 and hosted by the United States Agency for International Development’s (USAID) global Maternal and Child Survival Program (MCSP). Approximately 72 participants from over 25 global health organizations, government agencies, donors, universities, and other groups participated in the meeting.

The meeting placed emphases on how improved use of mapping could contribute to the post-2015 United Nation’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), agenda in general and to contribute to better maternal and neonatal health outcomes in particular. Researchers and policy makers have been calling for more equitable improvement in Maternal and Newborn Health (MNH), specifically addressing hard-to-reach populations at sub-national levels. Data visualization using mapping and geospatial analyses play a significant role in addressing the emerging need for improved spatial investigation at subnational scale. This correspondence identifies key challenges and recommendations so GIS may be better applied to maternal health programs in resource poor settings. The challenges and recommendations are broadly grouped into three categories: ancillary geospatial and MNH data sources, technical and human resources needs and community participation.

Text
Molla et al 2017_BMC Preg Childbirth.pdf - Version of Record
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More information

Submitted date: 28 February 2016
Accepted/In Press date: 15 December 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 January 2017
Published date: 11 January 2017
Keywords: Maternal, newborn, mortality, GIS, mapping
Organisations: Social Sciences, WorldPop, Geography & Environment

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 404792
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/404792
ISSN: 1471-2393
PURE UUID: d41d643e-5f35-488a-9076-b5bbb18718d4
ORCID for Zoe Matthews: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1533-6618

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Date deposited: 23 Jan 2017 15:18
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:47

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Contributors

Author: Yordanos B Molla
Author: Barbara Rawlins
Author: Prestige T Makanga
Author: Marc Cunningham
Author: Juan EH Avila
Author: Cori Ruktanonchai
Author: Kavita Singh
Author: Sylvia Alford
Author: Mira Thompson
Author: Vikas Dwivedi
Author: Allisyn Moran
Author: Zoe Matthews ORCID iD

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