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Beyond physical accessibility, bypassing health facilities offering cesarean section: a study based on women living in the slums of Dakar

Beyond physical accessibility, bypassing health facilities offering cesarean section: a study based on women living in the slums of Dakar
Beyond physical accessibility, bypassing health facilities offering cesarean section: a study based on women living in the slums of Dakar
Objective: the study examines the geographic accessibility of Comprehensive Emergency Obstetric Care (CEmONC) among women residing in the slums of Dakar.

Design: the study is a cross-sectional geographic analysis of caesarean care utilisation in health facilities offering the service in Dakar.

Setting: the study was conducted in urban slum areas in Dakar.

Participants: 763 women living in urban slums who had undergone a caesarean section in six health facilities in Dakar between July and December 2022.

Outcome measures The proportion of women bypassing the nearest health facility and travel time to health facilities.

Results: key findings show that most women in Dakar’s urban slums live within 5 min from a health facility offering caesarean services, with an average travel time of 6.3 min. However, 44.3% bypassed nearby facilities, often travelling outside their district. Medical referral was the primary reason for bypassing (43.2%), followed by the search for higher quality care (13.5%) and reliance on family or social networks (14.9%). Only a small proportion (1.4%) cited more affordable treatment costs as a reason for bypassing.

Conclusion: despite the good geographical accessibility of health facilities offering caesarean sections in Dakar, many women bypass nearby facilities due to medical referrals and the search for higher quality care, resulting in increased travel time and costs. Strengthening the quality and capacity of local health centres in urban slums is crucial to minimising unnecessary bypassing and ensuring timely access to essential obstetric services.
2044-6055
Sylla, El Hadji M.
a4d10b86-124c-4ec3-8e1a-21e6445f354a
Fall, Ndeye Awa
c24e046f-ad4c-4f17-9a1d-8afd4b5540d2
Dotse-Gborgbortsi, Winfred
02d3e356-268e-4650-9fb9-9638ccdb6eff
Sandie, Arsene Brunelle
966472b7-3df5-46a3-93b8-466d1654303e
Gueye, Barrel Sow
bdcf0bcb-1f16-4393-80cf-79969851665e
Senghor, Diarra Bousso
dc9b88ca-2e22-4843-9ea3-74f2050d251b
Cissé, Birane
207bcab9-ec1e-4f4e-b688-b51c856620b9
Bocoum, Fadima Yaya
4f39095e-e69e-470c-9db5-e3a6947e00d9
Sy, Ibrahim Ousmane
083202eb-e827-41c0-b09e-37d021d0a7fc
Faye, Cheikh
f927c577-b5c2-452e-a2d0-0d0436483562
Sylla, El Hadji M.
a4d10b86-124c-4ec3-8e1a-21e6445f354a
Fall, Ndeye Awa
c24e046f-ad4c-4f17-9a1d-8afd4b5540d2
Dotse-Gborgbortsi, Winfred
02d3e356-268e-4650-9fb9-9638ccdb6eff
Sandie, Arsene Brunelle
966472b7-3df5-46a3-93b8-466d1654303e
Gueye, Barrel Sow
bdcf0bcb-1f16-4393-80cf-79969851665e
Senghor, Diarra Bousso
dc9b88ca-2e22-4843-9ea3-74f2050d251b
Cissé, Birane
207bcab9-ec1e-4f4e-b688-b51c856620b9
Bocoum, Fadima Yaya
4f39095e-e69e-470c-9db5-e3a6947e00d9
Sy, Ibrahim Ousmane
083202eb-e827-41c0-b09e-37d021d0a7fc
Faye, Cheikh
f927c577-b5c2-452e-a2d0-0d0436483562

Sylla, El Hadji M., Fall, Ndeye Awa, Dotse-Gborgbortsi, Winfred, Sandie, Arsene Brunelle, Gueye, Barrel Sow, Senghor, Diarra Bousso, Cissé, Birane, Bocoum, Fadima Yaya, Sy, Ibrahim Ousmane and Faye, Cheikh (2025) Beyond physical accessibility, bypassing health facilities offering cesarean section: a study based on women living in the slums of Dakar. BMJ Open, 15 (3). (doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2024-088606).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: the study examines the geographic accessibility of Comprehensive Emergency Obstetric Care (CEmONC) among women residing in the slums of Dakar.

Design: the study is a cross-sectional geographic analysis of caesarean care utilisation in health facilities offering the service in Dakar.

Setting: the study was conducted in urban slum areas in Dakar.

Participants: 763 women living in urban slums who had undergone a caesarean section in six health facilities in Dakar between July and December 2022.

Outcome measures The proportion of women bypassing the nearest health facility and travel time to health facilities.

Results: key findings show that most women in Dakar’s urban slums live within 5 min from a health facility offering caesarean services, with an average travel time of 6.3 min. However, 44.3% bypassed nearby facilities, often travelling outside their district. Medical referral was the primary reason for bypassing (43.2%), followed by the search for higher quality care (13.5%) and reliance on family or social networks (14.9%). Only a small proportion (1.4%) cited more affordable treatment costs as a reason for bypassing.

Conclusion: despite the good geographical accessibility of health facilities offering caesarean sections in Dakar, many women bypass nearby facilities due to medical referrals and the search for higher quality care, resulting in increased travel time and costs. Strengthening the quality and capacity of local health centres in urban slums is crucial to minimising unnecessary bypassing and ensuring timely access to essential obstetric services.

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More information

Submitted date: 10 May 2024
Accepted/In Press date: 14 February 2025
Published date: 22 March 2025

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 499533
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499533
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: fe10d0f4-923c-43a6-b415-ecbaaf1261ac
ORCID for Winfred Dotse-Gborgbortsi: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7627-1809

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Date deposited: 25 Mar 2025 17:41
Last modified: 17 Sep 2025 02:15

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Contributors

Author: El Hadji M. Sylla
Author: Ndeye Awa Fall
Author: Winfred Dotse-Gborgbortsi ORCID iD
Author: Arsene Brunelle Sandie
Author: Barrel Sow Gueye
Author: Diarra Bousso Senghor
Author: Birane Cissé
Author: Fadima Yaya Bocoum
Author: Ibrahim Ousmane Sy
Author: Cheikh Faye

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