The International journal of health planning and management
-
Int J Health Plann Manage · Apr 1994
ReviewThe impact of maternal health improvement on perinatal survival: cost-effective alternatives.
Each year, an estimated half million women die from complications related to child birth either during pregnancy, delivery or within 42 days afterwards. When pregnant women have complications, their infants are at greater risk of becoming ill, permanently disabled or dying. For every maternal death, there are at least 20 infant deaths: stillbirths, neonatal or postneonatal deaths. ⋯ The cost to avert each death in a high mortality population is estimated between $800 and $1,500 or as low as $0.50 per capita per year. The priorities for programs targeting maternal and perinatal health depend on demographic, ecologic and economic factors, and should include the promotion of good health, not merely the avoidance of death. More operational research is required on various aspects of maternal and perinatal health; in particular, on the cost-effectiveness of different service components.
-
Int J Health Plann Manage · Apr 1994
Using hospital activity indicators to evaluate performance in Andhra Pradesh, India.
The performance of secondary level public hospitals in Andhra Pradesh. India was evaluated with the help of input-output ratios of hospital activity and service mix. Indicators for emergency, clinical, diagnostic and medico-legal services have been defined. ⋯ Extremes of turnover and occupancy were not associated with any particular case-mix pattern. Thus, neither poor productivity and capacity utilization nor over-crowding can be explained by case-mix differences. Problems of poor performance and inadequate capacity seem to be real.