Factors associated with attendance to and completion of prenatal care visits in Colombia among urban-residing Venezuelan refugee and migrant women

IF 3.9 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Journal of Migration and Health Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jmh.2024.100273
Justin Unternaher , José Rafael Guillén , Jennifer Ortíz , Megan Stevenson , Miguel Ángel Barriga Talero , Kathleen R. Page , Jhon Jairo López , Jhon Fredy Ramírez Correa , Ricardo Luque Núñez , Julián A. Fernandez-Niño , Paul B. Spiegel , Elana Liebow-Feeser , Andrea L. Wirtz
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Abstract

Between 2015 and 2023, 7.3 million Venezuelans have been displaced globally. We aimed to assess uptake of and factors associated with prenatal care among Venezuelan refugees and migrants in Colombia. We analyzed data from a cross-sectional survey of 6,221 urban-residing adult Venezuelans who were displaced to Colombia between 2015 and 2022. Analyses were restricted to 917 women aged 18–49 years who reported at least one pregnancy and delivered in Colombia; of these, 564 (61.5%) women completed ≥4 prenatal care visits in their most recent pregnancy. We used general linear models with negative binomial regression to identify associations and estimate the adjusted prevalence ratios (aPrR) of variables associated with completing ≥4 prenatal care visits during last complete pregnancy (WHO's pre-2016 recommendations). Having an irregular migration status was independently associated with a 12% lower likelihood (aPrR:0.88, 95%CI:0.78–0.99; p = 0.028) of completing ≥4 prenatal care visits compared to women with a regular status. Participants who reported an experience of denial of prenatal care at some point while Colombia (n = 135; 15.2%) were 42.8% less likely (aPrR:0.57, 95%CI:0.45–0.73; p < 0.001) to complete ≥4 prenatal care visits than those with no reported denial of care. Urban area of residence was also independently associated with prenatal care, while there was no evidence of association with educational attainment, literacy levels, or year of migration. Prenatal care attendance is suboptimal among Venezuelan refugees and migrants, particularly those with an irregular migration status, despite that prenatal care became officially available in 2018 to all Venezuelans in Colombia regardless of migration status. Reducing barriers to prenatal care by ensuring Venezuelan refugees and migrants are aware of available care, are supported in navigating the health system, and by preventing discrimination and stigma in the health facility are critical to ensuring the health and wellbeing of displaced people, their children, and the surrounding community.
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居住在哥伦比亚城市的委内瑞拉难民和移民妇女接受并完成产前检查的相关因素
从 2015 年到 2023 年,全球将有 730 万委内瑞拉人流离失所。我们的目的是评估哥伦比亚境内的委内瑞拉难民和移民对产前保健的接受情况及其相关因素。我们分析了一项横断面调查的数据,调查对象是 6,221 名在 2015 年至 2022 年间流离失所到哥伦比亚的居住在城市的成年委内瑞拉人。分析对象仅限于 917 名年龄在 18-49 岁、报告至少一次怀孕并在哥伦比亚分娩的女性;其中,564 名(61.5%)女性在最近一次怀孕期间完成了≥4 次产前检查。我们使用负二项回归的一般线性模型来确定相关性,并估算与最近一次完整妊娠期间完成≥4次产前检查相关的变量的调整患病率(aPrR)(世界卫生组织2016年前的建议)。与身份正常的妇女相比,身份不正常的妇女完成≥4次产前检查的可能性要低12%(aPrR:0.88, 95%CI:0.78-0.99; p = 0.028)。与未报告拒绝提供产前保健服务的妇女相比,报告在哥伦比亚期间曾被拒绝提供产前保健服务的妇女(n = 135;15.2%)完成≥4 次产前保健服务的可能性降低了 42.8%(aPrR:0.57, 95%CI:0.45-0.73;p <0.001)。城市居住区也与产前保健有独立关联,但没有证据表明与教育程度、文化水平或迁移年份有关。尽管 2018 年在哥伦比亚的所有委内瑞拉人,无论其移民身份如何,都可以正式获得产前保健服务,但委内瑞拉难民和移民,尤其是那些非正常移民身份的难民和移民的产前保健就诊率并不理想。通过确保委内瑞拉难民和移民了解可获得的医疗服务,支持他们浏览医疗系统,以及防止医疗机构中的歧视和污名化来减少产前护理的障碍,对于确保流离失所者及其子女和周围社区的健康和福祉至关重要。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Migration and Health
Journal of Migration and Health Social Sciences-Sociology and Political Science
CiteScore
5.70
自引率
8.70%
发文量
65
审稿时长
153 days
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