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Indirect cost of maternal mortality in the WHO African Region, 2013

Joses M Kirigia (Cluster of Health Systems and Services, World Health Organization Regional Office for Africa, Brazzaville, Congo)
Germano M Mwabu (School of Economics, University of Nairobi, Nairobi, Kenya)
Juliet N Orem (Cluster of Health Systems and Services, World Health Organization Regional Office for Africa, Brazzaville, Congo)
Rosenabi Karimi Muthuri (Department of Psychology, United States International University, Nairobi, Kenya)

International Journal of Social Economics

ISSN: 0306-8293

Article publication date: 9 May 2016

411

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of this paper is to estimate discounted value of potential non-health gross domestic product (GDP) losses attributable to the 167,913 maternal deaths that occurred among 45 countries in the WHO African Region in 2013.

Design/methodology/approach

A cost-of-illness method was used to estimate non-health GDP losses related to maternal deaths. Future non-health GDP losses were discounted at 3 per cent. The analysis was undertaken for countries categorized under three income groups.

Findings

The discounted value of future non-health GDP loss due to maternal deaths in 2013 is in the order of Int$5.53 billion. About 17.6 per cent of that occurred in countries in the high and upper income group, 45.7 per cent in the middle income group and 36.7 per cent in the lower middle income group, and the average non-health GDP loss per maternal death was Int$136,799, Int$43,304 and Int$19,822, respectively.

Research limitations/implications

This study omitted costs related to direct health care, direct non-health care treatment, patient time for treatment, informal caregivers’ time, intangible costs such as pain and grief, lost output due to morbidity, and negative externalities on the family and community.

Social implications

The study demonstrated that maternal deaths have a sizable negative effect on non-health GDP of the region, implying that maternal mortality is not only a human rights concern but also an economic issue and that universal coverage of maternal health interventions ought to be an imperative goal in all countries.

Originality/value

This paper provides new evidence on the impact of maternal deaths on non-health GDP of 45 countries in the WHO African Region.

Keywords

Citation

Kirigia, J.M., Mwabu, G.M., Orem, J.N. and Muthuri, R.K. (2016), "Indirect cost of maternal mortality in the WHO African Region, 2013", International Journal of Social Economics, Vol. 43 No. 5, pp. 532-548. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJSE-05-2014-0105

Publisher

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Emerald Group Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited

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