# Beyond physical accessibility, bypassing health facilities offering caesarean section: insights from women in Dakar’s slums

**Authors:** El Hadji Malick Sylla, Ndeye Awa Fall, Winfred Dotse-Gborgbortsi, Arsène Brunelle Sandie, Barrel Sow Gueye, Diarra Bousso Senghor, Birane Cissé, Fadima Yaya Bocoum, Ibrahima Ousmane Sy, Cheikh Faye

PMC · DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-088606 · BMJ Open · 2025-03-22

## TL;DR

The study finds that despite good geographic access to caesarean services in Dakar's slums, many women bypass nearby facilities due to referrals or seeking better care.

## Contribution

This study provides new insights into non-geographic factors influencing facility bypassing for caesarean care in urban slums.

## Key findings

- Most women live within 5 minutes of a caesarean facility but 44.3% bypass nearby ones.
- Medical referrals were the main reason for bypassing, followed by seeking higher quality care.
- Only 1.4% bypassed due to cost considerations.

## Abstract

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

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

The study was conducted in urban slum areas in Dakar.

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

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

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.

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.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

52 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11931907/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11931907