Antenatal care is not just a checkup. It is a series of visits that can spot life-threatening problems like high blood pressure, anemia, and infections.
It prepares a mother for a safe birth. It protects her baby.
In Somalia, maternal and newborn death rates are among the highest in the world. Suboptimal use of ANC is a key reason. You cannot fix a problem you do not fully understand.
For years, efforts have focused on building clinics and training staff. But what if the mother never makes it to the door?
The Surprising Shift
The old way of thinking looked at single issues. Not enough clinics. Not enough education.
This review reveals a web of interconnected barriers. It shows that the decision to seek care is a tug-of-war between personal circumstance, community forces, and the health system itself.
Fixing just one piece may not be enough.
Imagine planning a crucial trip. You need a vehicle (resources), knowledge of the route (education), permission to go (social support), and a welcoming destination (the health facility).
If any part of that chain breaks, the trip fails.
This review found that all these "links" are breaking for Somali women. It is a systems failure, not just an individual choice.
Researchers analyzed nine high-quality studies from 2010 to 2025. They looked for factors that consistently predicted whether a woman received ANC, using robust statistical methods to find true causes, not just correlations.
The most powerful predictors were socioeconomic. A woman's education level was paramount. So was her household wealth and whether she lived in an urban or rural area.
Married women were more likely to attend than unmarried women. Older mothers and those who planned their pregnancy also had higher uptake.
But money and location are only part of the story.
Knowledge and access were equally decisive. Women who understood the benefits of ANC or were exposed to health messages via radio/TV were more likely to go. Those who lived far from a facility or faced transportation costs often stayed home.
Here is the crucial human element.
The study found that a woman's perception of the health system mattered deeply. If she feared disrespectful or negative attitudes from health workers, she was less likely to seek care.
The Expert Perspective
This type of review is considered the strongest form of evidence. It does not just present new data. It synthesizes everything we know to identify undeniable patterns.
The findings are a powerful consensus. They tell policymakers and aid organizations exactly where to aim their resources for the greatest impact.
This is not a new pill or test you can ask your doctor about today. It is a policy and advocacy roadmap.
Its immediate impact is to guide ministries of health, NGOs, and community leaders. It validates the experiences of Somali women and gives data to their stories.
For caregivers and global health supporters, it clarifies where donations and advocacy can be most effective.
The Limits of the Map
The review is clear about its limits. The included studies show what is linked to ANC use, but cannot always prove direct cause and effect.
Cultural and regional nuances within Somalia may also be blended in the broader findings. This is a nationwide map, not a neighborhood street view.
The path forward is now better lit. The review calls for "targeted interventions" on multiple fronts simultaneously.
This means investing in girls' education and women's economic empowerment. It means creating community awareness campaigns via trusted media. Health systems must work to be more accessible, affordable, and respectful.
This doesn’t mean this treatment is available yet.
Turning this research into real-world change requires funding, political will, and community partnership. It is a long-term effort. But for the first time, the priorities are no longer a guess.
They are a checklist for saving lives.