Every day, globally approximately a thousand women and girls
needlessly die as a result of complications during pregnancy, childbirth or the
6 weeks following delivery. The majority of maternal deaths are avoidable
and could be prevented with proven interventions to prevent or manage complications
during pregnancy and child birth. The aim of this study was to examine factors
associated with underutilization of maternal health services in Sudan.
Data was obtained from the Sudan Household Health Survey
2010 (SHHS). The SHHS collected data from 5730 women, aged 15–49 years and who
were pregnant in the last 2 years preceding the survey. The selection of the
respondents was through a multi-stage cluster sampling technique. Interviews
were conducted with respondents to collect data about their demographic
characteristics, reproductive history, pregnancy and child delivery. Univariate
analysis and logistic regression were used to analyze the data.
The factors associated with receiving antenatal care were,
higher educational level, higher household wealth and low parity. The factors associated with
institutional delivery were higher educational level, high household wealth, urban residence, low parity, receiving ANC and complications during
pregnancy.
The factors associated with both antenatal care use and
institutional delivery are similar and interventions to target these include
expanding female education and improving coverage and affordability of health
services.
Below: Theoretical framework of factors associated with institutional delivery in Sudan (adapted from Andersen behavioural model [13])
Full article at: http://goo.gl/VPg2OC
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv_insight
No comments:
Post a Comment