Is Male Involvement in ANC and PMTCT Associated with Increased Facility-Based Obstetric Delivery in Pregnant Women?
Ensuring that pregnant women are delivering in a health facility and are attended to by skilled birth attendants is critical to reducing maternal and infant morbidity and mortality. This study sought to determine the associations between male involvement in antenatal care (ANC) services and pregnant...
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Veröffentlicht in: | African journal of reproductive health 2015-06, Vol.19 (2), p.116 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Ensuring that pregnant women are delivering in a health facility and
are attended to by skilled birth attendants is critical to reducing
maternal and infant morbidity and mortality. This study sought to
determine the associations between male involvement in antenatal care
(ANC) services and pregnant women delivering at health facilities and
being attended to by skilled birth attendants as well as attending
postnatal care. This was a retrospective cohort study using secondary
analysis of program data. We reviewed health records of all pregnant
women who attended antenatal services irrespective of HIV status
between March and December 2012 in 10 health facilities in three
provinces of Zambia. An extraction questionnaire was used to collect
socio-demographic and clinical information from registers used in
services for maternal neonatal child health as well as delivery. Using
logistic regression, we calculated the odds ratios (OR) and 95%
confidence intervals (CI) of the association between (1) male
involvement and delivery at a health facility by a skilled birth
attendant and (2) male involvement and women's attendance at
postnatal services. We found that more women who had been accompanied
by their male partner during ANC delivered at a health facility than
those who had not been accompanied (88/220=40% vs. 543/1787=30.4%,
respectively; OR 1.53, 95% CI: 1.15-2.04). Also, we noted that a
greater proportion of the women who returned for postnatal visits had
been accompanied by their partner at ANC visits, compared to those
women who came to ANC without their partner (106/220=48.2% vs.
661/1787=37.0%, respectively; OR 1.58, 95% CI: 1.20-2.10). Male
involvement seems to be a key factor in women's health-seeking
behaviours and could have a positive impact on maternal and infant
morbidity and mortality.
S'assurer que les femmes enceintes accouchent dans un
établissement de santé et qu'elles sont prises en
charge par des accoucheuses qualifiées est essentiel pour
réduire la morbidité et la mortalité maternelle et
infantile. Cette étude visait à déterminer les
associations entre la participation des hommes aux services de soins
prénatals (SPrN) et des femmes enceintes qui accouchent dans des
établissements de santé et d'être assistées par des
accoucheuses qualifiées ainsi que la participation dans des soins
postnatals (SPN). Il s'agissait d'une étude de cohorte
rétrospective effectué à l'aide d'une
analyse secondaire des données du programme. Nous avons
examiné les |
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ISSN: | 1118-4841 |