Determinants of prenatal care use: evidence from 32 low-income countries across Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America

While much has been written on the determinants of prenatal care attendance in low-income countries, comparatively little is known about the determinants of the frequency of prenatal visits in general and whether there are separate processes generating the decisions to use prenatal care and the freq...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health policy and planning 2014-08, Vol.29 (5), p.589-602
Hauptverfasser: Guliani, Harminder, Sepehri, Ardeshir, Serieux, John
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Serieux, John
description While much has been written on the determinants of prenatal care attendance in low-income countries, comparatively little is known about the determinants of the frequency of prenatal visits in general and whether there are separate processes generating the decisions to use prenatal care and the frequency of use. Using the Demographic and Health Surveys data for 32 low-income countries (across Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America) and appropriate two-part and multilevel models, this article empirically assesses the influence of a wide array of observed individual-, household- and community-level characteristics on a woman's decision to use prenatal care and the frequency of that use, while controlling for unobserved community level factors. The results suggest that, though both the decision to use care and the number of prenatal visits are influenced by a range of observed individual-, household- and community-level characteristics, the influence of these determinants vary in magnitude for prenatal care attendance and the frequency of prenatal visits. Despite remarkable consistency among regions in the association of individual, household and community indicators with prenatal care utilization, the estimated coefficients of the risk factors vary greatly across the three world regions. The strong influence of household wealth, education and regional poverty on the use of prenatal care suggests that safe motherhood programmes should be linked with the objectives of social development programmes such as poverty reduction, enhancing the status of women and increasing primary and secondary school enrolment rate among girls. Finally, the finding that teenage mothers and unmarried women and those with unintended pregnancies are less likely to use prenatal care and have fewer visits suggests that safe mother programmes need to pay particular attention to the disadvantaged and vulnerable subgroups of population whose reproductive health issues are often fraught with controversy.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); Jstor Complete Legacy; Oxford Journals Open Access Collection; MEDLINE; PAIS Index; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; PubMed Central; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Adolescent
Adult
Africa South of the Sahara
Asia
Decision analysis
Demography
Developing Countries
Educational attainment
Female
Global Health
Health administration
Health care
Health services
Health services utilization
Humans
Latin America
LDCs
Low income groups
Manycountries
Maternal Health Services - utilization
Middle Aged
Multivariate analysis
Original articles
Poverty
Pregnancy
Prenatal care
Prenatal Care - utilization
Reproductive health
Residence Characteristics
Secondary schools
Studies
Sub-Saharan Africa
Women
Young Adult
title Determinants of prenatal care use: evidence from 32 low-income countries across Asia, Sub-Saharan Africa and Latin America
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