| Literature DB >> 25674350 |
Sunita Taneja1, Shikhar Bahl1, Sarmila Mazumder1, Jose Martines2, Nita Bhandari1, Maharaj Kishan Bhan3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: A trial to evaluate the Integrated Management of Neonatal and Childhood Illness (IMNCI) strategy showed that the intervention resulted in lower infant mortality and improved infant care practices. In this paper, we present the results of a secondary analysis to examine the effect of the IMNCI strategy on inequities in health indicators.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25674350 PMCID: PMC4306296 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.05.010401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Population sub–groups in intervention and control clusters
| Characteristics of families of recruited infants | Intervention clusters (%) | Control clusters (%) |
|---|---|---|
| n = 29 589 | n = 30 604 | |
| Poorest | 5620 (19.0) | 6421 (20.9) |
| Very poor | 5380 (18.2) | 6660 (21.8) |
| Poor | 5818 (19.7) | 6222 (20.3) |
| Less poor | 6039 (20.4) | 6001 (19.6) |
| Least poor | 6732 (22.8) | 5300 (17.3) |
| n = 29 545 | n = 30 499 | |
| None | 11 220 (38.0) | 12 846 (42.1) |
| 1–9 years of schooling | 12 238 (41.4) | 11 604 (38.1) |
| 10–11 years of schooling | 3460 (11.7) | 3405 (11.2) |
| ≥12 years of schooling | 2627 (8.9) | 2644 (8.7) |
| n = 29 667 | n = 30 813 | |
| Male | 15 623 (52.7) | 16 252 (52.7) |
| Female | 14 044 (47.3) | 14 561 (47.3) |
| n = 29 565 | n = 30 577 | |
| Upper caste | 19 407 (65.6) | 16 122 (52.7) |
| Schedule caste/schedule tribe | 7532 (25.5) | 7013 (22.9) |
| Non–Hindu | 2626 (8.9) | 7442 (24.3) |
Effect of intervention on inequities in neonatal mortality in the intervention and control clusters
| Subgroups (total infants in intervention/control clusters) | No. of deaths (NMR/1000) | Difference in inequity gradient (95% CI)* | P–value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Poorest (5620/6421) | 293 (52.1) | 348 (54.2) | ||
| Very poor (5380/6660) | 248 (46.1) | 334 (50.2) | ||
| Poor (5818/6222) | 252 (43.3) | 224 (36.0) | ||
| Less poor (6039/6001) | 241 (39.9) | 218 (36.3) | ||
| Least poor (6732/5300) | 208 (30.9) | 177 (33.4) | ||
| Change in NMR/subgroup (inequity gradient) | –3.6 (–6.0 to –1.2) | –4.1 (–5.9 to –2.3) | 0.5 (–2.0 to 2.9) | 0.681 |
| Hindu scheduled caste/tribe (7532/7013) | 352 (46.7) | 330 (47.1) | ||
| Non–Hindu (2626/7442) | 117 (44.6) | 322 (43.3) | ||
| Hindu Upper Caste (19 407/16 122) | 773 (39.8) | 648 (40.2) | ||
| Change in NMR/subgroup (inequity gradient) | –0.2 (–3.6 to 3.3) | 0.2 (–3.7 to 4.0) | –0.3 (–4.8 to 4.1) | 0.872 |
| Female (14 044/14 561) | 577 (41.1) | 614 (42.2) | ||
| Male (15 623/16 252) | 667 (42.7) | 712 (43.8) | ||
| Change in NMR/subgroup (inequity gradient) | 1.9 (–4.9 to 8.7) | 2.0 (–3.1 to 7.2) | –0.1 (–8.7 to 8.4) | 0.974 |
| None (11 220/12 846) | 537 (47.9) | 626 (48.7) | ||
| 1–9 years (12 238/11 604) | 501 (40.9) | 478 (41.2) | ||
| 10–11 years (3460/3405) | 117 (33.8) | 127 (37.3) | ||
| 12+ years (2627/2644) | 83 (31.6) | 57 (21.6) | ||
| Change in NMR/subgroup (inequity gradient) | –2.9 (–5.1 to –0.71) | –4.8 (–8.2 to –1.4) | 1.9 (–1.9 to 5.7) | 0.296 |
NMR – neonatal mortality, CI – confidence interval
*Multiple linear regressions adjusted for cluster design and potential confounders (distance of nearest point from PHC to highway, percent of home births, and years of schooling of mother, gender, religion and caste and wealth quintile).
Effect of intervention on inequities in care–seeking from an appropriate provider for a danger sign during the neonatal period in intervention and control clusters
| Subgroups (newborns with danger signs in intervention/control groups) | N (%) taken for care to an appropriate provider | Difference in inequity gradients (95% CI)* | P–value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Poorest (185/257) | 60 (32.4) | 44 (17.1) | ||
| Very poor (164/258) | 58 (35.4) | 47 (18.2) | ||
| Poor (187/256) | 89 (47.6) | 86 (33.6) | ||
| Less poor (208/250) | 100 (48.1) | 91 (36.4) | ||
| Least poor (264/246) | 165 (62.5) | 105 (42.7) | ||
| Change in % taken for appropriate care/subgroup (inequity gradient) | 4.6 (2.8 to 6.4) | 4.0 (2.5 to 5.5) | 0.6 (–1.6 to 2.8) | 0.554 |
| Schedule caste and tribe (254/304) | 97 (38.2) | 84 (27.6) | ||
| Non–Hindu (79/308) | 18 (22.8) | 38 (12.3) | ||
| Hindu Upper Caste (677/653) | 359 (53.0) | 251 (38.4) | ||
| Change in % taken for appropriate care/subgroup (inequity gradient) | 3.9 (–0.2 to 7.9) | 2.8 (0.1 to 5.4) | 1.1 (–3.9 to 6.1) | 0.653 |
| Female (400/514) | 165 (41.3) | 99 (19.3) | ||
| Male (610/755) | 309 (50.7) | 275 (36.4) | ||
| Change in % taken for appropriate care/subgroup (inequity gradient) | 8.3 (1.6 to 15.1) | 17.6 (11.4 to 23.8) | –9.3 (–18.2 to –0.4) | 0.042 |
| None (405/555) | 156 (38.5) | 109 (19.6) | ||
| 1–9 years (395/447) | 188 (47.6) | 144 (32.2) | ||
| 10–11 years (119/157) | 67 (56.3) | 65 (41.4) | ||
| 12+ years (91/109) | 63 (69.2) | 56 (51.4) | ||
| Change in % taken for appropriate care/subgroup (inequity gradient) | 5.5 (1.5 to 9.4) | 6.5 (2.4 to 10.6) | –1.0 (–6.5 to 4.4) | 0.694 |
CI – confidence interval
*Multiple linear regressions adjusted for cluster design and potential confounders (distance of nearest point from PHC to highway, percent of home births, years of schooling of mother, gender, religion and caste and wealth quintile). Appropriate care provider: Physicians in government and private facilities, auxiliary nurse midwife, Anganwadi worker, or accredited social health activist.
Figure 1Concentration curves for different health outcomes and wealth quintiles. A. Early initiation of breastfeeding. B. Care seeking for danger signs from an appropriate provider. C. Neonatal mortality D. Post–neonatal mortality.
Effect of intervention on inequities in post–neonatal mortality in the intervention and control clusters
| Subgroups (total infants in intervention/control cluster) | No. of deaths (rate/1000) | Difference in inequity gradients (95% CI)* | P–value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Poorest (5620/6421) | 214 (38.1) | 268 (41.7) | ||
| Very poor (5380/6660) | 134 (24.9) | 219 (32.9) | ||
| Poor (5818/6222) | 119 (20.5) | 153 (24.6) | ||
| Less poor (6039/6001) | 111 (18.4) | 91 (15.2) | ||
| Least poor (6732/5300) | 100 (14.9) | 74 (14.0) | ||
| Change in mortality rate/subgroup (inequity gradient) | –2.8 (–4.2 to –1.3) | –4.9 (–7.0 to –2.8) | 2.2 (0 to 4.4) | 0.053 |
| Schedule caste and tribe (7532/7013) | 229 (30.4) | 233 (33.2) | ||
| Non–Hindu (2626/7442) | 69 (26.3) | 272 (36.5) | ||
| Hindu Upper Caste (19 407/16 122) | 379 (19.5) | 298 (18.5) | ||
| Change in mortality rate/subgroup (inequity gradient) | –1.8 (–4.1 to 0.51) | –4.8 (–7.7 to –1.8) | 3.0 (–0.6 to 6.6) | 0.101 |
| Female (14 044/14 561) | 392 (27.9) | 471 (32.3) | ||
| Male (15 623/16 252) | 289 (18.5) | 338 (20.8) | ||
| Change in mortality rate/subgroup (inequity gradient) | –9.1 (–12.2 to –6.0) | –10.8 (–14.7 to –6.9) | 1.7 (–3.2 to 6.6) | 0.479 |
| None (11 220/12 846) | 355 (31.6) | 466 (36.3) | ||
| 1–9 years (12 238/11 604) | 247 (20.2) | 261 (22.5) | ||
| 10–11 years (3460/3405) | 52 (15.0) | 45 (13.2) | ||
| 12+ years (2627/2644) | 24 (9.1) | 26 (9.8) | ||
| Change in mortality rate/subgroup (inequity gradient) | –4.0 (–6.4 to –1.5) | –5.9 (–8.1 to –3.7) | 2.0 (–1.3 to 5.2) | 0.222 |
CI – confidence interval
*Multiple linear regressions adjusted for cluster design and potential confounders (distance of nearest point from PHC to highway, percent of home births, years of schooling of mother, gender, religion and caste and wealth quintile).
Effect of intervention on inequities in breastfeeding initiation within 1 h of birth (as reported by the mother) in intervention and control clusters
| Subgroups (total infants in intervention/control clusters) | No. breastfed in first hour (%) | Difference in inequity gradients (95% CI)* | P–value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Poorest (1201/1231) | 527 (43.9) | 127 (10.3) | ||
| Very poor (1089/1299) | 510 (46.8) | 154 (11.9) | ||
| Poor (1182/1278) | 517 (43.7) | 139 (10.9) | ||
| Less poor (1276/1222) | 497 (38.9) | 140 (11.5) | ||
| Least poor (1452/1122) | 475 (32.7) | 128 (11.4) | ||
| Change in % initiated breastfeeding early/subgroup (inequity gradient) | –2.8 (–4.2 to –1.1) | 0.4 (–0.3 to 1.0) | –3.0 (–4.5 to –1.5) | <0.001 |
| Schedule caste and tribe (1556/1469) | 718 (46.1) | 193 (13.1) | ||
| Non–Hindu (526/1420) | 238 (45.3) | 93 (6.6) | ||
| Hindu Upper Caste (4119/3254) | 1569 (38.1) | 399 (12.3) | ||
| Change in % initiated breastfeeding early/subgroup (inequity gradient) | –3.4 (–5.2 to –1.7) | –0.5 (–1.2 to 2.1) | –3.9 (–6.0 to –1.8) | <0.001 |
| Female (2893/2845) | 1168 (40.4) | 323 (11.4) | ||
| Male (3310/3318) | 1358 (41.0) | 366 (11.0) | ||
| Change in % initiated breastfeeding early/subgroup (inequity gradient) | –0.8 (–2.0 to 3.6) | –0.2 (–2.3 to 1.9) | –1.0 (–2.5 to 4.5) | 0.542 |
| None (2465/2687) | 1068 (43.3) | 237 (8.8) | ||
| 1–9 years (2548/2260) | 1061 (41.6) | 301 (13.3) | ||
| 10–11 years (642/637) | 253 (39.4) | 95 (14.9) | ||
| 12+ years (547/574) | 144 (26.3) | 56 (9.8) | ||
| Change in % initiated breastfeeding early/subgroup (inequity gradient) | –3.1 (–4.9 to –1.3) | 2.2 (0.8 to 3.7) | –5.4 (–7.4 to –3.4) | <0.001 |
CI – confidence interval
*Multiple linear regressions adjusted for cluster design and potential confounders (distance of nearest point from PHC to highway, percent of home births, years of schooling of mother, gender, religion and caste and wealth quintile).