| Literature DB >> 26931301 |
Sabine Gabrysch1, Shannon A McMahon1, Katja Siling1,2, Michael G Kenward2, Oona M R Campbell2.
Abstract
It is widely held that decisions whether or when to attend health facilities for childbirth are not only influenced by risk awareness and household wealth, but also by factors such as autonomy or a woman's ability to act upon her own preferences. How autonomy should be constructed and measured - namely, as an individual or cluster-level variable - has been less examined. We drew on household survey data from Zambia to study the effect of several autonomy dimensions (financial, relationship, freedom of movement, health care seeking and violence) on place of delivery for 3200 births across 203 rural clusters (villages). In multilevel logistic regression, two autonomy dimensions (relationship and health care seeking) were strongly associated with facility delivery when measured at the cluster level (OR 1.27 and 1.57, respectively), though not at the individual level. This suggests that power relations and gender norms at the community level may override an individual woman's autonomy, and cluster-level measurement may prove critical to understanding the interplay between autonomy and care seeking in this and similar contexts.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26931301 PMCID: PMC4773858 DOI: 10.1038/srep22578
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Association of autonomy dimensions at cluster level and individual level with facility delivery.
| Autonomy dimension | Crude OR | p-value | Adjusted OR | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cluster-level | 1.18 (0.92–1.52) | 0.18 | 0.92 (0.72–1.18) | 0.53 |
| Individual-level (deviance) | 1.02 (0.96–1.08) | 0.60 | 1.00 (0.93–1.07) | 0.93 |
| Cluster-level | 1.26 (0.92–1.73) | 0.14 | 1.05 (0.76–1.44) | 0.78 |
| Individual-level (deviance) | 0.96 (0.88–1.04) | 0.29 | 0.95 (0.87–1.04) | 0.25 |
| Cluster-level | 1.72 (1.24–1.38) | 0.001 | 1.57 (1.17–2.12) | 0.001 |
| Individual-level (deviance) | 1.04 (0.97–1.11) | 0.31 | 1.06 (0.99–1.13) | 0.11 |
| Cluster-level | 1.35 (1.21–1.51) | <0.001 | 1.27 (1.14–1.43) | <0.001 |
| Individual-level (deviance) | 1.04 (1.01–1.07) | 0.006 | 1.02 (0.99–1.05) | 0.17 |
| Cluster-level | 0.90 (0.77–1.05) | 0.17 | 0.90 (0.79–1.03) | 0.13 |
| Individual-level (deviance) | 1.03 (0.99–1.06) | 0.12 | 1.03 (1.00–1.07) | 0.06 |
*From three-level random effects logistic regression model (levels: birth, mother, cluster).
**Adjusted for age, parity, education, occupation, ethnic group, religion, household wealth, husband’s education and occupation, distance to care, quality of care and other individual and cluster-level variables (see Methods for details).
Figure 1Probability of facility delivery by cluster-level relationship autonomy.
This graph shows predicted probabilities (with 95% confidence intervals) from an adjusted model (n = 3116) for different relationship autonomy scores at the cluster level. The probabilities of facility delivery ranged from 6% for women from villages with low average scores (14) for relationship autonomy, to 51% of births in a facility for women from villages scoring high (27).
Figure 2Probability of facility delivery by cluster-level health care seeking autonomy.
This graph shows predicted probabilities (with 95% confidence intervals) from an adjusted model (n = 3116) for different scores of health care seeking autonomy at the cluster level. The probabilities of facility delivery ranged from 13% for women from villages with low average scores (5.5) for health care seeking autonomy, to 36% for women from villages scoring high (9).