| Literature DB >> 31297251 |
Cesar Victora1,2, Ties Boerma3, Jennifer Requejo4, Marilia Arndt Mesenburg2, Gary Joseph2, Janaína Calu Costa2, Luis Paulo Vidaletti2, Leonardo Zanini Ferreira2, Ahmad Reza Hosseinpoor5, Aluisio J D Barros2.
Abstract
The Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 17.18 recommends efforts to increase the availability of data disaggregated by income, gender, age, race, ethnicity, migratory status, disability and geographic location in developing countries. Surveys will continue to be the leading data source for disaggregated data for most dimensions of inequality. We discuss potential advances in the disaggregation of data from national surveys, with a focus on the coverage of reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health indicators (RMNCH). Even though the Millennium Development Goals were focused on national-level progress, monitoring initiatives such as Countdown to 2015 reported on progress in RMNCH coverage according to wealth quintiles, sex of the child, women's education and age, urban/rural residence and subnational geographic regions. We describe how the granularity of equity analyses may be increased by including additional stratification variables such as wealth deciles, estimated absolute income, ethnicity, migratory status and disability. We also provide examples of analyses of intersectionality between wealth and urban/rural residence (also known as double stratification), sex of the child and age of the woman. Based on these examples, we describe the advantages and limitations of stratified analyses of survey data, including sample size issues and lack of information on the necessary variables in some surveys. We conclude by recommending that, whenever possible, stratified analyses should go beyond the traditional breakdowns by wealth quintiles, sex and residence, to also incorporate the wider dimensions of inequality. Greater granularity of equity analyses will contribute to identify subgroups of women and children who are being left behind and monitor the impact of efforts to reduce inequalities in order to achieve the health SDGs.Entities:
Keywords: child health; equity health; health services research; health systems evaluation; maternal health
Year: 2019 PMID: 31297251 PMCID: PMC6590961 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2018-001295
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Sample sizes for selected domains of RMNCH indicators in 129 surveys from 2010 to 2016
| Frequently used denominators | Examples of indicators based on each denominator | Median sample size by wealth quintiles | ||||
| Poorest | Second | Third | Fourth | Richest | ||
| All households with women aged 15–49 years or children under 5 years | Water, sanitation, hygiene | 2507 | 2352 | 2188 | 2215 | 2241 |
| Sexually active* 15–49-year-old women and girls | Contraceptive coverage | 1683 | 1626 | 1605 | 1570 | 1526 |
| Live births in the past 2–3 years to 15–49-year-old women and girls† | Antenatal, delivery and postnatal care | 1001 | 885 | 826 | 697 | 481 |
| Children aged <2 years | Early initiation of breastfeeding | 765 | 644 | 578 | 504 | 418 |
| Children aged <6 months | Exclusive breastfeeding | 183 | 157 | 136 | 121 | 103 |
| Children aged 12–23 months‡ | Immunisations | 376 | 319 | 299 | 262 | 224 |
| Children aged <5 years with diarrhoea in the past 2 weeks | Oral rehydration therapy or solution | 303 | 232 | 200 | 158 | 99 |
| Children aged <5 years with suspected pneumonia in the past 2 weeks | Care-seeking for pneumonia | 109 | 86 | 63 | 52 | 45 |
| Children aged <5 years | Bednets, anthropometric indicators | 1334 | 1139 | 1033 | 950 | 728 |
*Some surveys only ask this question for women who are married or in union.
†Denominators refer to women who delivered a live child in the past 2 years (MICS) or 3 years (DHS). Postnatal care refers to women giving birth in the past 2 years for both types of surveys.
‡In some countries, the denominator includes children aged 15–26 or 18–29 months, to take into account the immunisation calendars.
DHS, Demographic and Health Surveys; MICS, Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys; RMNCH, reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health indicators.
Figure 1Institutional delivery coverage according to wealth quintiles and deciles in selected countries.
Figure 2Institutional delivery coverage according to (A) wealth quintiles (left-hand panel) and to absolute income (right-hand panel) in selected countries and (B) at two points in time in Tanzania (left-hand panel) and Nepal (right-hand panel).
Figure 3Institutional delivery coverage according to wealth quintiles and place of residence in selected countries.
Figure 4Institutional delivery coverage in indigenous, afrodescendant and reference group women in selected countries in Latin America and the Caribbean.