| Literature DB >> 31718658 |
Atkure Defar1,2, Yemisrach B Okwaraji3,4, Zemene Tigabu5, Lars Åke Persson3,4, Kassahun Alemu6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Maternal and child health (MCH) care utilization often vary with geographic location. We analyzed the geographic distribution and determinants of utilization of four or more antenatal care visits, health facility delivery, child immunization, and care utilization for common childhood illnesses across four Ethiopian regions.Entities:
Keywords: Antenatal care; Autocorrelation; Childhood illness; Ethiopia; Geographical variation; Getis Ord Gi*; Immunization; Ordinary Least Square; Spatial analysis; Utilization
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31718658 PMCID: PMC6852737 DOI: 10.1186/s12939-019-1079-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Fig. 1Map of Ethiopia indicating the regions and districts where the study was undertaken
Definition of the studied maternal and child health services utilization
| Health service | Definition |
|---|---|
| Four or more antenatal care visits | The proportion of women aged 13 to 49 with a live birth in the last 12 months who attended antenatal care four or more times during that pregnancy. |
| Institutional delivery | The proportion of women with a live birth in the year preceding the survey who gave birth in a health facility |
| Child immunization; fully immunized | The proportion of live children aged 12–23 months who had received Bacillus Calmette-Guerin (BCG) vaccine, three doses of polio vaccine and three doses of pentavalent vaccine (Diphtheria-Tetanus-Pertussis-Hepatitis B and Hemophilus vaccines) |
| Care seeking for common childhood illness | The proportion of children aged 2–59 months with fever, diarrhoea, or suspected pneumonia in the last two weeks for whom care was sought at health posts, health centers, hospitals, or private clinics |
Level of utilization and indications of geographic clustering of use of selected maternal and child health services in four national regions of Ethiopia, December 2016–February 2017
| Care utilization indicators | n/N | % (95% CI) | Moran’s Index | Z-score of the Index | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Maternal health services | |||||
| Four or more antenatal care visits | 215/714 | 30 (27–35) | 0.089 | 1.351 | 0.176 |
| Delivery in a health facility | 336/714 | 47 (43–51) | 0.205 | 2.70 | 0.006 |
| Child health services | |||||
| Fully immunized children 12–23 months age | 232/567 | 41 (37–45) | 0.172 | 2.30 | 0.021 |
| Utilization of care for common childhood illnesses during the last 2 weeks | 67/139 | 48 (40–57) | 0.016 | 0.454 | 0.640 |
Fig. 2Maps showing geographic distribution of maternal and child health care service use in 46 districts of four regions of Ethiopia. a Four or more antenatal care visits b) Health facility delivery care c) Full immunization d) Care seeking for common childhood illness. The three levels of utilization (red, yellow, blue) for each service utilization represent the tertile distributions
Fig. 3Spatial patterns of maternal and child health care utilization in 46 districts of the four regions of Ethiopia. The clustered patterns (on the right sides) show that similar coverage values at the district level are close to each other. The outputs have automatically generated keys on the right and left sides of each panel. Auto-generated interpretations available below each panel shows whether the likelihood of clustered patterns occurred randomly is less than 1, 5% or 10%. The bright red and blue colours (to the end tails) indicate increased significance levels. Left to right, the graphs show 1) Antenatal care visits four or more times; 2) Health facility delivery care; 3) Full immunization coverage, and 4) Sick child care-seeking for common childhood illnesses
Association between selected socio-geographic and health system factors and the geographical distribution of maternal and child health care utilization in 46 districts of Ethiopia, December 2016–February 2017
| Explanatory variablesa | Estimate | Standard error | Vifb | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antenatal care visits four times or more | |||||
| Intercept | 0.283 | ||||
| Mean age of the women | 0.013 | 0.015 | 2.157 | 0.037** | 1.652 |
| Mean education level of the women | −0.018 | 0.024 | −0.798 | 0.429 | 1.672 |
| The proportion of households with a mobile phone | −0.002 | 0.000 | 0.911 | 0.368 | 1.606 |
| Proportion of households with a radio | 0.000 | 0.000 | 1.083 | 0.285 | 1.799 |
| Proportion of women’s ownership of households | −0.002 | 0.004 | − 0.544 | 0.589 | 1.157 |
| Proportion of women having a family health card | 0.003 | 0.002 | 1.437 | 0.159 | 1.240 |
| Mean parity | −0.111 | 0.039 | −2.882 | 0.006** | 1.724 |
| Health facility delivery | |||||
| Intercept | −0.195 | ||||
| Mean age of the women | 0.01 | 0.016 | 0.591 | 0.558 | 2.578 |
| Mean number of pregnancies | −0.106 | 0.162 | − 0.652 | 0.518 | 1.812 |
| Mean number of antenatal care visits | 0.007 | 0.002 | 3.013 | 0.004** | 1.721 |
| The proportion of women participating in women’s development groups | 0.001 | 0.002 | 0.646 | 0.522 | 1.167 |
| Proportion of women having a family health card | 0.003 | 0.002 | 1.484 | 0.145 | 1.196 |
| Mean parity | −0.006 | 0.055 | −0.121 | 0.904 | 4.207 |
| Full immunization | |||||
| Intercept | 0.309 | ||||
| Mean distance to the health post | −0.001 | 0.001 | − 0.91 | 0.368 | 1.406 |
| Family size | −0.05 | 0.048 | −1.05 | 0.299 | 1.515 |
| Mean radio availability in the household | −0.17 | 0.172 | −0.987 | 0.330 | 1.154 |
| Mean mobile phone availability in the household | 0.206 | 0.109 | 1.896 | 0.046** | 1.274 |
| Mean elevation | −0.000 | 0.000 | −0.65 | 0.519 | 1.273 |
| Mean age of the child (in month) | 0.046 | 0.031 | 1.498 | 0.143 | 1.209 |
| The proportion of male children | −0.195 | 0.225 | −0.867 | 0.392 | 1.705 |
| Proportion of household with health post in their kebele | 0.179 | 0.229 | 0.785 | 0.437 | 1.265 |
| Sick child care utilization | |||||
| Intercept | −0.221 | ||||
| The proportion of household with health post in their kebele | 0.007 | 0.005 | 1.337 | 0.189 | 1.15 |
| The proportion of male children | 0.004 | 0.008 | 0.530 | 0.599 | 1.153 |
| Mean distance to health post (reported) | −0.004 | 0.004 | −1.212 | 0.232 | 1.055 |
** Significance at p-value < 0.05
aThe estimation was done at district level
bVariance inflation factor
Fig. 4Maps showing the distribution of the standard residuals from the OLS model a) Antenatal care visits four times or more b) Health facility delivery care c) Full immunization d) Sick child care-seeking for common childhood illnesses
Analysis of geographic clustering of residuals in the linear regression analyses of determinants of selected maternal and child health care utilization. Moran’s I test statistics
| Outcome indicators | Morans’ Index | Z-score of the Index | Interpretation | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antenatal care visits four times or more | 0.025 | 0.488 | 0.625 | OLS residual was not clustered |
| Health facility delivery | 0.423 | 0.800 | 0.423 | OLS residual was not clustered |
| Immunization | 0.182 | 2.136 | 0.032 | OLS residual was clustered |
| Sick child care utilization | −0.052 | − 0.039 | 0.752 | OLS residual was not clustered |
Fig. 5Spatial clustering of high (Hot spot), and low values (cold spot) for full immunization coverage. a) The observed +/− 3 Gi_bins in the map reflect statistical significance with 99% confidence level; the +/− 2 Gi_bins reflect a 95% confidence level; the +/− 1 Gi_bins reflect a 90% confidence level; and the clustering for features in bin 0 is not statistically significant. b & c) The z-score are used to measures the statistical significance given the number of features and their values. It helps to conclude whether to reject or not the null hypothesis, feature by feature