| Literature DB >> 31805087 |
Mitchell A Kinkor1, Bijaya K Padhi2,3, Pinaki Panigrahi4, Kelly K Baker5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The public health burden of reproductive tract infections (RTIs) among women in rural areas of low-income countries is poorly addressed because health care seeking for treatment of RTIs is inadequate. There are gaps in knowledge about whether low care seeking behavior stems from challenges in accessing health care versus women's recognition of and response to RTI-specific disease symptoms. We aim to identify determinants of care seeking behavior and analyze the difference in utilization of health care resources in response to symptoms of an RTI versus non-RTI disease symptoms in rural India. This will aid in the design of interventions that promote RTI care seeking behavior.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31805087 PMCID: PMC6894837 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0225687
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Definition of variables.
| Category | Variable | Definition |
|---|---|---|
| Unmarried youth | Single and less than 24 years of age | |
| Newly married | Married for 2 or less years | |
| Established married | Married for more than 2 years | |
| Other | Single/divorced/widowed/separated and/or over 24 years of age | |
| BPL card | Possession of a Below Poverty Line (BPL) card | |
| Lives in home with more than 2.5 people/sleeping room | Lives in home with an above median number (2.5) of people/sleeping room | |
| No formal education | ||
| Primary education | Completed some primary education | |
| Secondary education | Completed some secondary education |
Demographic differences between women reporting acute RTI symptoms within the last two weeks versus women with no symptoms in the last two weeks.
| Level, sample size | % of women who reported RTI symptoms (N = 342) | % of those who did not report RTI symptoms (N = 3, 225) | P | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Khordha n = 998 | 31.9% (n = 109) | 27.6% (n = 889) | ||
| Sundergarh n = 2,569 | 68.1% (n = 233) | 72.4% (n = 2,336) | ||
| Hindu, n = 2,505 | 72.2% (n = 247) | 70.0% (n = 2,558) | ||
| Christian, n = 863 | 15.8% (n = 54) | 25.1% (n = 809) | ||
| Muslim, n = 188 | 11.7% (n = 40) | 4.6% (n = 148) | ||
| Other religion, n = 11 | 0.3% (n = 1) | 0.3% (n = 10) | ||
| Employed, n = 429 | 8.8% (n = 30) | 12.4% (n = 339) | ||
| Housewife, n = 2,020 | 64.6% (n = 221) | 55.8% (n = 1,799) | ||
| Student, n = 589 | 11.7% (n = 40) | 17.0% (n = 549) | ||
| Other occupation, n = 529 | 14.9% (n = 51) | 14.8% (n = 478) | ||
| Other backwards caste, n = 627 | 19.6% (n = 67) | 17.4% (n = 560) | ||
| Other caste, n = 270 | 10.5% (n = 36) | 7.3% (n = 234) | ||
| Scheduled caste, n = 652 | 14.9% (n = 51) | 18.6% (n = 601) | ||
| Scheduled tribe, n = 956 | 27.2(n = % (n = 93) | 27.8% (n = 863) | ||
| Caste not reported, n = 1,062 | 27.8% (n = 95) | 30.0% (n = 967) | ||
| No formal education, n = 661 | 19.0% (n = 65) | 18.5% (n = 596) | ||
| Primary education, n = 645 | 19.0% (n = 65) | 18.0% (n = 580) | ||
| Secondary education, n = 2,261 | 62.0% (n = 212) | 63.5% (n = 2,049) | ||
| Unmarried youth, n = 1,166 | 27.5% (n = 94) | 33.2% (n = 1072) | ||
| Newly married, n = 74 | 2.9% (n = 10) | 2.0% (n = 64) | ||
| Established married, n = 2,132 | 64.9% (n = 222) | 59.2% (n = 1,910) | ||
| Other, n = 192 | 4.7% (n = 16) | 5.5% (n = 176) | ||
| BPL Card, n = 1,878 | 52.1% (n = 178) | 52.7% (n = 1,700) | ||
| Lives in home with more than 2.5 people/room, n = 1,491 | 42.4% (n = 145) | 41.7% (n = 1,346) | ||
| 59.6% (n = 204) | 34.7% (n = 1,120) | |||
| 1.8% (n = 6) | 2.1% (n = 67) | |||
| 27.3 (8.2) | 26.5 (8.0) | |||
| 51.5 minutes (30.3) | 45.7 minutes (25.3) | |||
Factors associated with health care utilization for RTI symptoms among symptomatic women.
| Determinant level, sample size | Proportion of care seekers, N = 161 | Proportion of non-care seekers, N = 181 | Bivariate model OR (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No formal education, n = 65 | 20.5% (n = 33) | 19.9% (n = 32) | 1.2 (0.7, 2.1) | ||
| Primary education, n = 65 | 19.9% (n = 32) | 20.5% (n = 33) | 1.1 (0.6, 1.9) | ||
| Secondary education, n = 212 | 59.6% (n = 96) | 72.0% (n = 116) | 0.8 (0.5, 1.3) | ||
| Believe RTI symptoms cannot be prevented, n = 6 | 0.6% (n = 1) | 2.8% (n = 5) | 0.2 (0.0, 1.9) | ||
| BPL card, n = 178 | 49.7% (n = 80) | 54.1% (n = 98) | 0.8 (0.5, 1.3) | ||
| Lives in home with more than 2.5 people/room, n = 145 | 41.6% (n = 67) | 43.1% (n = 78) | 0.9 (0.6, 1.4) | ||
| Unmarried youth, n = 94 | 18.0% (n = 29) | 35.9% (n = 65) | 0.4 (0.2, 0.6) | ||
| Newly married, n = 10 | 3.7% (n = 6) | 2.2% (n = 4) | 1.7 (0.5, 6.2) | ||
| Established married, n = 222 | 72.3% (n = 117) | 58.0% (n = 105) | 1.9 (1.2, 3.0) | ||
| Other, n = 16 | 6.0% (n = 9) | 3.9% (n = 7) | 1.5 (0.5, 4.0) | ||
Reasons Why RTI symptomatic women (N = 141) Did Not Seek Treatment for RTI Symptoms.
| Reason | % (n) |
|---|---|
| I did not think I needed treatment | 73.8 (104) |
| Could not take time away from work | 8.5 (12) |
| Clinic too far from home | 5.7 (8) |
| Unable to find transport | 2.8 (4) |
| Cost for travel too high | 3.5 (5) |
| Children could not be left home alone | 2.8 (4) |
| Did not have permission from husband/mother-in-law/other | 2.1 (3) |
| Cost for treatment too high | 0.7 (1) |
| Flood or bad weather | 0.0 (0) |
| Not happy with clinical services in area | 0.0 (0) |
Care provider sought for RTI symptoms among RTI symptomatic women vs. RTI asymptomatic women seeking care for other recent non-RTI symptoms.
| RTI symptomatic women, N = 129 | % (n) | RTI asymptomatic women with other recent symptoms, N = 1,117 | % (n) | P-Value (formal vs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
32 respondents indicated that they sought care but did not report location.
b 3 respondents indicated that they sought care but did not report location.