Geography and Population Department, Mahendra Ratna Campus, Tribhuvan University, Kathmandu, Nepal.
BMC Int Health Hum Rights. 2010 Jun 7;10:13. doi: 10.1186/1472-698X-10-13.
Nepal has seen substantial improvements in its reproductive health outcomes, but infant and child mortality are still high. This study attempts to examine the prevalence and factors influencing the experience of child death of mothers who have given birth during a five-year period. More specifically, this paper aims to investigate whether household headship has an impact on child death in Nepal.
This paper reports on data drawn from the Nepal Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS 2006), a nationally representative sample survey. The analysis is confined to women who had given birth during the five years preceding the survey (n = 4066). The association between experience of child death of mother and the explanatory variables was assessed via bivariate analysis using a chi-square test. The variables were also examined using multivariate analysis (binary logistic regression) to assess the net effect of household headship on child death after controlling for the other variables.
Out of all the mothers who had given birth during a five-years period, 3,229 (79.4%) were from male-headed households; the remaining 837 (20.6%) were from female-headed households. A significantly higher proportion of mothers from male-headed households (6.5%) than female-headed households (4.5%) had experienced the death of a child over the five years preceding the survey. Several socio-demographic, economic, and cultural variables were significant predicators for death of a child. For instance, women who had given birth to three or more children and who were Hindu were more likely to experience a child's death than were their counterparts. On the other hand, women who were literate, who had ever used family planning methods, who had visited a health facility, who utilized antenatal care for the last pregnancy, and who were from female-headed households were less likely to see a child die than were women in their comparison group. Notably, keeping all other control variables constant in the logistic model, women from female-headed households were 31 percent less likely to experience the death of a child (odds ratio = 0.69) than were women from male-headed households.
The death of children is not uncommon in Nepal. No single factor can account for the high child mortality in the country; many factors contribute to the problem. After controlling for other variables, this study found that, among many other factors, household headship was a strong predictor. Programs seeking to help remedy this problem should focus on the issues identified here regarding women's autonomy, such as reducing the number of children born, increasing women's literacy status, increasing the use of family planning, increasing the use of antenatal care, and increasing female household headship so that child mortality will decrease and the overall well-being of the family can be maintained and enhance.
尼泊尔在生殖健康方面取得了显著进步,但婴儿和儿童死亡率仍然很高。本研究试图调查在五年期间分娩的母亲经历儿童死亡的流行情况和影响因素。更具体地说,本文旨在探讨尼泊尔家庭户主身份对儿童死亡的影响。
本文报告了来自尼泊尔人口与健康调查(NDHS 2006)的数据,这是一项具有全国代表性的抽样调查。分析仅限于在调查前五年期间分娩的妇女(n=4066)。使用卡方检验通过双变量分析评估母亲经历儿童死亡与解释变量之间的关联。还使用多变量分析(二元逻辑回归)检查变量,以在控制其他变量后评估家庭户主身份对儿童死亡的净影响。
在所有在五年期间分娩的母亲中,3229 名(79.4%)来自男性户主家庭;其余 837 名(20.6%)来自女性户主家庭。在调查前五年期间,来自男性户主家庭的母亲中,经历过孩子死亡的比例明显高于女性户主家庭(6.5%比 4.5%)。几个社会人口、经济和文化变量是儿童死亡的重要预测因素。例如,与对照相比,生育三个或更多孩子的印度教徒和女性更有可能经历孩子的死亡。另一方面,受过教育、曾经使用过计划生育方法、去过卫生机构、最后一次怀孕时使用过产前护理以及来自女性户主家庭的女性不太可能看到孩子死亡,而不是她们的对照组。值得注意的是,在逻辑模型中保持所有其他控制变量不变,来自女性户主家庭的女性经历孩子死亡的可能性降低 31%(优势比=0.69)比来自男性户主家庭的女性。
在尼泊尔,儿童死亡并不罕见。没有单一因素可以解释该国的高儿童死亡率;许多因素促成了这个问题。在控制其他变量后,本研究发现,在许多其他因素中,家庭户主身份是一个强有力的预测因素。旨在帮助解决这一问题的计划应关注这里与妇女自主权相关的问题,例如减少出生人数、提高妇女识字率、增加计划生育使用、增加产前护理使用和增加女性户主身份,以降低儿童死亡率并维持和提高家庭的整体福祉。