Jackson Michelle, Duff Putu, Kusumaningrum Santi, Stark Lindsay
Program on Forced Migration and Health, Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health, 60 Haven Ave B-4 Suite 432, New York, 10032, NY, USA.
School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, 608-1081 Burrard St, Vancouver, V5N 1P5, BC, Canada.
BMC Int Health Hum Rights. 2014 Dec 21;14:306. doi: 10.1186/s12914-014-0038-3.
There are an estimated 35 million unregistered children in Indonesia. To understand ways to best leverage existing health system-related resources and ensure greater protective measures for these vulnerable children, this study explores the predictive relationship between the utilization of perinatal health services and birth certificate ownership in two Indonesian provinces.
This study employed a cross-sectional design with interviewer-administered household surveys to heads of households in West Nusa Tenggara and East Nusa Tenggara from May to July of 2013. The primary outcome of interest was birth certificate ownership among children under the age of 5 years old. Bivariate and multivariable regression analyses using Generalized Estimating Equations (GEE) considered a set of covariates that represented child and household socio-demographic characteristics along with health services utilization variables during pregnancy and post-pregnancy periods.
389 heads of households were interviewed, yielding data on a sample of 451 children under the age of 5. Fewer than 28% of children in this sample possessed a birth certificate. Nearly 57% (n = 259) of children were delivered in a clinical facility, though only 36% (n = 93) of these were legally registered. Of children born in the home (n = 194), registration dropped to 16% (n = 31). Adjusted analyses accounting for socio-demographic factors suggest that children born in a clinic facility (AOR = 2.33, 95% CI: 1.27, 4.33), hospital (AOR = 2.38, 95% CI: 1.12, 5.09), or in the presence of a skilled birth attendant (AOR = 2.35, 95% CI: 1.31, 4.23) were significantly more likely to be registered. Children whose mothers sought post-natal care were 2.99 times more likely to possess a birth certificate (AOR = 2.99, 95% CI: 1.1, 7.57). Pre-natal care was not associated with birth registration.
These findings suggest that use of perinatal health services increases the likelihood of registering a child's birth despite a lack of formal integration of vital registration with the health sector. Formally leveraging existing community-based health workers and perinatal services may serve to further increase registration rates in hard to reach areas of Indonesia.
据估计,印度尼西亚有3500万儿童未登记。为了解如何最好地利用现有的与卫生系统相关的资源,并确保为这些弱势儿童采取更多保护措施,本研究探讨了印度尼西亚两个省份围产期保健服务利用情况与出生证明持有情况之间的预测关系。
本研究采用横断面设计,于2013年5月至7月对西努沙登加拉省和东努沙登加拉省的户主进行了访谈式家庭调查。主要关注的结果是5岁以下儿童的出生证明持有情况。使用广义估计方程(GEE)进行的双变量和多变量回归分析考虑了一组协变量,这些协变量代表了儿童和家庭的社会人口特征以及孕期和产后的卫生服务利用变量。
共访谈了389名户主,获得了451名5岁以下儿童的样本数据。该样本中拥有出生证明的儿童不到28%。近57%(n = 259)的儿童在临床机构分娩,但其中只有36%(n = 93)进行了合法登记。在家中出生的儿童(n = 194)中,登记率降至16%(n = 31)。考虑社会人口因素的调整分析表明,在诊所(比值比[AOR]=2.33,95%置信区间[CI]:1.27,4.33)、医院(AOR = 2.38,95% CI:1.12,5.09)出生或有熟练助产士在场(AOR = 2.35,95% CI:1.31,4.23)的儿童登记的可能性显著更高。母亲寻求产后护理的儿童拥有出生证明的可能性高出2.99倍(AOR = 2.99,95% CI:1.1,7.57)。产前护理与出生登记无关。
这些研究结果表明,尽管生命登记与卫生部门缺乏正式整合,但围产期保健服务的使用增加了儿童出生登记的可能性。正式利用现有的社区卫生工作者和围产期服务可能有助于进一步提高印度尼西亚难以到达地区的登记率。