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了解妇女群体社区参与式干预改善马拉维农村地区孕产妇健康结果的机制:使用避孕药具是其途径吗?

Understanding the mechanisms through which women's group community participatory intervention improved maternal health outcomes in rural Malawi: was the use of contraceptives the pathway?

作者信息

Zamawe Collins O F, Mandiwa Chrispin

机构信息

Parent and Child Health Initiative, Research Centre, Lilongwe, Malawi.

Ministry of Health, Lilongwe, Malawi;

出版信息

Glob Health Action. 2016 Apr 19;9:30496. doi: 10.3402/gha.v9.30496. eCollection 2016.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Women's group intervention is a community based initiative through which rural women form groups, meet regularly to discuss maternal health issues affecting them, and come up with locally available solutions. This intervention has been associated with reduced maternal and neonatal mortality in limited resource settings. Nevertheless, the mechanisms through which women's groups influence maternal health outcomes are uncertain. Because contraception reduces the risk of maternal mortality and women's groups also tackled this issue, we speculated that contraceptive use might be the pathway. Consequently, this study investigated whether participation in women's groups was associated with contraceptive use in Malawi.

DESIGN

We examined the use of contraceptives between women who participated in women's groups and those who did not through a community-based cross-sectional study in Mchinji, Malawi. The study involved 3,435 women of reproductive age (15-49 years) who were recruited using a multistage sampling approach. Members (treated) and non-members (control) of women's groups were matched on observed covariates using propensity scores and the counterfactual for the treated individuals was estimated.

RESULTS

Crude analysis revealed that women's groups improved uptake of contraceptives by 26% (odds ratio (OR)=1.26; 95% confidence interval (CI)=1.03-1.56; p=0.024). However, using the matched data, uptake of contraceptives was almost the same among members and non-members of women's groups. More precisely, the likelihood of using contraceptives was not significantly different between the members and non-members of women's groups (OR=1.00; 95% CI=0.81-1.24; p=0.991).

CONCLUSIONS

There is insufficient evidence of an association between participation in women's groups and contraceptive use among rural Malawian women. The implication is that contraception was not the mechanism through which women's groups contributed to reduced maternal mortality in Malawi. Because the effects of community interventions are usually comprehensive and sometimes difficult to demonstrate, ethnographic studies should be considered in the evaluation of women's groups and other related interventions.

摘要

背景

妇女团体干预是一项基于社区的倡议活动,农村妇女通过组建团体,定期会面讨论影响她们的孕产妇健康问题,并提出当地可行的解决方案。在资源有限的环境中,这种干预措施与降低孕产妇和新生儿死亡率相关。然而,妇女团体影响孕产妇健康结果的机制尚不确定。由于避孕可降低孕产妇死亡风险,且妇女团体也探讨了这一问题,我们推测使用避孕措施可能是其中的途径。因此,本研究调查了在马拉维参与妇女团体是否与使用避孕措施有关。

设计

我们通过在马拉维姆钦吉进行的一项基于社区的横断面研究,比较了参与妇女团体的妇女和未参与妇女团体的妇女的避孕措施使用情况。该研究纳入了3435名育龄妇女(15 - 49岁),采用多阶段抽样方法招募。使用倾向得分在观察到的协变量上对妇女团体的成员(处理组)和非成员(对照组)进行匹配,并估计处理组个体的反事实情况。

结果

粗略分析显示,妇女团体使避孕措施的采用率提高了26%(优势比(OR)=1.26;95%置信区间(CI)=1.03 - 1.56;p = 0.024)。然而,使用匹配数据时,妇女团体成员和非成员的避孕措施采用率几乎相同。更确切地说,妇女团体成员和非成员使用避孕措施的可能性没有显著差异(OR = 1.00;95% CI = 0.81 - 1.24;p = 0.991)。

结论

没有足够证据表明马拉维农村妇女参与妇女团体与使用避孕措施之间存在关联。这意味着避孕并非妇女团体在马拉维降低孕产妇死亡率的作用机制。由于社区干预的效果通常是全面的,有时难以证明,在评估妇女团体及其他相关干预措施时应考虑人种学研究。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/8bfb/4838992/07bdab5e5229/GHA-9-30496-g001.jpg

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