Boston College School of Social Work, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2018 Jun 21;13(6):e0199230. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0199230. eCollection 2018.
Home deliveries increase the risk of maternal and child mortality. To increase institutional deliveries, South Asian countries have introduced various forms of Conditional Cash Transfer (CCT) schemes that offer women cash if they come to deliver at a health facility. In 2005, Nepal introduced its Safe Delivery Incentive Programme (SDIP)-a cash incentive program nationwide to boost the rate of institutional delivery and care from health professionals at childbirth. This study asks the following research questions: How informed were Nepalese women about the cash incentive program? Does knowledge about the cash incentive program correlate with institutional delivery?
Data to answer these questions come from the 2011 Nepal Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS). This is a nationally representative data collected from 12,674 women between 15 and 49 years of age, of which 4,036 had given births in the past five years. Multiple logistic regression was employed to predict if knowledge about the cash incentive program increased the odds of institutional delivery controlling for sociodemographic and geographic factors.
Approximately 90% of the women knew about the SDIP. About 42% of the women who knew about the SDIP and 13% of the women who did not know about the SDIP had their most recent delivery at a health institution. The odds of institutional delivery increased nearly three-fold (OR = 2.70; CI: 1.59-4.59) among women who knew about the SDIP compared to women who did not know about the SDIP. Other factors that predicted institutional delivery included education, wealth, urban status, first birth, the number of antenatal care visits, and exposure to news media.
This study shows that there is a correlation between women's knowledge about the SDIP and increased institutional delivery. Nepal's health and social work professionals should inform all women of reproductive age about the program so that they can make more informed delivery decisions.
家庭分娩会增加母婴死亡的风险。为了增加机构分娩,南亚国家引入了各种形式的有条件现金转移(CCT)计划,如果妇女到医疗机构分娩,就给她们现金。2005 年,尼泊尔推出了全国范围内的安全分娩激励计划(SDIP),即向妇女提供现金激励,以提高机构分娩率,并在分娩时获得卫生专业人员的护理。本研究提出了以下研究问题:尼泊尔妇女对现金激励计划了解多少?对现金激励计划的了解是否与机构分娩率相关?
回答这些问题的数据来自 2011 年尼泊尔人口与健康调查(NDHS)。这是一项全国代表性的数据,来自 12674 名 15 至 49 岁的妇女,其中 4036 名妇女在过去五年中分娩过。采用多变量逻辑回归来预测,在控制社会人口和地理因素的情况下,对现金激励计划的了解是否增加了机构分娩的几率。
大约 90%的妇女知道 SDIP。大约 42%知道 SDIP 的妇女和 13%不知道 SDIP 的妇女在卫生机构分娩。与不知道 SDIP 的妇女相比,知道 SDIP 的妇女机构分娩的几率增加了近三倍(OR=2.70;CI:1.59-4.59)。预测机构分娩的其他因素包括教育、财富、城市地位、第一胎、产前保健次数和接触新闻媒体。
本研究表明,妇女对 SDIP 的了解与增加机构分娩率之间存在相关性。尼泊尔的卫生和社会工作专业人员应该向所有育龄妇女宣传该计划,以便她们能够做出更明智的分娩决策。