International Institute for Population Sciences, Govandi station Road, Deonar, Mumbai, 400088, India.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2019 Oct 24;19(1):378. doi: 10.1186/s12884-019-2528-8.
Several risk factors predisposing women and their live-borns to adverse outcomes during pregnancy have been documented. Little is known about sanitation being a factor contributing to adverse pregnancy outcomes in India. The role of sanitation in adverse pregnancy outcomes remains largely unexplored in the Indian context. This study is an attempt to bring the focus on sanitation as a factor in adverse pregnancy outcome. Along with the sanitation factors, few confounder variables have also been studied in order to understand the adverse pregnancy outcomes.
The study is based on the fourth round of National Family Health Survey (NFHS-IV) covering 26,972 married women in the age-group 15-49. The study variables include the mother's age, Body Mass Index (BMI), education, anemia, and Antenatal care (ANC) visits during their last pregnancy. The household level variable includes place of residence, religion, caste, wealth index, access to toilet, type of toilet, availability of water within toilet premises, and facility of hand wash near the toilet. Children study variables include Low Birth Weight (LBW), the order of birth (Parity), and the death of the children of the women in the last 5 years. The target variable Adverse Pregnancy Outcome (APO) was constructed using children born with low birth weight or died during the last pregnancy.
We calculated both adjusted as well as unadjusted odds ratios for a better understanding of the association between sanitation and adverse pregnancy outcomes. Findings from the study showed that women who did not have access to a toilet within the house had a higher risk of adverse pregnancy outcome. In the multivariable model, no association was observed for adverse pregnancy outcome among women who did not have access to toilet and women who used shared toilet. Teenage (15-19 years), uneducated, underweight and anemic mothers were more likely to face APO as compare to other mothers in similar characteristics group.
Our findings contribute to the decidedly less available literature on maternal sanitation behaviour and adverse pregnancy outcomes. Our results support that sanitation is a very significant aspect for women who are about to deliver a baby as there was an association between sanitation and adverse pregnancy outcome. Education on sanitation practices is the need of the hour as much as it needs to follow.
有几项已知的风险因素可导致女性及其新生儿在妊娠期间出现不良结局。关于卫生状况是印度不良妊娠结局的一个促成因素,人们知之甚少。在印度背景下,卫生状况对不良妊娠结局的影响在很大程度上仍未得到探索。本研究试图将重点放在卫生状况作为不良妊娠结局的一个因素上。除了卫生因素外,本研究还研究了一些混杂变量,以了解不良妊娠结局。
本研究基于涵盖了 15-49 岁已婚妇女的第四次国家家庭健康调查(NFHS-IV)的第四轮调查。研究变量包括母亲的年龄、体重指数(BMI)、教育程度、贫血和上次妊娠期间的产前护理(ANC)就诊次数。家庭层面的变量包括居住地点、宗教信仰、种姓、财富指数、家中是否有厕所、厕所类型、厕所内是否有供水以及厕所附近是否有洗手设施。儿童研究变量包括低出生体重(LBW)、出生顺序(胎次)以及妇女在过去 5 年内的子女死亡情况。使用出生体重低或上次妊娠期间死亡的儿童构建了不良妊娠结局(APO)这一目标变量。
为了更好地理解卫生状况与不良妊娠结局之间的关联,我们计算了调整后和未调整后的比值比。研究结果表明,家中没有厕所的妇女发生不良妊娠结局的风险更高。在多变量模型中,家中没有厕所或使用共享厕所的妇女与不良妊娠结局之间没有关联。与其他具有相似特征的母亲相比,15-19 岁的青少年、未受教育、体重不足和贫血的母亲更有可能面临 APO。
我们的研究结果为关于产妇卫生行为和不良妊娠结局的文献相对较少做出了贡献。我们的研究结果支持卫生状况是即将分娩的妇女非常重要的一个方面,因为卫生状况与不良妊娠结局之间存在关联。卫生实践教育是当务之急,需要得到重视。