Department of Economics and Centre for Modern Indian Studies, University of Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany.
United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), West and Central Africa Regional Office, Dakar, Senegal.
J Glob Health. 2021 Aug 10;11:13010. doi: 10.7189/jogh.11.13010. eCollection 2021.
Globally, health care seeking for childhood diseases seems to be on the rise. However, progress is slow and still, many cases of infectious diseases in children remain untreated, leading to preventable child mortality. A better understanding of care seeking behaviour may help to further increase the probability that a sick child is taken to a health facility for care.
We investigated whether mother's and father's age at birth of the child is associated with health care seeking behaviour for childhood diseases and how this association changed over time. For this observational study, we used repeated cross-sectional data, namely all available Demographic and Health Surveys as well as Multi-Indicator Cluster Surveys from Western and Central Africa, 1995 to 2017. We analysed care seeking behaviour for diarrhoea, acute respiratory infections (ARI), and treatment of diarrhoea with oral rehydration solution (ORS). We estimated ordinary least squares regressions, controlling for socioeconomic characteristics of the household and adding survey year- and country-fixed effects. Estimated associations are presented for the entire region and for each country separately to highlight heterogeneity.
Overall, the likelihood that care is sought for a child suffering from diarrhoea or ARI is low in Western and Central Africa. Probability of care seeking for diarrhoea ranges between 49% for mothers above 40 years and 53% for mothers between 25 and 29 years. For ARI, the rates are 60% and 62%, respectively. Treatment of diarrhoea with ORS is even lower, ranging between 23% and 26%. The probability that parents seek health care for their child does not seem to be associated with parents' age at birth. Mother's level of education and household's wealth status seem to be more important factors. There is evidence of the relationship between parents' age and care seeking changing over time, suggesting a stronger association in the past.
Parents' age at child birth does not seem to have a relevant association with care seeking for common childhood diseases. Identifying relevant factors may help in improving health care seeking behaviour of parents in low- and middle-income countries leading to reductions in child morbidity and mortality.
在全球范围内,儿童疾病的医疗保健寻求似乎呈上升趋势。然而,进展缓慢,许多儿童传染病病例仍未得到治疗,导致可预防的儿童死亡。更好地了解寻求医疗服务的行为可能有助于进一步增加患病儿童被送往医疗机构接受治疗的可能性。
我们调查了儿童母亲和父亲的出生年龄是否与儿童疾病的医疗保健寻求行为有关,以及这种关联随时间的变化情况。对于这项观察性研究,我们使用了重复的横截面数据,即来自 1995 年至 2017 年的西部和中部非洲所有现有的人口与健康调查以及多指标类集调查。我们分析了腹泻、急性呼吸道感染(ARI)以及使用口服补液盐(ORS)治疗腹泻的医疗保健寻求行为。我们使用普通最小二乘法回归进行分析,控制了家庭的社会经济特征,并添加了调查年份和国家固定效应。我们为整个地区和每个国家分别呈现了估计的关联,以突出异质性。
总体而言,在西部和中部非洲,儿童腹泻或 ARI 患者寻求医疗保健的可能性较低。对于腹泻,年龄在 40 岁以上的母亲寻求医疗保健的可能性为 49%,而年龄在 25 至 29 岁的母亲为 53%。对于 ARI,这两个年龄段的比例分别为 60%和 62%。使用 ORS 治疗腹泻的比例甚至更低,在 23%至 26%之间。父母为孩子寻求医疗保健的可能性似乎与父母的出生年龄无关。母亲的教育水平和家庭的财富状况似乎是更重要的因素。有证据表明,父母年龄与寻求医疗保健之间的关系随时间而变化,表明过去的关联更强。
儿童母亲和父亲的出生年龄似乎与常见儿童疾病的医疗保健寻求行为没有相关关联。确定相关因素可能有助于改善中低收入国家父母的医疗保健寻求行为,从而降低儿童发病率和死亡率。