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Predictors of Safe Delivery Service Utilization in Arsi Zone, South-East Ethiopia

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TLDR
Maternal education, her birth experience and her use of prenatal services are important predictors of safe delivery service use by mothers, and birth attended by skilled personnel was low in the study area.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Evidence show that lack of access to and use of, essential obstetric care services to be a crucial factor that contributes to the high maternal morbidity and mortality. Skilled attendance during labor, delivery and early post-partum period could reduce deaths due to obstructed labor, hemorrhage, sepsis and eclampsia. There is limited information on the mothers’ use of skilled delivery services in the study area. This study assessed the predictors of safe delivery service utilization in Arsi Zone, Southeast Ethiopia. METHODS: A cross- sectional community based study using quantitative and qualitative methods was conducted from February 15th to March 15th 2006. A total of 1089 women who had at least one birth one year prior to the study were involved in the study from nine rural and four urban kebeles in three Woredas (Districts) selected using a systematic sampling method from all households in the study area. A pre-tested structured interviewer administered questionnaire was used to collect data. Information on the utilization of safe delivery service and socio-demographic, individual and institutional factors and past obstetric history were collected. Focus Group Discussion guide was used for qualitative data collection. The data were edited, cleaned, and entered into a computer and analyzed using SPSS for windows version 12.0. RESULT: One thousand seventy four women who had at least one birth were interviewed making a response rate 98.6%. Two hundred seventy one (75.0%) of urban and 373(52.0%) rural women received antenatal care from skilled health professional at least once during their last pregnancy. Thirty-one (4.3%) of rural and 145 (40.4%) of urban women delivered in health institution. In multivariate analysis showed that residential area OR= 8.5, 95%CI; (5.1,13.9), parity OR=0.18, 95%CI; (0.08, 0.42), and ANC service use OR= 4.5, 95%CI; (2.2,8.9), and maternal education OR=4.6, 95%CI; (1.7,12.8), were most significant predictors of safe delivery service use by mothers (P< 0.01). CONCLUSION: Birth attended by skilled personnel was low in the study area. Maternal education, her birth experience and her use of prenatal services are important predictors. Promoting information, education and communication on safe delivery service utilization, expansion of health service and empowerment of women are needed. KEYWORDS : safe delivery, skilled attendants, and maternal health service utilization Ethiop J Health Sci . Vol. 21, Special Issue August, 2011

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Journal ArticleDOI

Determinants of maternal health care utilization in Holeta town, central Ethiopia

TL;DR: The utilization of ANC and DC service is inadequate in Holeta town, central Ethiopia and improving the status of women by expanding educational opportunities, strengthening promotion of antenatal and delivery care by enhancing community awareness about the importance ofANC and DC are recommended.
Journal ArticleDOI

Determinants of antenatal and delivery care utilization in Tigray region, Ethiopia: A cross-sectional study

TL;DR: A relatively acceptable utilisation of ANC services but extremely low institutional delivery was observed, and different aspects of HEP need to be strengthened to improve maternal health in Tigray.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antenatal Care as a Means of Increasing Birth in the Health Facility and Reducing Maternal Mortality: A Systematic Review

TL;DR: The present regression and meta-analysis has identified the relative advantage of having antenatal care to give birth in health facilities, however, the majority of women who had antenatal Care did not show up to a health facility for delivery, so future research needs to give emphasis to identifying barriers to health facility delivery.
Journal ArticleDOI

Factors associated with Institutional delivery service utilization among mothers in Bahir Dar City administration, Amhara region: a community based cross sectional study.

TL;DR: In this study, institutional delivery service utilization is optimal, urban mothers were more likely to practice institutional delivery and intensifying education for women and behavior change communication (BCC) interventions to increase early initiation and up-take of ANC service use in the first trimester and delaying marriage are recommended to promote institutional delivery Service utilization.
Journal ArticleDOI

Factors associated with institutional delivery service utilization in Ethiopia.

TL;DR: Most obstetric complications occur unpredictably during the time of delivery, but they can be prevented with proper medical care in the health facilities as discussed by the authors. But despite the Ethiopian government's efforts to expand health service facilities and promote health institution-based delivery service in the country, an estimated 85% of births still take place at home.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Utilization of maternal health care services in Southern India

TL;DR: Results show that utilization of maternal health care services is highest in Kerala followed by Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka, and there was no significant rural-urban gap in the case of antenatal care.
Journal ArticleDOI

The socio-economic determinants of maternal health care utilization in Turkey.

TL;DR: The results indicate that educational attainment, parity level, health insurance coverage, ethnicity, household wealth and geographic region are statistically significant factors that affect the use of health care services thought essential to reduce infant and child mortality rates.
Journal ArticleDOI

Does Antenatal Care Make a Difference to Safe Delivery? A Study in Urban Uttar Pradesh, India

TL;DR: A new measure for antenatal care utilization, comprised of 20 input components covering care content and visit frequency, is introduced, showing a strong positive association between level of care obtained during pregnancy and the use of safe delivery care.
Journal ArticleDOI

Education and the use of maternal health care in Thailand

TL;DR: Overall, secondary education emerges as the most consistent predictor of health service use showing higher likelihood of use of all three services, and educational differentials in the use of delivery assistance start emerging only after secondary schooling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Utilization of care during pregnancy in rural Guatemala: does obstetrical need matter?

TL;DR: Examination of factors associated with the use of biomedical care during pregnancy in Guatemala suggests that obstetrical need, as well as demographic, social, and cultural factors, are important predictors of pregnancy care, and measures of availability and access to health services have modest effects.
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