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The inequality of maternal health in urban sub-Saharan Africa

The inequality of maternal health in urban sub-Saharan Africa
The inequality of maternal health in urban sub-Saharan Africa
Numerous studies document the urban poor disadvantage in child health conditions in African cities. This study uses DHS data from 23 countries in sub-Saharan Africa to examine whether the urban poor experience comparable disadvantages in maternal health. The results show that although the urban poor on average receive better antenatal and delivery care than rural residents, they consistently have poorer maternal health indicators than the urban non-poor. Further analyses based on a multilevel approach reveal significant variations in urban maternal health inequalities across countries of sub-Saharan Africa. The urban poor disadvantage is more pronounced in countries with better average maternal health indicators, where the urban poor tend to be even worse off than rural residents.
A03/01
Southampton Statistical Sciences Research Institute, University of Southampton
Magadi, Monica
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Zulu, Eliya
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Brockerhoff, Martin
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Magadi, Monica
f3436e41-6c4f-4488-80c7-194c254ea4eb
Zulu, Eliya
99eb823a-75aa-4d19-86f0-c4b12e475e91
Brockerhoff, Martin
d26d6e9d-1345-4718-8896-7020c2cded89

Magadi, Monica, Zulu, Eliya and Brockerhoff, Martin (2003) The inequality of maternal health in urban sub-Saharan Africa (S3RI Applications and Policy Working Papers, A03/01) Southampton, UK. Southampton Statistical Sciences Research Institute, University of Southampton 40pp.

Record type: Monograph (Working Paper)

Abstract

Numerous studies document the urban poor disadvantage in child health conditions in African cities. This study uses DHS data from 23 countries in sub-Saharan Africa to examine whether the urban poor experience comparable disadvantages in maternal health. The results show that although the urban poor on average receive better antenatal and delivery care than rural residents, they consistently have poorer maternal health indicators than the urban non-poor. Further analyses based on a multilevel approach reveal significant variations in urban maternal health inequalities across countries of sub-Saharan Africa. The urban poor disadvantage is more pronounced in countries with better average maternal health indicators, where the urban poor tend to be even worse off than rural residents.

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Published date: 2003

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 8136
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/8136
PURE UUID: f68e54d7-7305-4ae8-a43c-cbde1ea80975

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Date deposited: 11 Jul 2004
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 04:50

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Contributors

Author: Monica Magadi
Author: Eliya Zulu
Author: Martin Brockerhoff

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