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Individual and community level factors associated with premature births, size of baby at birth and caesarean section deliveries in Kenya

Individual and community level factors associated with premature births, size of baby at birth and caesarean section deliveries in Kenya
Individual and community level factors associated with premature births, size of baby at birth and caesarean section deliveries in Kenya
Most previous studies addressing factors associated with adverse birth outcomes have been based on hospital statistics. This is a serious limitation in the developing countries where the majority of births do not occur within the health facilities. This paper examines factors associated with premature deliveries, small baby’s size at birth and Caesarean section deliveries in Kenya based on the 1993 Kenya Demographic and Health Survey data. Due to the hierarchical nature of the data, the analysis uses multilevel logistic regression models to take into account the family and community effects. The results show that the odds of premature births, small size of baby at birth and Caesarean section deliveries are significantly higher for first births than higher order births. Furthermore, antenatal care (measured by frequency of antenatal care visits and tetanus toxoid injection) is observed to have a negative association with the incidence of premature births. For baby’s size at birth, maternal nutritional status is observed to be a predominant factor. Short maternal stature is confirmed to be a significant risk factor for Caesarean section deliveries. The observed higher odds of Caesarean section deliveries among women from households of high socio-economic status is attributed to the expected association between socio-economic status and the use of appropriate maternal health care services. The odds of all the birth outcomes included in this study vary significantly between women. In addition, the odds of Caesarean section deliveries vary significantly between districts, after taking into account the individual level characteristics of the women and specific pregnancies.
Magadi, Monica
f3436e41-6c4f-4488-80c7-194c254ea4eb
Diamond, Ian
b4e9ea54-fced-4314-9286-727256504de9
Madise, Nyovani
2ea2fbcc-50da-4696-a0a5-2fe01db63d8c
Magadi, Monica
f3436e41-6c4f-4488-80c7-194c254ea4eb
Diamond, Ian
b4e9ea54-fced-4314-9286-727256504de9
Madise, Nyovani
2ea2fbcc-50da-4696-a0a5-2fe01db63d8c

Magadi, Monica, Diamond, Ian and Madise, Nyovani (2000) Individual and community level factors associated with premature births, size of baby at birth and caesarean section deliveries in Kenya. APHRC Working Papers.

Record type: Article

Abstract

Most previous studies addressing factors associated with adverse birth outcomes have been based on hospital statistics. This is a serious limitation in the developing countries where the majority of births do not occur within the health facilities. This paper examines factors associated with premature deliveries, small baby’s size at birth and Caesarean section deliveries in Kenya based on the 1993 Kenya Demographic and Health Survey data. Due to the hierarchical nature of the data, the analysis uses multilevel logistic regression models to take into account the family and community effects. The results show that the odds of premature births, small size of baby at birth and Caesarean section deliveries are significantly higher for first births than higher order births. Furthermore, antenatal care (measured by frequency of antenatal care visits and tetanus toxoid injection) is observed to have a negative association with the incidence of premature births. For baby’s size at birth, maternal nutritional status is observed to be a predominant factor. Short maternal stature is confirmed to be a significant risk factor for Caesarean section deliveries. The observed higher odds of Caesarean section deliveries among women from households of high socio-economic status is attributed to the expected association between socio-economic status and the use of appropriate maternal health care services. The odds of all the birth outcomes included in this study vary significantly between women. In addition, the odds of Caesarean section deliveries vary significantly between districts, after taking into account the individual level characteristics of the women and specific pregnancies.

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More information

Published date: 2000

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 34255
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/34255
PURE UUID: 75f63d3f-eb9e-4b4b-a63b-589aa06d8369
ORCID for Nyovani Madise: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2813-5295

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 26 Jul 2006
Last modified: 22 Jul 2022 20:42

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Contributors

Author: Monica Magadi
Author: Ian Diamond
Author: Nyovani Madise ORCID iD

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