Prevalence and correlates of sex-selective abortions and missing girls in Nepal: evidence from the 2011 Population Census and 2016 Demographic and Health Survey
Prevalence and correlates of sex-selective abortions and missing girls in Nepal: evidence from the 2011 Population Census and 2016 Demographic and Health Survey
Objectives: these were to: (1) produce national and subnational estimates of the sex ratio at birth (SRB) and number of missing girl births in Nepal and (2) understand the socioeconomic correlates of these phenomena.
Design: observational secondary data analysis of (1) the 2011 population census of Nepal and (2) the Nepal Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) 2006, 2011 and 2016.
Setting: Nepal.
Participants: (1) 2 567 963 children age 0–4 in the 2011 population census and (2) 27 329 births recorded in DHSs.
Primary and secondary outcomes: we estimate the SRB, and number and proportion of missing girls in the year and 5 years before the census by district. We also calculate conditional sex ratios (the SRB dependant on parity and sex of previous children) by province, time, education and wealth.
Results: we find that 11 districts have significantly skewed sex ratios at birth in the 2011 population census, with the highest SRBs observed in Arghakhanchi (SRB=127) and Bhaktapur (SRB=123). 22 540 girl births were missing in the 5 years before the 2011 population census. Sex-selective abortion is geographically concentrated, especially in the Kathmandu Valley and Lumbini Province, with 53% of missing girls found in only 11 out of 75 districts.
DHS data confirm this, with elevated conditional sex ratios observed in Bagmati and Lumbini Provinces; conditional sex ratios where previous births were all female also became more skewed over time. Skewed sex ratios are concentrated among wealthier more educated groups.
Conclusions: it is clear that sex selection will persist and develop in Nepal unless a coordinated effort is made to address both the demand for and supply of this service. Policies should be holistic and encompass economic and legal gender equity, and strengthen monitoring mechanisms to prevent technology misuse, without jeopardising the right to safe, free and legal abortion.
demography, health policy, public health
Channon, Melanie
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Puri, Mahesh
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Gietel-Basten, Stuart
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Williams Stone, Lucy
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Channon, Andrew Amos
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16 March 2021
Channon, Melanie
9fbd1bc5-7454-415a-8539-c1468a2d60da
Puri, Mahesh
ab31f18f-600f-4019-a899-c203146cbc85
Gietel-Basten, Stuart
4c2dfe87-887c-46ca-b938-be6efbefb5b9
Williams Stone, Lucy
686e4929-66ee-4d75-939e-6b1255c154e6
Channon, Andrew Amos
5a60607c-6861-4960-a81d-504169d5880c
Channon, Melanie, Puri, Mahesh, Gietel-Basten, Stuart, Williams Stone, Lucy and Channon, Andrew Amos
(2021)
Prevalence and correlates of sex-selective abortions and missing girls in Nepal: evidence from the 2011 Population Census and 2016 Demographic and Health Survey.
BMJ Open, 11 (e042542), [e042542].
(doi:10.1136/bmjopen-2020-042542).
Abstract
Objectives: these were to: (1) produce national and subnational estimates of the sex ratio at birth (SRB) and number of missing girl births in Nepal and (2) understand the socioeconomic correlates of these phenomena.
Design: observational secondary data analysis of (1) the 2011 population census of Nepal and (2) the Nepal Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) 2006, 2011 and 2016.
Setting: Nepal.
Participants: (1) 2 567 963 children age 0–4 in the 2011 population census and (2) 27 329 births recorded in DHSs.
Primary and secondary outcomes: we estimate the SRB, and number and proportion of missing girls in the year and 5 years before the census by district. We also calculate conditional sex ratios (the SRB dependant on parity and sex of previous children) by province, time, education and wealth.
Results: we find that 11 districts have significantly skewed sex ratios at birth in the 2011 population census, with the highest SRBs observed in Arghakhanchi (SRB=127) and Bhaktapur (SRB=123). 22 540 girl births were missing in the 5 years before the 2011 population census. Sex-selective abortion is geographically concentrated, especially in the Kathmandu Valley and Lumbini Province, with 53% of missing girls found in only 11 out of 75 districts.
DHS data confirm this, with elevated conditional sex ratios observed in Bagmati and Lumbini Provinces; conditional sex ratios where previous births were all female also became more skewed over time. Skewed sex ratios are concentrated among wealthier more educated groups.
Conclusions: it is clear that sex selection will persist and develop in Nepal unless a coordinated effort is made to address both the demand for and supply of this service. Policies should be holistic and encompass economic and legal gender equity, and strengthen monitoring mechanisms to prevent technology misuse, without jeopardising the right to safe, free and legal abortion.
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Prevalence and correlates
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Accepted/In Press date: 6 March 2021
Published date: 16 March 2021
Additional Information:
Funding Information:
Funding This work was supported by the Birth Control Trust of the Galton Institute, grant number R37295/GA001.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 BMJ Publishing Group. All rights reserved.
Keywords:
demography, health policy, public health
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 447882
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/447882
ISSN: 2044-6055
PURE UUID: 412d514f-c510-4c68-8377-38ffc1b60797
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Date deposited: 25 Mar 2021 18:19
Last modified: 06 Jun 2024 01:42
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Author:
Melanie Channon
Author:
Mahesh Puri
Author:
Stuart Gietel-Basten
Author:
Lucy Williams Stone
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