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International Family Planning Perspectives | 2007

Maternal health and care-seeking behavior in Bangladesh: Findings from a national survey

Michael A. Koenig; Kanta Jamil; Peter Kim Streatfield; Tulshi D. Saha; Ahmed Al-Sabir; Shams El Arifeen; Ken Hill; Yasmin Haque

CONTEXT Although the reduction of maternal mortality levels is a key Millennium Development Goal, community-based evidence on obstetric complications and maternal care-seeking behavior remains limited in low-resource countries. METHODS This study presents an overview of key findings from the 2001 Bangladesh Maternal Health Services and Maternal Mortality Survey of ever-married women aged 13-49. The survey collected data on the prevalence of obstetric complications, womens knowledge of life-threatening complications, treatment-seeking behavior and reasons for delay in seeking medical care. RESULTS Bangladeshi women report low but increasing use of antenatal care, as well as low rates of delivery in a health facility or with the assistance of a skilled provider. Although almost half of women reported having one or more complications during pregnancy that they perceived as life threatening, only one in three sought treatment from a qualified provider. More than three-fourths of women with the time-sensitive complications of convulsions or excessive bleeding either failed to seek any treatment or sought treatment from an unqualified provider. The principal reason cited for failing to seek care for life-threatening complications was concern over medical costs, and pronounced socioeconomic disparities were found for maternal care-seeking behavior in both urban and rural Bangladesh. CONCLUSIONS Despite these gaps in access to skilled delivery and effective emergency obstetric care, some progress has been made in reducing maternal mortality levels. Improved obstetric care and declining levels of fertility and unwanted pregnancy may have played critical roles in addressing the maternal health care needs of Bangladeshi women.


The Lancet | 2014

Maternal mortality in Bangladesh: a Countdown to 2015 country case study

Shams El Arifeen; Kenneth Hill; Karar Zunaid Ahsan; Kanta Jamil; Quamrun Nahar; Peter Kim Streatfield

BACKGROUND Bangladesh is one of the only nine Countdown countries that are on track to achieve the primary target of Millennium Development Goal (MDG) 5 by 2015. It is also the only low-income or middle-income country with two large, nationally-representative, high-quality household surveys focused on the measurement of maternal mortality and service use. METHODS We use data from the 2001 and 2010 Bangladesh Maternal Mortality Surveys to measure change in the maternal mortality ratio (MMR) and from these and six Bangladesh Demographic and Health Surveys to measure changes in factors potentially related to such change. We estimate the changes in risk of maternal death between the two surveys using Poisson regression. FINDINGS The MMR fell from 322 deaths per 100,000 livebirths (95% CI 253-391) in 1998-2001 to 194 deaths per 100,000 livebirths (149-238) in 2007-10, an annual rate of decrease of 5·6%. This decrease rate is slightly higher than that required (5·5%) to achieve the MDG target between 1990 and 2015. The key contribution to this decrease was a drop in mortality risk mainly due to improved access to and use of health facilities. Additionally, a number of favourable changes occurred during this period: fertility decreased and the proportion of births associated with high risk to the mother fell; income per head increased sharply and the poverty rate fell; and the education levels of women of reproductive age improved substantially. We estimate that 52% of maternal deaths that would have occurred in 2010 in view of 2001 rates were averted because of decreases in fertility and risk of maternal death. INTERPRETATION The decrease in MMR in Bangladesh seems to have been the result of factors both within and outside the health sector. This finding holds important lessons for other countries as the world discusses and decides on the post-MDG goals and strategies. For Bangladesh, this case study provides a strong rationale for the pursuit of a broader developmental agenda alongside increased and accelerated investments in improving access to and quality of public and private health-care facilities providing maternal health in Bangladesh. FUNDING United States Agency for International Development, UK Department for International Development, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.


Journal of Urban Health-bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine | 2018

Reducing Inequity in Urban Health: Have the Intra-urban Differentials in Reproductive Health Service Utilization and Child Nutritional Outcome Narrowed in Bangladesh?

Gustavo Angeles; Karar Zunaid Ahsan; Peter Kim Streatfield; Shams El Arifeen; Kanta Jamil

Bangladesh is undergoing a rapid urbanization process. About one-third of the population of major cities in the country live in slums, which are areas that exhibit pronounced concentrations of factors that negatively affect health and nutrition. People living in slums face greater challenge to improve their health than other parts of the country, which fuels the growing intra-urban health inequities. Two rounds of the Bangladesh Urban Health Survey (UHS), conducted in 2013 and 2006, were designed to examine the reproductive health status and service utilization between slum and non-slum residents. We applied an adaptation of the difference-in-differences (DID) model to pooled data from the 2006 and 2013 UHS rounds to examine changes over time in intra-urban differences between slums and non-slums in key health outcomes and service utilization and to identify the factors associated with the reduction in intra-urban gaps. In terms of change in intra-urban differentials during 2006–2013, DID regression analysis estimated that the gap between slums and non-slums for skilled birth attendant (SBA) during delivery significantly decreased. DID regression analysis also estimated that the gap between slums and non-slums for use of modern contraceptives among currently married women also narrowed significantly, and the gap reversed in favor of slums. However, the DID estimates indicate a small but not statistically significant reduction in the gap between slums and non-slums for child nutritional status. Results from extended DID regression model indicate that availability of community health workers in urban areas appears to have played a significant role in reducing the gap in SBA. The urban population in Bangladesh is expected to grow rapidly in the coming decades. Wide disparities between urban slums and non-slums can potentially push country performance off track during the post-2015 era, unless the specific health needs of the expanding slum communities are addressed. To our knowledge, this is the first systematic explanation and quantification of the role of various factors for improving intra-urban health equity in Bangladesh using nationally representative data. The findings provide a strong rationale for continuing and expanding community-based reproductive health services in urban areas by the NGOs with a focus on slum populations.


SSM-Population Health | 2017

Women's television watching and reproductive health behavior in Bangladesh

Mizanur Rahman; Siân L. Curtis; Nitai Chakraborty; Kanta Jamil

Bangladesh has made significant social, economic, and health progress in recent decades, yet many reproductive health indicators remain weak. Access to television (TV) is increasing rapidly and provides a potential mechanism for influencing health behavior. We present a conceptual framework for the influence of different types of TV exposure on individual’s aspirations and health behavior through the mechanisms of observational learning and ideational change. We analyze data from two large national surveys conducted in 2010 and 2011 to examine the association between women’s TV watching and five reproductive health behaviors controlling for the effects of observed confounders. We find that TV watchers are significantly more likely to desire fewer children, are more likely to use contraceptives, and are less likely to have a birth in the two years before the survey. They are more likely to seek at least four antenatal care visits and to utilize a skilled birth attendant. Consequently, continued increase in the reach of TV and associated growth in TV viewing is potentially an important driver of health behaviors in the country.


Archive | 1994

Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey 1993-1994

S.N. Mitra; Ahmed Al-Sabir; Anne R. Cross; Kanta Jamil


Bulletin of The World Health Organization | 2006

How should we measure maternal mortality in the developing world? A comparison of household deaths and sibling history approaches

Kenneth Hill; Shams El Arifeen; Michael A. Koenig; Ahmed Al-Sabir; Kanta Jamil; Han Raggers


Health Policy and Planning | 1999

The immunization programme in Bangladesh: impressive gains in coverage, but gaps remain.

Kanta Jamil; Abbas Bhuiya; Kim Streatfield; Nitai Chakrabarty


BMC Public Health | 2015

Causes of adult female deaths in Bangladesh: findings from two National Surveys

Quamrun Nahar; Shams El Arifeen; Kanta Jamil; Peter Kim Streatfield


World Academy of Science, Engineering and Technology, International Journal of Nutrition and Food Engineering | 2016

Nutrition Transition in Bangladesh: Multisectoral Responsiveness of Health Systems and Innovative Measures to Mobilize Resources Are Required for Preventing This Epidemic in Making

Shusmita Khan; Shams El Arifeen; Kanta Jamil


Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey | 2015

Maternal mortality in Bangladesh: A countdown to 2015 country case study

Shams El Arifeen; Kenneth Hill; Karar Zunaid Ahsan; Kanta Jamil; Quamrun Nahar; Peter Kim Streatfield

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Karar Zunaid Ahsan

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Kenneth Hill

Johns Hopkins University

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Kenneth Hill

Johns Hopkins University

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Gustavo Angeles

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Mizanur Rahman

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Shusmita Khan

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Siân L. Curtis

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Tulshi D. Saha

National Institutes of Health

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