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Public Health Reports | 2016

Female Genital Mutilation/Cutting in the United States: Updated Estimates of Women and Girls at Risk, 2012

Howard I. Goldberg; Paul Stupp; Ekwutosi M. Okoroh; Ghenet Besera; David A. Goodman; Isabella Danel

Objectives. In 1996, the U.S. Congress passed legislation making female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C) illegal in the United States. CDC published the first estimates of the number of women and girls at risk for FGM/C in 1997. Since 2012, various constituencies have again raised concerns about the practice in the United States. We updated an earlier estimate of the number of women and girls in the United States who were at risk for FGM/C or its consequences. Methods. We estimated the number of women and girls who were at risk for undergoing FGM/C or its consequences in 2012 by applying country-specific prevalence of FGM/C to the estimated number of women and girls living in the United States who were born in that country or who lived with a parent born in that country. Results. Approximately 513,000 women and girls in the United States were at risk for FGM/C or its consequences in 2012, which was more than three times higher than the earlier estimate, based on 1990 data. The increase in the number of women and girls younger than 18 years of age at risk for FGM/C was more than four times that of previous estimates. Conclusion. The estimated increase was wholly a result of rapid growth in the number of immigrants from FGM/C-practicing countries living in the United States and not from increases in FGM/C prevalence in those countries. Scientifically valid information regarding whether women or their daughters have actually undergone FGM/C and related information that can contribute to efforts to prevent the practice in the United States and provide needed health services to women who have undergone FGM/C are needed.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2010

Perinatal risk for common mental disorders and suicidal ideation among women in Paraguay

Kanako Ishida; Paul Stupp; Florina Serbanescu; Edgar Tullo

To examine the association between mental health problems among pregnant women and those in the postpartum period using a nationally representative sample of 6538 women aged 15–49 years from the National Survey of Demography and Sexual and Reproductive Health in Paraguay.


Revista Panamericana De Salud Publica-pan American Journal of Public Health | 2006

Burden of diarrhea among children in Honduras, 2000-2004: estimates of the role of rotavirus

José Orlando Solórzano Girón; Ida Berenice Molina; Reina M. Turcios-Ruiz; Claudia E. Quiroz Mejia; Luis Miguel Amendola; Lucia Helena de Oliveira; Jon Kim Andrus; Paul Stupp; Joseph S. Bresee; Roger I. Glass

OBJECTIVES To estimate the annual burden of diarrhea and of diarrhea that is associated with rotavirus (RV) in children who are treated at public clinics and hospitals in Honduras. METHODS Data were collected from computerized records of all children < 5 years old treated for diarrhea at clinics and hospitals operated by the Secretary of Health for the period of 2000 through 2004. A review of studies of RV in Honduras and neighboring countries provided estimates of detection rates of RV among children treated for acute diarrhea as outpatients or as inpatients. From these data, we estimated the annual number of cases of diarrhea and of rotavirus-related diarrhea in Honduras, the cumulative incidence of diarrhea and of rotavirus-related diarrhea for a child from birth to age 5 years, and the number of fatalities due to RV among children hospitalized for diarrhea. RESULTS From 2000 through 2004, a mean of 222,000 clinic visits, 4,390 hospitalizations, and 162 in-hospital deaths due to diarrhea were recorded annually among children < 5 years of age in the public health facilities in Honduras. From our review of scientific literature on Honduras and neighboring countries, an estimated 30% of outpatients and 43% of inpatients who were treated for diarrhea would be expected to have RV. Consequently, we estimated that 66,600 outpatient visits, 1,888 hospitalizations, and 70 in-hospital deaths among children < 5 years in Honduras could be attributed to RV each year. Therefore, a child in the first five years of life has a respective risk for consultation, hospitalization, and in-hospital death of 1:1, 1:46, and 1:1,235 for diarrhea. For an episode associated with RV, the respective risks are 1:3, 1:106, and 1:2,857. These values likely underestimate the true burden of diarrhea in Honduras, since some 51% of children with acute diarrhea do not receive formal care for the illness, 70% do not receive oral rehydration solution, and 80% of diarrheal deaths occur outside of hospitals. CONCLUSIONS Diarrhea is a major cause of illness among children < 5 years old in Honduras, and RV is likely the most common cause. Our preliminary estimates need to be refined so that health planners in Honduras can make decisions on the future use of rotavirus vaccines. A program of hospital-based surveillance for rotavirus in Honduras has been established to address this need.


International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health | 2009

Stalled decline in fertility in Ecuador.

Kanako Ishida; Paul Stupp; Jose Ordonez Sotomayor

This article considers the data from the Ecuador Demographic Maternal and Infant Health Surveys conducted in 1994 1999 and 2004. The consistency and quality of fertility measurements in these three surveys are assessed by comparing cohort-specific fertility rates on the basis of retrospective five-year birth histories.


Journal of Biosocial Science | 1994

Ethnicity and the use of health services in Belize

Paul Stupp; Beth A. Macke; Richard S. Monteith; Sandra Paredez

Data from the 1991 Belize Family Health Survey show differentials in the use of maternal and child health services between ethnic groups (Creole, Mestizo, Maya/Ketchi and Garifuna). Multivariate analysis is used to explore whether such differentials can truly be attributed to ethnicity or to other characteristics that distinguish the ethnic groups. Health services considered are: family planning, place of delivery (hospital/other), postpartum and newborn check-ups after a birth, and immunisations for children. The language usually spoken in the household is found to be important for interpreting ethnic differentials. Mayan-speaking Maya/Ketchis are significantly less likely to use family planning services or to give birth in a hospital. Spanish-speakers (Mestizos and Maya/Ketchis) are less likely to use newborn and postpartum check-ups, after controlling for other characteristics. There are no ethnic differentials for immunisations. Programmatic implications of these results are discussed.


Population Research and Policy Review | 1996

An alternative sampling strategy for obtaining child health data in a reproductive health survey.

Laurence M. Grummer-Strawn; Paul Stupp

Retrospective demographic surveys typically collect substantial information about child health. This information is often collected for all children born during a specified period. For women with several young children, the interview can become quite long. To shorten the interview, some surveys have asked child health questions only for the last child born. However, data on the last birth may be biased because last children have a younger age distribution and have longer subsequent birth intervals than does the average child. In this paper, we propose an alternative approach to collecting child health data - that child health questions be asked only for a child chosen randomly from among the respondents children younger than age five. This alternative has the advantage of keeping the interview shorter but does not lead to biased information.


BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth | 2017

Rapid reduction of maternal mortality in Uganda and Zambia through the saving mothers, giving life initiative: results of year 1 evaluation

Florina Serbanescu; Howard I. Goldberg; Isabella Danel; Tadesse Wuhib; Lawrence H. Marum; Walter Obiero; James B. McAuley; Jane Aceng; Ewlyn Chomba; Paul Stupp; Claudia Morrissey Conlon

BackgroundAchieving maternal mortality reduction as a development goal remains a major challenge in most low-resource countries. Saving Mothers, Giving Life (SMGL) is a multi-partner initiative designed to reduce maternal mortality rapidly in high mortality settings through community and facility evidence-based interventions and district-wide health systems strengthening that could reduce delays to appropriate obstetric care.MethodsAn evaluation employing multiple studies and data collection methods was used to compare baseline maternal outcomes to those during Year 1 in SMGL pilot districts in Uganda and Zambia. Studies include health facility assessments, pregnancy outcome monitoring, enhanced maternal mortality detection in facilities, and population-based investigation of community maternal deaths. Population-based evaluation used standard approaches and comparable indicators to measure outcome and impact, and to allow comparison of the SMGL implementation in unique country contexts.ResultsThe evaluation found a 30% reduction in the population-based maternal mortality ratio (MMR) in Uganda during Year 1, from 452 to 316 per 100,000 live births. The MMR in health facilities declined by 35% in each country (from 534 to 345 in Uganda and from 310 to 202 in Zambia). The institutional delivery rate increased by 62% in Uganda and 35% in Zambia. The number of facilities providing emergency obstetric and newborn care (EmONC) rose from 10 to 25 in Uganda and from 7 to 11 in Zambia. Partial EmONC care became available in many more low and mid-level facilities. Cesarean section rates for all births increased by 23% in Uganda and 15% in Zambia. The proportion of women with childbirth complications delivered in EmONC facilities rose by 25% in Uganda and 23% in Zambia. Facility case fatality rates fell from 2.6 to 2.0% in Uganda and 3.1 to 2.0% in Zambia.ConclusionsMaternal mortality ratios fell significantly in one year in Uganda and Zambia following the introduction of the SMGL model. This model employed a comprehensive district system strengthening approach. The lessons learned from SMGL can inform policymakers and program managers in other low and middle income settings where similar approaches could be utilized to rapidly reduce preventable maternal deaths.


Population Studies-a Journal of Demography | 2011

The problems of eligibility and endogenous confounders when assessing the mortality impact of a nationwide disease-prevention programme: The case of insecticide-treated nets in Togo

Kanako Ishida; Paul Stupp; Marcy Erskine; Howard I. Goldberg; Kodjo Morgah

Evaluation of the mortality impact of nationwide disease-prevention efforts is complicated by potential endogeneity: programme recipients may have unobserved characteristics that simultaneously make them both more likely to become recipients and more likely to survive as a result of other health practices. This population-based study assesses the mortality impact of a nationwide programme that distributed insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) to mothers of children aged 9–59 months in Togo. By comparing mortality rates before and after the programme according to households’ eligibility status, we demonstrate that a one-time programme that restricts eligibility to households with a surviving child excludes some households with a high risk of child mortality. We then apply simultaneous estimation models to untangle the mortality impact of ITNs from the effects of unobserved confounders and show that among eligible households, living in a household with ITNs significantly reduces mortality for children aged 20–59 months, even after controlling for endogeneity.


Paediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology | 1997

The relationship of interpregnancy interval to infant birthweight and length of gestation among low‐risk women, Georgia

Melissa M. Adams; Kristin Delaney; Paul Stupp; Brian J. McCarthy; James Rawlings


Social Science & Medicine | 2010

Exploring the associations between intimate partner violence and women's mental health: Evidence from a population-based study in Paraguay

Kanako Ishida; Paul Stupp; Mercedes Melian; Florina Serbanescu; Mary M. Goodwin

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Kanako Ishida

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Howard I. Goldberg

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Florina Serbanescu

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Isabella Danel

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Beth A. Macke

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Brian J. McCarthy

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Claudia Morrissey Conlon

United States Agency for International Development

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David A. Goodman

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Ekwutosi M. Okoroh

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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Ghenet Besera

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

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