Background: Policy encouraging healthcare intrapartum/delivery care is critical to accelerating the decline in maternal mortality. The study analyzes intrapartum/delivery care factors in Indonesia and the Philippines.
Methods: The investigation included 15,346 Indonesian and 7992 Filipino women (ages 15 to 49 who delivered during the previous five years). Aside from the location of intrapartum/delivery care as a dependent variable, additional factors investigated included domicile, marital status, age, occupation, education, parity, wealth, and ANC-the conclusion of the study utilizing binary logistic regression.
Results: Women in both countries predominantly do healthcare intrapartum/delivery care. Both countries' urban women are more likely to receive intrapartum/delivery care than rural women. The higher the amount of schooling, the greater the likelihood of receiving intrapartum/delivery care. The lower the parity, the higher the chance to do healthcare intrapartum/delivery care. The higher the wealth position, the greater the likelihood of receiving intrapartum/delivery care. Furthermore, women in both nations who had four or more antenatal visits were more likely to receive intrapartum/delivery care.
Conclusion: The study concluded five factors related to healthcare intrapartum/delivery care in the Philippines: residence, education, parity, wealth, and ANC. Meanwhile, there are six factors related to healthcare intrapartum/delivery care in Indonesia: place, age, education, parity, wealth, and ANC.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.heliyon.2024.e27718 | DOI Listing |
Background: Policy encouraging healthcare intrapartum/delivery care is critical to accelerating the decline in maternal mortality. The study analyzes intrapartum/delivery care factors in Indonesia and the Philippines.
Methods: The investigation included 15,346 Indonesian and 7992 Filipino women (ages 15 to 49 who delivered during the previous five years).
Acta Obstet Gynecol Scand
April 2022
Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Trousseau Hospital - Assistance Publique-Hopitaux de Paris, Sorbonne University, Paris, France.
Introduction: The aim of the study was to identify the obstetric risk factors for hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (HIE) in infants with asphyxia at birth.
Material And Methods: This multicenter case-control study covered the 5-year period from 2014 through 2018 and included newborns ≥36 weeks of gestation with an umbilical pH at birth ≤7.0.
Asia Pac Fam Med
May 2013
Shizuoka Family Medicine Training Program, Kikugawa Family Medicine Center, 1055-1 Akatsuchi, Kikugawa, Shizuoka 437-1507, Japan.
Background: Even though Japan faces serious challenges in women's health care such as a rapidly aging population, attrition of obstetrical providers, and a harsh legal climate, few family medicine residency training programs in Japan include training in obstetrics, and the literature lacks research on women's views of intra-partum pregnancy care by family physicians.
Findings: In this exploratory study, we conducted semi-structured qualitative interviews with five women who received their admission, intrapartum, delivery and discharge care from family medicine residents in the obstetrics ward of a community training hospital. Four women had vaginal births, and one had a Cesarean section.
BJOG
May 2002
Nuffield Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Oxford, John Radcliffe Hospital, UK.
Objective: To determine how long it takes from the decision to achieve delivery by non-elective caesarean section (DDI), the influences on this interval, and the impact on neonatal condition at birth.
Design: Twelve months prospective data collection on all non-elective caesarean sections.
Methods: Prospective collection of data relating to all caesarean sections in 1996 in a major teaching hospital obstetric unit was conducted, without the knowledge of the other clinicians providing clinical care.
J Fla Med Assoc
August 1995
Family Health Services, State Health Office, Florida Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, Tallahassee, USA.
The Florida Pregnancy Risk Assessment Monitoring System (PRAMS) survey, a population-based, random sample mail-telephone query of new mothers of live-born infants, includes questions about pregnancy timing and wantedness, sources of payment for care, other related topics, mother's risk behaviors, satisfaction with prenatal care, and the newborn's health. There were 2,059 completed responses in 1993. Results are weighted for factors affecting response rates to reflect all births.
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