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Fatalism or vigilance? Exposure to infant and maternal deaths and subsequent use of maternal health services in Malawi. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • In developing countries, understanding why individuals may avoid using health services is essential for improving population health, especially in places with high mortality rates.
  • A study in Malawi investigates how women's exposure to death (specifically a sister's maternal death or a child's neonatal death) impacts their likelihood of using maternal health services.
  • Findings suggest that rather than leading to fatalism, exposure to death tends to increase women's health vigilance, prompting them to seek out more maternal care amid significant health risks.

Article Abstract

In developing contexts, where formal health services are still expanding, understanding what factors discourage individuals from using health services is critical to advance population health. A long theorized, but rarely investigated, conjecture is that in high-mortality contexts, exposure to death can beget fatalism, or even foster distrust of formal healthcare, locking families into cycles of low use of health services. A counter perspective, however, suggests exposure to death can encourage individuals' health vigilance, corresponding with their higher use of health services. We test these competing ideas by analyzing the associations between women's intimate exposure to death in the context of pregnancy and delivery via (1) a sister's maternal death and (2) an infant child's neonatal death, and their subsequent use of maternal health services. We focus on the context of Malawi, a setting that features high maternal and infant mortality rates, similar to those observed across much of sub-Saharan Africa, as well as persistent gaps in service use. Specifically, we use Malawi Demographic and Health Survey (2015-16) data to examine if a sister's maternal death or a child's neonatal death corresponds with a woman's odds of attending full antenatal care during a subsequent pregnancy or delivering the pregnancy at a formal health facility. Given the qualitatively distinct nature of losing one's only or first child, we also assess if the effect of a child's neonatal death varies by birth order. The results show that maternal and neonate death exposures correspond generally with women's higher use of maternal health services, challenging the notion that exposure to death fosters fatalism or distrust. Although the results vary in significance, the nuanced findings highlight women's vigilance in the face of health threats, emphasizing their resilience amid a high burden of familial loss.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11465936PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.worlddev.2024.106795DOI Listing

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