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The Pan African medical journal. 2022 May 12:42:28. doi: 10.11604/pamj.2022.42.28.25689 Q41.02025

National and subnational variations in gender relations and the utilization of maternal healthcare services in Nigeria

尼日利亚国家和次国家范围内的性别关系及产期保健服务利用情况的差异性分析 翻译改进

Yemi Adewoyin  1  2, Clifford Obby Odimegwu  2, Theresa Bassey  3  4, Olukemi Funmilayo Awelewa  4, Oluwakemi Akintan  5

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作者单位

  • 1 Department of Geography, University of Nigeria, Nsukka, Nigeria.
  • 2 Demography and Population Studies Programme Schools of Public Health and Social Sciences University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
  • 3 Department of Environmental Health, College of Health Technology, Calabar, Nigeria.
  • 4 Department of Geography, University of Ibadan, Ibadan, Nigeria.
  • 5 Department of Geography and Planning Science, Ekiti State University, Ado-Ekiti, Nigeria.
  • DOI: 10.11604/pamj.2022.42.28.25689 PMID: 35910063

    摘要 Ai翻译

    Introduction: poor maternal health outcomes remain a major public health issue in Nigeria. These have been shown to be affected by the low level of utilization of maternal healthcare services. This study investigates the levels of gender relations (GR) among Nigerian women and how these influence their utilization of maternal healthcare services. The relations are conceptualized as feminine (FGR), masculine (MGR) and egalitarian.

    Methods: data on household decision-making, antenatal care (ANC) visits, health facility delivery, and associated sociodemographic variables, were extracted from the 2018 Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey for 29,992 parous women aged 15-49 for a cross-sectional study. Associations were investigated using Chi-Square and regression analyses.

    Results: women with FGR constituted 5.7% of the population at the national level, while subnational variations ranged from 1.8% in the North-East to 12.8% in the South-South regions. The prevalence rates of the recommended minimum ANC visits (RMANC) and health facility delivery were 42.1% and 30.0% at the national level and were lowest in the northern regions. At both the unadjusted and adjusted levels, FGR was not significantly associated with RMANC and health facility delivery at the national level and in all the regions except the South-West. MGR was however significantly associated with increased odds of RMANC (OR: 2.235, CI: 2.043-2.444) and health facility delivery (OR: 2.571, CI: 2.369-2.791) at national level. Significant subnational variations in the association between gender relations and the utilization of maternal healthcare services were also recorded.

    Conclusion: sub-national variations in GR and their varying impacts on the utilization of maternal healthcare services in Nigeria suggest that gender-related policies to improve maternal health outcomes should be location-specific, rather than general. As FGR did not affect maternal healthcare services utilization, educating men on the benefits of supporting their wives to scale-up utilization is recommended.

    Keywords: Maternal health; Nigeria; antenatal care services; gender relations; health facility delivery; subnational regions.

    Keywords:gender relations; maternal healthcare services; nigeria

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    期刊名:Pan african medical journal

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    ISSN:N/A

    e-ISSN:1937-8688

    IF/分区:1.0/Q4

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