Involvement of Men in Maternal Health Care is a Public Policy Issue in Uganda (original) (raw)
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Journal of Global Health Reports
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Factors Contributing to Maternal Mortality in Uganda
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The study aimed at establishing the factors affecting maternal mortality in Uganda. It was guided by the following objectives; to investigating whether the number of antenatal Care visits, maternal education, age, area and region of residence had any effect on maternal mortality in Uganda. Descriptive statistics are used to summarize characteristics of the respondents, and the results presented in frequencies and percentages. Cross tabulations on the number of antenatal care visits, maternal education, region where mother comes from, age and area of residence to maternal mortality were run to establish the association between them. The Binary Logistic model was used to analyze the relationship between maternal mortality on the number of antenatal care visits, maternal education, age, area and region of residence. All the variables apart from area of residence were found to be significant at bivariate level. The study found mothers who make fewer or no ANC visits had a higher likelih...
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BMC Public Health, 2011
Background: From 1995-2000 the under five mortality rate in Uganda increased from 147.3 to 151.5 deaths per 1000 live births and reasons for the increase were not clear. This study was undertaken to understand factors influencing the increase in under five mortality rate during 1995-2000 in Uganda with a view of suggesting remedial actions. Methods: We performed a comparative retrospective analysis of data derived from the 1995 and the 2000 Uganda demographic and health surveys. We correlated the change of under five mortality rate in Uganda desegregated by region (central, eastern, north and western) with change in major known determinants of under five mortality such social economic circumstances, maternal factors, access to health services, and level of nutrition. Results: The increase in under five mortality rate only happened in western Uganda with the other 3 regions of Uganda (eastern, northern and central) showing a decrease. The changes in U5MR could not be explained by changes in poverty, maternal conditions, level of nutrition, or in access to health and other social services and in the prevalence of HIV among women attending for ante-natal care. All these factors did not reach statistical significance (P > 0.05) using Pearson's correlation coefficient. Conclusion: In order to explain these findings, there is need to find something that happened in western Uganda (but not other parts of the country) during the period 1995-2000 and has the potential to change the under five mortality by a big margin. We hypothesize that the increase in under five mortality could be explained by the severe malaria epidemic that occurred in western Uganda (but not other regions) in 1997/98.
Uganda Delivery of Improved Services for Health Evaluation Surveys 1997
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This report presents findings from the 1997 Delivery of Improved Services for Health (DISH) Evaluation Survey, and, where possible, compares the status of reproductive health services and individuals with those measured in the 1995 Uganda Demographic and Health Survey. The DISH Evaluation Survey gathered information from 1,967 women, 900 men, and 173 health facilities. This 94-page document presents key findings in the following areas: information-education communication; family planning; maternal and child health; health facilities; and STDs and HIV/AIDS.
Uganda Health and nutrition thematic paper for the National Development Plan
Uganda Health, 2009
Over the past decade, the country registered progress in improving the health of the Ugandans as reflected in key health outcome indicators. These key outcome indicators include Infant Mortality Rate (IMR), Under-five Mortality Rate (U5 MR), Maternal Mortality Rate (MMR), Total Fertility Rate (TFR), and chronic malnutrition (see Table 1). However these improvements fell short of the PEAP and Millennium Development Goal (MDG) targets of 354 and 60 for reducing MMR respectively (MFPED, 2004; UNDP (Uganda), 2007). In addition, at 6.7, Uganda’s TFR remains high.