Pakistan 2018-19 MICS (Sindh) (original) (raw)
Related papers
Paediatrics and international child health, 2015
The world has made substantial progress in reducing maternal and child mortality, but many countries are projected to fall short of achieving their Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) 4 and 5 targets. The major objective of this paper is to examine progress in Pakistan in reducing maternal and child mortality and malnutrition over the last two decades. Data from recent national and international surveys suggest that Pakistan lags behind on all of its MDGs related to maternal and child health and, for some indicators especially related to nutrition, the situation has worsened from the baseline of 1990. Progress in addressing key social determinants such as poverty, female education and empowerment has also been slow and unregulated population growth has further compromised progress. There is a need to integrate the various different sectors and programmes to achieve the desired results effectively and efficiently as many of the determinants and influencing factors are outside the hea...
The purpose of this research is to analyze the socioeconomic situation of Pakistan using six social indicators and how trends have changed in those indicators in 10 years using statistical data. The indicators that I have chosen to support my research are Poverty, Child mortality, Education, Health, Population and Terrorism.
2019
Background : Pakistan is facing an acute problem of child under-nutrition as about 38 percent of children in Pakistan are stunted. Punjab, the largest province by population and GDP share having stunting prevalence of about 33.5 percent moderately and 13.3 percent severely stunted children of less than five years. Thus, this study aims at examining empirically the determinants of stunting (moderate and severe) at different level of hierarchy. Methodology : Data for this study is coming from Punjab Multiple Indicators Cluster Survey (MICS-2014). MICS uses two-stage, stratified cluster sampling approach. MICS is sub national level (Punjab province) data covering urban and rural areas. The data consists of 25,067 children under five, for 9 administrative divisions and 36 districts of Punjab province of Pakistan. Descriptive statistics and multilevel hierarchical models were estimated. Multilevel data analyses has advantage because it provides robust standard error estimates and helps i...
Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2006: Monitoring the Situation of Children and Women. Yemen
UNICEF, 2008
The Yemen Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey was conducted in 2006 with cooperation between the Ministry of Public Health and Population and UNICEF and the support of the Pan-Arab Project for Family Health in the League of Arab States. The MICS is a nationally representative survey of 3,586 households, 3,742 ever-married women age 15-49 and 3,783 mothers’ and caretakers of children age less than five. The primary objective of the MICS is to provide policymakers and planners with reliable and detailed information needed to monitor the situation of women and children in Yemen. Information on child mortality, nutrition, child health, child protection, water and sanitation, education, fertility, reproductive health, and knowledge of HIV and AIDS is included.
Sindh Bureau of Statistics, 2022
Equity profiling for Sindh has been prepared on the basis of secondary data of Sindh MICS 2018-19. The exercise has been jointly performed by Sindh Bureau of Statistics and UNICEF. Equity profiling is a statistical display of socioeconomic inequalities disaggregated by gender and district. These profiles would help to undertake measure to address current socioeconomic inequalities, outline leeway to bring desired changes, track changes and undertake programmatic interventions to attain equity-focused Objectives and goals. Earlier the Equity Profiling was conducted in 2017-18 on the basis of Sindh MICS 2014. This time specific profiles would provide an evidence-informed prevailing equity gaps, progress towards closing the gaps and the underlying inequities, demand and supply barriers to help the government, development partners and civil society to undertake programmatic decisions and understand budget required for their implementation. This report presented 6 different profiles on different sectors that include health, nutrition, education, wash, gender equality and poverty. This report will definitely be helpful for the identification of gaps for further planning and execution of programs based on equity analysis.