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Essays on Development and Maternal-Infant HealthMcDevitt-Irwin, Jesse Reid January 2024 (has links)
In this dissertation I analyze patterns of maternal-infant health in developing contexts.
My first chapter uses child hemoglobin as a bio-marker for maternal malnutrition in Senegal during the 2008 food price crisis. In early 2008, world rice prices skyrocketed, causing people around the world to plunge into poverty. Senegal, in particular, depends heavily on imported foodstuffs. I find that the crisis had a large, negative impact on child anemia in urban Senegal, most likely reflecting a deterioration of maternal nutrition caused by rising food prices.
In the second and third chapters, we introduce a novel indicator of maternal-infant health: childhood sex ratios. Because infant females have lower rates of mortality than infant males, the sex ratio of the surviving population reflects the level of infant mortality. Childhood sex ratios are widely available from census data, meaning we can use them to shed new light on historical populations who lack traditional sources of data on infant mortality, like birth and death records.
We apply this new method to the 19th-century US, where the lack of vital statistics has left uncertainty over even approximate levels of infant mortality. We find that the level of infant mortality in the pre-industrial US was much lower than previously thought, but that racial health disparities were much greater.
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Sources of infant care informational social support for mothers of infants in the Appalachian regionUnknown Date (has links)
The purpose of this study was to describe the sources of infant care informational
support systems that mothers residing in the Western North Carolina Appalachian region use and prefer in the postpartum period. In addition, the study explored the associations of the sources for informational social support on infant care with personal factors (age, socioeconomic status, parity, race, ethnicity, residence, marital status, education, access to Internet, access to cellular phone, prior attendance in childbirth classes, and other adult infant care assistance in the home) of the mothers. / Includes bibliography. / Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2015. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
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The effectiveness of neonatal health care services in the primary health care units in the north-west of EthiopiaBizuhan Gelaw Birhanu 11 1900 (has links)
Improving the quality of newborn care services and accelerating the service utilization of sick young infants is required to contribute to the reduction of neonatal mortality and improve the wellbeing of the newborns.
The purpose of this study was to explore the effectiveness of neonatal healthcare services in the primary healthcare units in the north-west of Ethiopia and develop guideline for effective neonatal care.
A mixed method approach with a sequential explanatory design was employed to explore factors affecting the effectiveness of the neonatal healthcare services. Interviewer-administered questionnaires were administered to 221 health workers and health extension workers in 142 health facilities; and service statistics abstracted for 767 sick young infants’ from the sick young infant registers. Data was entered in the EpiData 3.1, exported to SPSS and STATA for analysis. In the qualitative study, twenty-six participants from the health centers and health posts were interviewed through focus group discussions. Thematic analysis was undertaken to explore factors affecting neonatal healthcare services.
Results: The quality of newborn care with the domains of newborn resuscitation, follow-up care after resuscitation and thermal care; immediate care and breastfeeding advice for very low birthweight babies were found to be moderate at primary hospitals and urban health centres; low at rural health centres and health posts. The availability of essential equipment is significantly associated with the quality of neonatal care provision in the health facilities (p < 0.05).
More than forty percent of health facilities were not meeting the quality of case management tasks for sick young infants, and the newborn care knowledge of health providers is significantly associated with the quality of sick young infants’ management (p < 0.05).
The sick young infants’ service utilisation was only 6.3 percent from the expected sick young infants’ population.
Overall, the effectiveness of the neonatal healthcare services has a significant association with the health facilitates readiness [95%CI: 0.134-0.768].
Conclusion: The quality of neonatal healthcare provision is low to moderate; and the service utilization of sick young infants is very low. Thus, the rural health centers and health posts should be prioritised for the effective neonatal care. / Health Studies / D. Litt. et Phil. (Health Studies)
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