宗教和机构分娩服务的使用:莫桑比克的个人和背景途径。

IF 4.4 3区 医学 Q1 Social Sciences International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health Pub Date : 2019-10-21 DOI:10.1363/45e7719
B. Cau, Victor Agadjanian
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引用次数: 3

摘要

背景撒哈拉以南非洲关于机构分娩的研究通常侧重于卫生设施的可用性和可及性。文化因素,包括宗教,可能促进或阻碍这种服务的使用,但没有得到很好的审查,而且仍然知之甚少。方法利用2008年在莫桑比克一个以基督教为主的地区对1,297名18-50岁妇女进行的家庭调查和对825个宗教团体进行的人口普查数据,探讨宗教信仰与在卫生机构分娩之间的关系。根据个人的宗教信仰和居住社区中某些教派的宗教集会的集中程度,进行了多水平逻辑回归分析,以预测最近机构交付的可能性。结果约63%的分娩发生在卫生机构。除其他因素外(比值比分别为0.5和0.6),使徒教会或无宗教信仰的妇女分娩的几率低于天主教或主流新教教会的妇女。此外,无论女性的宗教信仰如何,在她居住的社区中,每增加一个天主教或主流新教会众,她有机构分娩的几率就会增加9%(1.1)。在莫桑比克,有组织的宗教与关键的健康结果有关,在撒哈拉以南非洲其他地区也可能如此。政策制定者应考虑设计方案和干预措施,促进对这些服务使用率较低的宗教团体成员以及这些宗教团体存在较多的地区使用机构交付服务。
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Religion and Use of Institutional Child Delivery Services: Individual and Contextual Pathways in Mozambique.
CONTEXT Research on institutional child delivery in Sub-Saharan Africa typically focuses on availability and accessibility of health facilities. Cultural factors, including religion, that may facilitate or hinder the use of such services have not been well examined and remain poorly understood. METHODS The relationship between religious affiliation and delivery in a health facility was explored using data from a household survey of 1,297 women aged 18-50 and a census of 825 religious congregations, both conducted in a predominantly Christian district in Mozambique in 2008. Multilevel logistic regression analyses were conducted to predict the likelihood of recent institutional delivery according to both individual religious affiliation and the concentration of religious congregations of certain denominations in the community of residence. RESULTS Approximately 63% of deliveries occurred in a health facility. The odds of such deliveries were lower among women who belonged to Apostolic churches or had no religious affiliation than among members of Catholic or mainline Protestant churches, net of other factors (odds ratios, 0.5 and 0.6, respectively). In addition, regardless of a woman's religion, the odds that she had an institutional delivery increased by 9% for each additional Catholic or mainline Protestant congregation in her community of residence (1.1). CONCLUSIONS Organized religion is associated with critical health outcomes in Mozambique and, potentially, in other Sub-Saharan African contexts. Policymakers should consider designing programs and interventions that promote the use of institutional delivery services among members of religious groups characterized by low use of these services and in areas where such religious groups have a strong presence.
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