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    Women focused development intervention reduces neonatal mortality in rural Bangladesh: a study of the pathways of influence

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    Date
    2003-05
    Publisher
    BRAC Research and Evaluation Division (RED)
    Author
    Hashima-E-Nasreen
    Bhuiya, Abbas
    Ahmed, Syed Masud
    Chowdhury, Mushtaque
    Metadata
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    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10361/13096
    Citation
    Nasreen, H. E., Bhuiya, A., Ahmed, S. M., & chowdhury, M. (2003, May). Women focused development intervention reduces neonatal mortality in rural Bangladesh: a study of the pathways of influence. Research Reports (2003): Health Studies, Vol - XXXV, 61–83.
    Abstract
    Background: There has been a substantial reduction in hazard of childhood death in Bangladesh over the last decade. The reduction was much greater in case of infants whose mothers participated in the development program. However, the pathways through which development interventions influence neonatal survival remain to be explored. Objective: Study the impact of BRAC's women focused development interventions on neonatal mortality in Matlab. Methods: A case-control study comprising 117 cases (died within 28 days) and 351 controls (live children taken from the nearest door of cases) born during the year 1999- 2000 was employed. Twelve case studies from both cases and controls were done to complement the quantitative data. ICDDR, B surveillance database provided the sampling frame. The risk ratio was estimated to see how BRAC program participation reduces risk of mortality, and stratified analysis was done to see the effects of third variables over the association. Finally, log regression was done to see the net effect of variables on neonatal death. Results: Neonates of BRAC non-members were at 1.9 times increased risk (CL; 1.09- 3.25) of dying compared to neonates of BRAC members. This association works through two intermediate variables including antenatal care and family planning. Mothers' age and fathers' occupation acted as confounders over this association. Physical violence against mothers and psychological stress, pre-maturity and low-birth-weight had respectively 2.2, 1.7, 13 and 2 times increased risk of neonatal death. However, BRAe membership did not have any influence over these factors. When simultaneously accounting for all variables in a multivariate log regression, a dose response association was maintained for antenatal care, family planning, physical violence and pre-maturity. Conclusion: There has been a substantial reduction of neonatal morality among mothers who participated in BRAC intervention. For an effective reduction of these deaths, program planners should think about ways to address all risk factors together rather than antenatal care and family planning alone. Acknowledgements: The financial support of the Ford Foundation and Aga Khan Foundation is acknowledged.
    Keywords
    Women; Neonatal mortality; Rural Bangladesh; Women's development; BRAC; Bangladesh
     
    LC Subject Headings
    Fetal death; Infants--Mortality; Mothers--Mortality; Women in development
     
    Type
    Research report
    Collections
    • Research Reports (2003): Health Studies, Vol - XXXV [12]

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