Determinants Of Non-Utilization Of Skilled Health Assistance During Delivery In Kenya
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Date
2019Author
Aluoch, Fidelis Monica
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
The use of maternal health care services is an effective means for reducing the risk of
maternal morbidity and mortality, especially in developing countries where the general health
status of women is poor. This study aims to analyze the determinants of non-utilization of
skilled health assistance during delivery in Kenya among women of reproductive age. The
study used data from 2008-09 and 2014 KDHS for women with a last birth in the five years
preceding the survey. Descriptive statistics and multivariate logistic regression methods of
analysis were used to determine the association and significance of independent variables on
non-utilization of skilled health birth attendance during delivery among women of
reproductive age. The dependent variable was whether a woman used skilled health
attendance during delivery in the five years preceding each survey. The main independent
variables were: age of the woman, parity, marital status, level of education, wealth index,
place of residence (urban-rural), religion, region of the country and use of antenatal care by
the woman. The results show a notable decline in the level of non-utilization of skilled health
assistance during delivery from the year 2008/09 to the year 2014. The independent variables
were found to be significantly associated with non-utilization of skilled health assistance
during delivery in the five years preceding both 2008/09 and 2014 surveys. In the five years
preceding the 2008/09 survey, the odds of non-utilization of skilled health assistance during
delivery were lower for women of age 25 and above, women with high levels of education,
richer women, women in urban areas, those in Central region and women who attended
antenatal health. But the odds were higher for women with high parity, women in the rural
areas, non-Catholic women and women in the remaining regions. In the five years preceding
the 2014 survey, the odds of non-utilization of skilled health assistance during delivery were
higher for older women, women of parity 4 and higher, married and formerly married
women, rural women, women of Muslim faith and women in Western and Rift Valley regions
but lower for women education level of primary and above, those of middle and rich wealth
index, protestant and Catholic women and women from Central, Nyanza and North Eastern
regions.Therefore effort is needed to educate the general public on the importance of
maternal health care services, focusing on the social structures that deter women from
utilizing skilled health assistance during delivery to create and strengthen conditions that
encourage the use. There should be deliberate improvement on access to health care
particularly in the rural areas so as to improve on the use of skilled health attendance at
delivery by the women. Policies to sustain and improve on the noted gains should be
vi
implemented. Finally research should focus on the noted increase of younger women of age
34 years and below not utilizing skilled assistance during delivery.
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Publisher
University of Nairobi
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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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