BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth (Aug 2023)

Predicting maternal healthcare seeking behaviour in Afghanistan: exploring sociodemographic factors and women’s knowledge of severity of illness

  • Essa Tawfiq,
  • Mohammad Daud Azimi,
  • Aeraj Feroz,
  • Ahmad Shakir Hadad,
  • Mohammad Samim Soroush,
  • Massoma Jafari,
  • Marzia Salam Yaftali,
  • Sayed Ataullah Saeedzai

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12884-023-05750-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Background Little is known whether women’s knowledge of perceived severity of illness and sociodemographic characteristics of women influence healthcare seeking behavior for maternal health services in Afghanistan. The aim of this study was to address this knowledge gap. Methods Data were used from the Afghanistan Health Survey 2018. Women’s knowledge in terms of danger signs or symptoms during pregnancy was assessed. The signs or symptoms were bleeding, swelling of the body, headache, fever, or any other danger sign or symptom (e.g., high blood pressure). A categorical variable of knowledge score was created. The outcome variables were defined as ≥ 4 ANC vs. 0–3 ANC; ≥ 4 PNC vs. 0–3 PNC visits; institutional vs. non-institutional deliveries. A multivariable generalized linear model (GLM) was used. Results Data were used from 9,190 ever-married women, aged 13–49 years, who gave birth in the past two years. It was found that 56%, 22% and 2% of women sought healthcare for institutional delivery, ≥ 4 ANC, ≥ 4 PNC visits, respectively, and that women’s knowledge is a strong predictor of healthcare seeking [odds ratio (OR)1.77(1.54–2.05), 2.28(1.99–2.61), and 2.78 (2.34–3.32) on knowledge of 1, 2, and 3–5 signs or symptoms, respectively, in women with ≥ 4 ANC visits when compared with women who knew none of the signs or symptoms. In women with ≥ 4 PNC visits, it was 1.80(1.12–2.90), 2.22(1.42–3.48), and 3.33(2.00–5.54), respectively. In women with institutional deliveries, it was 1.49(1.32–1.68), 2.02(1.78–2.28), and 2.34(1.95–2.79), respectively. Other strong predictors were women’s education level, multiparity, residential areas (urban vs. rural), socioeconomic status, access to mass media (radio, TV, the internet), access of women to health workers for birth, and decision-making for women where to deliver. However, age of women was not a strong predictor. Conclusion Our findings suggest that pregnant women’s healthcare seeking behaviour is influenced by women’s knowledge of danger signs and symptoms during pregnancy, women’s education, socioeconomic status, access to media, husband’s, in-laws’ and relatives’ decisions, residential area, multiparity, and access to health workers. The findings have implications for promoting safe motherhood and childbirth practices through improving women’s knowledge, education, and social status.

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