PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

Decomposition analysis of women's empowerment-based inequalities in the use of maternal health care services in Ethiopia: Evidence from Demographic and Health Surveys.

  • Gebretsadik Shibre,
  • Wubegzier Mekonnen,
  • Damen Haile Mariam

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0285024
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 4
p. e0285024

Abstract

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BackgroundThe use of maternal health care services tends to rise with women's empowerment. However, disparities in the use of maternal health care services in Ethiopia that are founded on women's empowerment are not sufficiently addressed. In light of women's empowerment equity stratifier, this study seeks to assess inequalities in the uptake of maternal health care services (early antenatal care, four or more antenatal care and postnatal care services).MethodsDrawing on data from the four rounds of Ethiopia Demographic and Health Surveys (EDHSs) conducted between 2000 and 2016, we conducted analysis of inequalities in utilization of maternal health care services using women's empowerment as equity stratifier. We utilized concentration index and concentration curve for assessing the inequalities. We used clorenz and conindex Stata modules to compute the index and curve. Decomposition of the Erreygers normalized concentration index was done to explain the inequalities in terms of other variables' percent contributions. Complex aspect of the EDHSs data was considered during analysis to produce findings consistent with the data generating process. All analyses were done using Stata v16.ResultsUtilization of maternal health care services was inequitably distributed between empowered and poorly empowered women, with women in the highly empowered category taking more of the services. For instance, the Erreygers index for quality ANC are 0.240 (95% CI 0.207, 0.273); 0.20 (95% CI 0.169, 0.231) and 0.122 (95% CI 0.087, 0.157), respectively, for the attitude towards violence, social independence and decision-making domains of women's empowerment. Inequalities in the distribution of other variables like wealth, education, place of residence and women's empowerment itself underpin the inequalities in the utilization of the services across the women's empowerment groups.ConclusionsEquity in maternal health care services can be improved through redistributive policies that attempt to fairly distribute the socioeconomic determinants of health such as wealth and education between highly and poorly empowered women.