This paper examines the effects of demographic, socioeconomic, and women’s autonomy factors on the utilization of delivery assistance in Sokoto State, Nigeria. Data were obtained from the Nigeria 2008 Demographic and Health Survey (DHS). Bivariate analysis and logistic regression procedures were conducted. The study revealed that delivery with no one present and with unskilled attendance accounted for roughly 95% of all births in Sokoto State. Mothers with existing high risk factors, including higher parity, were more likely to select unsafe/unskilled delivery practices than younger, lower-parity mothers. Evidenced by the high prevalence of delivery with traditional birth attendants, this study demonstrates that expectant mothers are willing to obtain care from a provider, and their odds of using accessible, affordable, skilled delivery is high, should such an option be presented. This conclusion is supported by the high correlation between a mother’s socioeconomic status and the likelihood of using skilled attendance. To improve the access to, and increase the affordability of, skilled health attendants, we recommended two solutions: 1) the use of cash subsidies to augment women’s incomes in order to reduce finance-related barriers in the use of formal health services, thus increasing demand; and 2) a structural improvement that will increase women’s economic security by improving their access to higher education, income, and urban ideation. © 2014 Fapohunda and Orobaton.
This study analyzed data obtained from the 2008 Nigeria DHS on maternal and reproductive experiences of women aged 15–49 years.1 The survey was designed to yield a representative sample at the national, zonal/regional, and state levels. This paper is based on the subsample of the data collected from Sokoto State, which comprised 985 women aged 15–49 years and 292 men aged 15–59 years. The study pooled data on a total of 1,089 live births to married Sokoto women between 2003 and 2008, with valid responses on the relevant indicators. Study data were analyzed using the Stata statistical package (StataCorp LP, College Station, TX, USA). Estimates of types of delivery assistance utilized by mothers in 5 years preceding the survey were calculated and disaggregated by demographic (age, birth order); socioeconomic (residence, mother’s education, woman’s employment); and women’s autonomy (participation in decision-making and disapproval of gender norms that foster inequity) factors. Bivariate analyses and multivariate logistic regressions were modeled to identify influential factors that shape the utilization of specific delivery assistant types. Sampling weights were used to control for over- or under-sampling within groups. Details of variables employed in the analysis are presented in Table 1. These variables were developed based on evidence from the literature on maternal health, women’s status, knowledge of the context of the study, and data availability. The variables were categorized into three domains: demographic, socioeconomic, and women’s autonomy. The demographic domain had two variables: age of mother at birth and birth order of children. The socioeconomic domain had four variables: place of residence, education, wealth quintiles, and mother’s employment status. Religion was not included, as over 98% of respondents were Muslim. The women’s autonomy domain also comprised four variables: participation in decision-making in the household, control over personal sexuality, disapproval of wife-beating, and presence of co-wives. The last three variables were also branded as a construct of gender norms that foster inequity. Recent work by Singh et al informed the construction of the women’s autonomy measures.24 Description of outcome and predictor variables Located in the Sahel, Sokoto State occupies a land area of 25,973 square kilometers with a population of 4.6 million people. It is bordered by Niger Republic to the north and Benin Republic in the west; it is bordered to the south and southeast by the Nigerian states of Zamfara and Birnin Kebbi.25 The total fertility rate (TFR) of 8.7 and mortality rate of 1,500/100,000 live births in Sokoto State are among the highest in the country. Utilization rates of maternal and child health services are also very low. For example, the Nigeria DHS found that 1.9% of women of reproductive age reported the current use of any method of contraception; that DPT3 coverage in the region is around 2%; and that 11.6% of children who are under the age of 5 years currently sleep under insecticide-treated bednets.1
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