Journal article

Essential newborn care after home delivery in Nepal

Abstract

Aims: Postnatal care of the newborn is essential in order to reduce neonatal mortality. Nepal has made great efforts to

improve maternal and child health by focusing on accessibility and outreach over the past decades. This study aims to

examine trends, over the past decade, in levels and equity of facility delivery rates and the provision of newborn care after

home delivery in Nepal. Methods: Household-level data from the Demographic Health Surveys (DHS) 2006 and 2011

and the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS5) from 2014 performed in Nepal was sourced for the study. Coverage

rates of facility delivery and newborn care after home delivery were calculated and logistic regression models were used to

ascertain inequity. Results: Home delivery rate dropped from 79.2% in 2006 to 46.5% in 2014, a development showing an

inequitable distribution, with a larger share of better-off families shifting to facility delivery. For those who still delivered at

home there was an increased rate of early initiation of breastfeeding and adequate temperature control, but only 2.2% of

women delivering at home received a home visit by a health professional in the first week of delivery. No inequity in receiving

newborn care after home delivery could be detected. Conclusions: There have been significant improvements in

facility delivery rates over the last 10 years in Nepal and postnatal care at home has improved. There is, however,

an alarmingly low level of home visits during an infant’s first week.

Key Words: Postnatal care, newborn, home delivery, Nepal, equity, socioeconomic determinants

Languages

  • English

Publisher

Sagepub

Journal

Scandinavian Journal of Public Health, 1–6

Volume

March 2017

Type

Journal article

Categories

  • Data

Countries

  • Nepal

Added by: Hemanthi

Added on: 2023-07-04 02:48:01

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