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"Gillespie, Duff"
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Economic Status, Education and Empowerment: Implications for Maternal Health Service Utilization in Developing Countries
2010
Relative to the attention given to improving the quality of and access to maternal health services, the influence of women's socio-economic situation on maternal health care use has received scant attention. The objective of this paper is to examine the relationship between women's economic, educational and empowerment status, introduced as the 3Es, and maternal health service utilization in developing countries.
The analysis uses data from the most recent Demographic and Health Surveys conducted in 31 countries for which data on all the 3Es are available. Separate logistic regression models are fitted for modern contraceptive use, antenatal care and skilled birth attendance in relation to the three covariates of interest: economic, education and empowerment status, additionally controlling for women's age and residence. We use meta-analysis techniques to combine and summarize results from multiple countries. The 3Es are significantly associated with utilization of maternal health services. The odds of having a skilled attendant at delivery for women in the poorest wealth quintile are 94% lower than that for women in the highest wealth quintile and almost 5 times higher for women with complete primary education relative to those less educated. The likelihood of using modern contraception and attending four or more antenatal care visits are 2.01 and 2.89 times, respectively, higher for women with complete primary education than for those less educated. Women with the highest empowerment score are between 1.31 and 1.82 times more likely than those with a null empowerment score to use modern contraception, attend four or more antenatal care visits and have a skilled attendant at birth.
Efforts to expand maternal health service utilization can be accelerated by parallel investments in programs aimed at poverty eradication (MDG 1), universal primary education (MDG 2), and women's empowerment (MDG 3).
Journal Article
Low use of contraception among poor women in Africa: an equity issue
by
Tsui, Amy O
,
Gillespie, Duff
,
Creanga, Andreea A
in
Adjustment
,
Africa South of the Sahara
,
Biological and medical sciences
2011
To examine the use of contraception in 13 countries in sub-Saharan Africa; to assess changes in met need for contraception associated with wealth-related inequity; and to describe the relationship between the use of long-term versus short-term contraceptive methods and a woman's fertility intentions and household wealth.
The analysis was conducted with Demographic and Health Survey data from 13 sub-Saharan African countries. Wealth-related inequities in the use of contraception were calculated using household wealth and concentration indices. Logistic regression models were fitted for the likelihood of using a long-term contraceptive method, with adjustments for: wealth index quintile, fertility intentions (to space births versus to stop childbearing), residence (urban/rural), education, number of living children, marital status and survey year.
The use of contraception has increased substantially between surveys in Ethiopia, Madagascar, Mozambique, Namibia and Zambia but has declined slightly in Kenya, Senegal and Uganda. Wealth-related inequalities in the met need for contraception have decreased in most countries and especially so in Mozambique, but they have increased in Kenya, Uganda and Zambia with regard to spacing births, and in Malawi, Senegal, Uganda, the United Republic of Tanzania and Zambia with regard to limiting childbearing. After adjustment for fertility intention, women in the richest wealth quintile were more likely than those in the poorest quintile to practice long-term contraception.
Family planning programmes in sub-Saharan Africa show varying success in reaching all social segments, but inequities persist in all countries.
Journal Article
Contraceptive Use and the Poor: A Matter of Choice?
2007
Gillespie discusses a new study showing that, despite the overall increase in the use of modern contraceptives, use among the poor remains quite low compared with wealthier segments of society.
Journal Article
A Qualitative Study of Patients' Use of Expedited Partner Therapy
by
Temkin, Elizabeth
,
Mmari, Kristin
,
Gillespie, Duff G.
in
Adult
,
Anti-Bacterial Agents - therapeutic use
,
Baltimore
2011
Background: In randomized controlled trials of expedited partner therapy (EPT), among patients in the EPT arm, the proportion of partners believed to have taken the medication ranged from 56% to 85%. Little is known about the content of successful and unsuccessful EPT negotiations between patients and their partners. The aim of this study was to describe how patients made decisions about EPT and what they did with the EPT medication packs dispensed to them. Methods: We performed a qualitative study at the Baltimore City Health Department sexually transmitted disease clinics, which instituted an EPT pilot program in 2007. In-depth interviews were conducted with 31 patients, 1 week to 3 months after they had accepted EPT to bring to their partners. Taped interviews were transcribed verbatim and coded using ATLAS.ti 6 qualitative software. Codes were further combined into more comprehensive themes that were mapped onto the study's main aim. Results: Participants were innovative about how to get medication to their partners and indicated a deep sense of concern and responsibility for their partners' health. On the other hand, participants reported of being anxious about the interaction and sometimes felt that they lacked the words to talk with their partners about EPT. Some participants used EPT in unexpected ways, such as giving it to people other than their sex partners or taking it themselves. Conclusions: Enhancing the counseling that accompanies EPT may improve patients' success in delivering it to their partners.
Journal Article
Integrating family planning into Ethiopian voluntary testing and counselling programmes
PROBLEM: Governments and donors encourage the integration of family planning into voluntary testing and counselling (VCT) services. We aimed to determine if clients of VCT services have a need for and will accept quality family planning services. APPROACH: \"Voluntary HIV counselling and testing integrated with contraceptive services\" is a proof-of-concept study that interviewed 4019 VCT clients before the addition of family planning services and 4027 different clients after family planning services were introduced. Clients attended eight public VCT facilities in the Oromia region, Ethiopia. The intervention had four components: development of family planning counselling messages for VCT clients, VCT provider training, contraceptive supply provision and monitoring. LOCAL SETTING: Ethiopia's population of 80 million is increasing rapidly at an annual rate of 2.5%. Contraceptive prevalence is only 15%. The estimated adult HIV prevalence rate is 2.1%, with more than 1.1 million people infected. The number of VCT facilities increased from 23 in 2001 to more than 1000 in 2007, and the number of HIV tests taken doubled from 1.7 million tests in 2007 to 3.5 million in 2008. RELEVANT CHANGES: Clients interviewed after the introduction of family planning services received significantly more family planning counselling and accepted significantly more contraceptives than those clients served before the intervention. However, three-quarters of the clients were not sexually active. Of those clients who were sexually active, 70% were using contraceptives. LESSONS LEARNED: The study demonstrated that family planning can be integrated into VCT clinics. However, policy-makers and programme managers should carefully consider the characteristics and reproductive health needs of target populations when making decisions about service integration.
Journal Article
The meeting that did not happen: Cairo, 10 years on
2004
Paradoxically, one reason the USA is so feared in the reproductive health field is because it donates so much money. With the exception of money for HIV/AIDS, the amount of donor funds going to reproductive health seems lower today than in the mid-1990s. Throughout this period, the USA has continued to be the dominant donor in reproductive health. In 2001, for instance, the USA donated over $200 million more than all of the other donor countries combined, including the European Community.6 With the new $15 billion presidential initiative in HIV/AIDS, the gap between the USA and other donors will become wider. In announcing the initiative, the US Department of State boasted that the USA will contribute twice as much money to combat AIDS as all other donor countries combined.7 The USA is not against reproductive health, but, as with so many other matters, it chooses to define reproductive health in its own terms. Most governments, non-governmental organisations, religious organisations, and even UN agencies benefiting from the USA's largesse will think twice before displeasing their paymaster. Trite, but in this case true: money speaks louder than words.
Journal Article