MERAL Myanmar Education Research and Learning Portal
Item
{"_buckets": {"deposit": "8c5bcb40-90fb-4d40-bea4-41a00053222f"}, "_deposit": {"created_by": 20, "id": "9703", "owner": "20", "owners": [20], "owners_ext": {"displayname": "", "username": ""}, "pid": {"revision_id": 0, "type": "depid", "value": "9703"}, "status": "published"}, "_oai": {"id": "oai:meral.edu.mm:recid/00009703", "sets": ["1582963436320"]}, "author_link": [], "item_1583103067471": {"attribute_name": "Title", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"subitem_1551255647225": "Patterns and Determinants of Maternal and Reproductive Health Care Services Utilization in Myanmar (A Case Study of Bago Township) ( Tha Zin Htwe, 2024)", "subitem_1551255648112": "en"}]}, "item_1583103085720": {"attribute_name": "Description", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"interim": "Maternal mortality ratio is a key health indicator of development. This study aims to identify maternal and reproductive health care seeking behaviors, to determine the factors influencing maternal and reproductive health care services and to assess the effect of these health care service utilizations on infant mortality in Bago Township. Descriptive statistics was used to examine the patterns of maternal and reproductive health care services; binary and multinomial logistic regression were used to analyze the determinants of maternal and reproductive health care services and to assess the effects of maternal and reproductive health care service utilization on infant mortality. This study reveals that more than half of pregnant women receive at least four ANC visits whereas three quarters of them receive it from skilled providers. More than half of live births were delivered in a health facility whereas more than three quarters of births are assisted by skilled providers. Furthermore, nearly half of mothers receive PNC within the first 2 days after birth and more than half of currently married women use modern contraceptive method in Bago Township. This study also found that woman’s occupation, household monthly income, age, education, knowledge of health and place of residence have positive effect on the maternal and reproductive healthcare service use. In contrast, problems concerning money needed for delivery/drugs/ treatments and distance to health facility and cultural practices have negative effect on these health care services. Women with over third birth order are less likely to use antenatal care, delivery care, and postnatal care but they are more likely to use modern contraceptive method. This study observes that the risk of infant mortality decreases if a mother receives ANC from a skilled provider, gives birth assistance by a doctor, receives PNC, or uses modern method of contraception. Maternal and reproductive health of women would improve if policy makers focused more on promoting health knowledge, increasing the availability of skilled health providers in rural areas, and transmitting mass media for the safety and well-being of mothers and infants in Myanmar, including Bago Township."}]}, "item_1583103120197": {"attribute_name": "Files", "attribute_type": "file", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"accessrole": "open_access", "date": [{"dateType": "Available", "dateValue": "2024-08-06"}], "displaytype": "preview", "download_preview_message": "", "file_order": 0, "filename": "Tha Zin Htwe ,4 PhD- Ba -1.pdf", "filesize": [{"value": "4.5 MB"}], "format": "application/pdf", "future_date_message": "", "is_thumbnail": false, "licensetype": "license_0", "mimetype": "application/pdf", "size": 4500000.0, "url": {"url": "https://meral.edu.mm/record/9703/files/Tha Zin Htwe ,4 PhD- Ba -1.pdf"}, "version_id": "0d7330ad-20c3-4ebd-a0a9-7d781e4f0d9c"}]}, "item_1583103233624": {"attribute_name": "Thesis/dissertations", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"subitem_awarding_university": "Yangon University of Economics", "subitem_supervisor(s)": [{"subitem_supervisor": "Dr. Zin Zin Shwe"}]}]}, "item_1583105942107": {"attribute_name": "Authors", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"subitem_authors": [{"subitem_authors_fullname": "Tha Zin Htwe"}]}]}, "item_1583108359239": {"attribute_name": "Upload type", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"interim": "Other"}]}, "item_1583108428133": {"attribute_name": "Publication type", "attribute_value_mlt": [{"interim": "Dissertation"}]}, "item_1583159729339": {"attribute_name": "Publication date", "attribute_value": "2024-05-01"}, "item_title": "Patterns and Determinants of Maternal and Reproductive Health Care Services Utilization in Myanmar (A Case Study of Bago Township) ( Tha Zin Htwe, 2024)", "item_type_id": "21", "owner": "20", "path": ["1582963436320", "1582965742757"], "permalink_uri": "https://meral.edu.mm/records/9703", "pubdate": {"attribute_name": "Deposit date", "attribute_value": "2024-08-06"}, "publish_date": "2024-08-06", "publish_status": "0", "recid": "9703", "relation": {}, "relation_version_is_last": true, "title": ["Patterns and Determinants of Maternal and Reproductive Health Care Services Utilization in Myanmar (A Case Study of Bago Township) ( Tha Zin Htwe, 2024)"], "weko_shared_id": -1}
Patterns and Determinants of Maternal and Reproductive Health Care Services Utilization in Myanmar (A Case Study of Bago Township) ( Tha Zin Htwe, 2024)
https://meral.edu.mm/records/9703
https://meral.edu.mm/records/97035b13d344-0c38-4ded-b065-147b5023823f
8c5bcb40-90fb-4d40-bea4-41a00053222f
Name / File | License | Actions |
---|---|---|
Tha Zin Htwe ,4 PhD- Ba -1.pdf (4.5 MB)
|
Publication type | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Dissertation | ||||||
Upload type | ||||||
Other | ||||||
Title | ||||||
Title | Patterns and Determinants of Maternal and Reproductive Health Care Services Utilization in Myanmar (A Case Study of Bago Township) ( Tha Zin Htwe, 2024) | |||||
Language | en | |||||
Publication date | 2024-05-01 | |||||
Authors | ||||||
Tha Zin Htwe | ||||||
Description | ||||||
Maternal mortality ratio is a key health indicator of development. This study aims to identify maternal and reproductive health care seeking behaviors, to determine the factors influencing maternal and reproductive health care services and to assess the effect of these health care service utilizations on infant mortality in Bago Township. Descriptive statistics was used to examine the patterns of maternal and reproductive health care services; binary and multinomial logistic regression were used to analyze the determinants of maternal and reproductive health care services and to assess the effects of maternal and reproductive health care service utilization on infant mortality. This study reveals that more than half of pregnant women receive at least four ANC visits whereas three quarters of them receive it from skilled providers. More than half of live births were delivered in a health facility whereas more than three quarters of births are assisted by skilled providers. Furthermore, nearly half of mothers receive PNC within the first 2 days after birth and more than half of currently married women use modern contraceptive method in Bago Township. This study also found that woman’s occupation, household monthly income, age, education, knowledge of health and place of residence have positive effect on the maternal and reproductive healthcare service use. In contrast, problems concerning money needed for delivery/drugs/ treatments and distance to health facility and cultural practices have negative effect on these health care services. Women with over third birth order are less likely to use antenatal care, delivery care, and postnatal care but they are more likely to use modern contraceptive method. This study observes that the risk of infant mortality decreases if a mother receives ANC from a skilled provider, gives birth assistance by a doctor, receives PNC, or uses modern method of contraception. Maternal and reproductive health of women would improve if policy makers focused more on promoting health knowledge, increasing the availability of skilled health providers in rural areas, and transmitting mass media for the safety and well-being of mothers and infants in Myanmar, including Bago Township. | ||||||
Thesis/dissertations | ||||||
Yangon University of Economics | ||||||
Dr. Zin Zin Shwe |