1. Evaluation of a large-scale reproductive, maternal, newborn and child health and nutrition program in Bihar, India, through an equity lens
- Author
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Ward, Victoria C, Weng, Yingjie, Bentley, Jason, Carmichael, Suzan L, Mehta, Kala M, Mahmood, Wajeeha, Pepper, Kevin T, Abdalla, Safa, Atmavilas, Yamini, Mahapatra, Tanmay, Srikantiah, Sridhar, Borkum, Evan, Rangarajan, Anu, Sridharan, Swetha, Rotz, Dana, Bhattacharya, Debarshi, Nanda, Priya, Tarigopula, Usha Kiran, Shah, Hemant, Darmstadt, Gary L, Carmichael, Suzan, Chaudhuri, Indrajit, Creanga, Andreea, Dutt, Priyanka, Irani, Laili, Mitra, Radharani, Munar, Wolfgang A, Raheel, Hina, Saggurti, Niranjan, Sastry, Padmapriya, Ward, Victoria, Walker, Dilys, and Wilhelm, Jess
- Subjects
Public Health ,Health Sciences ,Pediatric ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Child Health ,Female ,Health Behavior ,Health Promotion ,Healthcare Disparities ,Humans ,India ,Infant ,Infant Health ,Infant ,Newborn ,Male ,Maternal Health ,Maternal Health Services ,Nutritional Status ,Pregnancy ,Reproductive Health ,Ananya Study Group ,Public Health and Health Services ,Public health - Abstract
BackgroundDespite increasing focus on health inequities in low- and middle income countries, significant disparities persist. We analysed impacts of a statewide maternal and child health program among the most compared to the least marginalised women in Bihar, India.MethodsUtilising survey-weighted logistic regression, we estimated programmatic impact using difference-in-difference estimators from Mathematica data collected at the beginning (2012, n = 10 174) and after two years of program implementation (2014, n = 9611). We also examined changes in disparities over time using eight rounds of Community-based Household Surveys (CHS) (2012-2017, n = 48 349) collected by CARE India.ResultsAt baseline for the Mathematica data, least marginalised women generally performed desired health-related behaviours more frequently than the most marginalised. After two years, most disparities persisted. Disparities increased for skilled birth attendant identification [+16.2% (most marginalised) vs +32.6% (least marginalized), P
- Published
- 2020