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Determinants of childhood mortality in slums of Karachi, Pakistan

Authors :
Rennie M. D'Souza
John Bryant
Source :
Journal of healthpopulation in developing countries. 2(1)
Publication Year :
2002

Abstract

Pakistan has an infant mortality rate (IMR) of 90.5/1000 live births, and the country's child mortality level of 117.5 is worse than in other South Asian countries. Rapid population growth combined with rural-to-urban migration has led to the creation of urban slums in which morbidity levels are usually higher than in rural populations. A study was conducted in January 1993 in 6 slums of Karachi where the Aga Khan University has operated primary health care programs since 1985. Researchers recorded the deaths of 347 children under age 5 years old due to diarrhea and acute respiratory infections (ARI) during 1989-93. 235 mothers of these children were interviewed. The following are discussed as risk factors for under-5 child mortality: the use of traditional healers, poor nutritional status, incomplete or no immunization, the quick change of healers, inappropriate child care arrangements, mother's literacy, who decides about outside treatment, short birth interval, bottle feeding, and nuclear family structure. Maternal autonomy, appropriate health-seeking behavior, and child-rearing processes identified in the study point to the need for intervention strategies which go beyond the usual primary health care initiatives and involve communities in developing social support systems for mothers.

Details

ISSN :
10958940
Volume :
2
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of healthpopulation in developing countries
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9e7ece7d67f35ac103773852053b752b