Impact of antenatal care quality on neonatal mortality in Ethiopia: Evidence from DHS (2000 to 2019)

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Abstract

Background

Globally, 2.3 million children died, with an average of 6,300 neonatal deaths every day. Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) has the world’s highest infant death rate and has made the slowest progress in reducing neonatal mortality. Studies on the impact of antenatal care quality on neonatal mortality in Ethiopia have been limited.

Method

This study analyzed five years of Ethiopian demographic and health survey data, examining 51,730 live births from the five years prior to the survey. It assessed the quality of antenatal care through six key components. Utilizing multivariate logistic regression, the study explored the relationship between antenatal care quality scores, ANC visits, service components, and neonatal mortality. Factors with p-values below 0.05 were deemed statistically significant.

Results

The quality of prenatal care was 2.69 in 2016, ranging from 2.25 in the Somali region to 6.35 in Addis Ababa, 5.36 in higher education, 4.12 among the wealthiest individuals, and 4.7 in urban subpopulations. Neonatal mortality decreased by 16.3% for each unit increase in prenatal care quality. The reduction in neonatal mortality was associated with AN4+ (AOR=0.46, 95%CI 0.33, 0.64), good quality of antenatal care (AOR=0.56, 95% CI 0.42, 0.74), blood pressure measurements (AOR= 0.42, 95% CI 0.23, 0.75), and counseling about pregnancy complications (AOR= 0.58, 95% CI 0.35, 0.95).

Conclusion

The Quality of antenatal care varies across regions, and is more advantageous in the subpopulations. Reducing neonatal mortality is associated with pregnant women receiving quality ANC, attending at least four ANC visits, having blood pressure measurements, and receiving advice on pregnancy-related difficulties.

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