Socioeconomic and Regional Disparities in Postnatal Care Utilization in Bangladesh: Evidence from the Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey 2022

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Abstract

Maternal and neonatal mortality in Bangladesh remains high, particularly in rural areas where access to skilled postnatal care (PNC) is limited. This study assessed urban-rural disparities in PNC utilization using data from the 2022 Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey. A sample of 4,844 ever-married women aged 15–49 with a recent live birth (3,249 rural; 1,595 urban) was analyzed. Outcomes included received any PNC, timely PNC within two days, and PNC from trained providers. Socio-demographic, reproductive, and healthcare determinants are analyzed using survey adjusted weighted logistic regression. Overall, 76.6% of women received PNC, 70.4% within 48 hours, and 24.7% from skilled providers. Utilization was consistently higher in urban than rural areas. Education, wealth, antenatal visits, and maternal employment were positively associated with PNC use, with women attending four or more antenatal visits showing nearly twice the odds of receiving timely and skilled PNC. Conversely, higher birth order and regional disparities, particularly in Rangpur, were linked to reduced skilled care. Chattogram showed comparatively higher coverage. Persistent inequities in PNC utilization, with rural women lagging behind in both timeliness and access to skilled providers indicates targeted interventions addressing education, socio-economic inequality, and service availability are critical to improving maternal and newborn health outcomes in Bangladesh.

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