One of the indicators for this purpose is the proportion of births attended by skilled health personnel (SBA). The study assessed the progress of low and middle income countries of Southeast Asia (SSEA) Southern region and within the scope of SBA and evaluate the contribution of women in this study progression.
The Demographic and Health Survey assessed, including 38 nationally representative survey of women aged between 15-49 year from 10 countries in the region SSEA been in 30 years. Binary Logistic regression models were fitted to adjust the cluster survey, surfactant 10g strata and sampling weights. Meta-analysis conducted by collapsing effect size and confidence intervals were modeled on SBA coverage.Results education shows that Cambodia, Indonesia and the Philippines have more coverage SBA 80% after 2010, while Bangladesh and Afghanistan has about 50% coverage.
Women with primary, secondary and higher education are 1.65, 2.21 and 3.14 times were significantly more likely to access care during childbirth SBA respectively as compared with women who do not have education, shows that education is a key factor to address skilled delivery care in the region.Evaluation SSEA skilled midwife existing policies at the national level can provide useful insights for decision makers to improve access to skilled care at birth by investing in female education in remote and rural areas.
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