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Determinants of Maternal Health Care Utilisation in India: Evidence from a Recent Household Survey

Abusaleh Shariff and Geeta Singh
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Abusaleh Shariff: National Council of Applied Economic Research
Geeta Singh: Harvard Institute of International Development

No 85, NCAER Working Papers from National Council of Applied Economic Research

Abstract: In India, utilisation of basic health services has remained poor. The reasons may be low levels of household income, high illiteracy and ignorance, and a host of traditional factors. In this paper an attempt is made to discuss the issues associated with the demand and supply of the five measures of maternity care-antenatal care, blood pressure check up, place of delivery, use of trained help at the time of delivery and postnatal care. Econometric analysis is undertaken to find out the determinants of the use of reproductive health care services among rural Indian households. Rural data from 32,000 households belonging to 1765 villages across all parts of India was collected by National Council of Applied Economic Research in 1994. The multi-model survey was conducted both at the national and state level. The analysis pertains to 7635 women in the reproductive age group who delivered a child in the year before the survey. The focus on the role of education, information and economic factors as determ nants of health care accessibility and their utilisation is the speciality of this analysis. Analysis shows that education and information variables significantly increase the utilisation rates for prenata child delivery and postnatal health care. Women with primary education are more likely to use maternal health services as compared to illiterate women, even after controlling for income and health care supply factors. Exposure to media increases the probability of reproductive health care utilisation. Economic factors such as wages and income are important only for the utilisation of child delivery services. Access to locally available health services significantly increases maternity care use. An important health care facility in this respect has been the village level ICDS centre. Further, probit regressions analysis is used to examine the impact of individual, household and community level variables on the above choices of reproductive health care shows that the additional transaction costs in terms of delays and speed money incurred by the Indian exporters during trading with Bangladesh is about 10 per cent of shipment value. The present study has shown that informal barriers/para-tariff in India-Bangladesh trade are already high and further trade liberalisation without improving the infrastructure would be counterproductive. The paper ends with feasible policy recommendations to make trade between India and Bangladesh more vibrant.

Keywords: Maternal Health; Household Behaviour; Health Care (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: D1 I10 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Pages: 41 pages
Date: 2002
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (6)

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