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Does Empowering Women Influence Maternal Healthcare Service Utilization?: Evidence from National Family Health Survey-5, India

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Abstract

Background

Maternal healthcare service utilization is a pivotal indicator of a nation’s progress in safeguarding the health and well-being of its women and children. In this context, women’s empowerment emerges as a critical determinant influencing the utilization of maternal healthcare services. The study aims to assess the relationship between women’s level of empowerment and utilization of maternal healthcare services among currently married women in India.

Data and Methods

The study uses data from the fifth round of the National Family Health Survey conducted in 2019–2021 and analyzed 26,552 (15–49 aged) currently married women who had a live birth in the last 5 years preceding the survey. Additionally, univariate and bivariate analyses, multivariate logistic regression, and the SWPER index were used for the analysis.

Results

Over the years, utilization of antenatal care, skilled birth attainment, and postnatal care has increased extensively in India. However, the study found that utilization of services was higher among empowered women, and it varies across the state with the extent of empowerment. State-level analysis shows that the extent of women empowerment was higher in Goa, followed by Tamil Nadu and Kerala, and lower in Jharkhand, followed by Tripura, so as the utilization of maternal and health care services. The extent of empowerment and utilization of services also varies by level of educational attainment, employment, and socio-economic status.

Conclusion

There is a need for comprehensive strategies to enhance women’s empowerment through education, employment, political participation, self-awareness, and reduction in gender-based violence and child marriages, which may improve awareness demand for better public health structure, and may ensure higher utilization of maternal healthcare services. Ultimately, these strategies may converse the higher maternal death and child mortality.

Significance

What is already known about this subject? Existing literature in India mostly highlights a clear connection between women’s autonomy and maternal healthcare services utilization. Women with higher autonomy, decision-making power, and mobility are more likely to use these services. However, in exploring the link between women’s empowerment and maternal healthcare, some studies focus on education, employment, and media access among Indian mothers, sidelining broader empowerment dimensions.

What this study adds? This study is likely the first to investigate the relationship between women’s empowerment and the level of maternal healthcare service utilization in India. It covers key dimensions of women’s empowerment, including Attitude to Violence, Social Independence, and Decision-making Power. Moreover, it is possibly the first Indian research paper to employ a survey-based women’s empowerment index in this context. Notably, the assessment highlights Social Independence as a significant dimension.

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Data Availability

The study analyzed a secondary data set which is freely available in the public domain through https://dhsprogram.com/data/dataset/India_Standard-DHS_2020.cfm?flag=0s

References

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Funding

The authors have not declared a particular grant from any funding agency in the public, private, or not-for-profit organization for this research.

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Authors

Contributions

Contributions: (i) SD, DP and RRS conceptualized to the design of the work; (ii) SD, DP contributed to the acquisition, analysis and interpretation of data; (iii) SD, DP and RRS drafted the article critically for critical intellectual content; (iv) SD, DP and RRS commented on the version to be published; (v) SD, DP, and RRS each contributed enough to the effort for significant sections of the text. The final manuscript was read and approved by all of the contributors.

Corresponding author

Correspondence to Rajeev Ranjan Singh.

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Competing Interests

All authors state that they have no competing interests.

Ethical Approval

This study did not require ethical approval because it is based on publicly available survey data.

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All procedures were used in accordance with applicable rules and legislation.

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Das, S., Deepak & Singh, R.R. Does Empowering Women Influence Maternal Healthcare Service Utilization?: Evidence from National Family Health Survey-5, India. Matern Child Health J 28, 679–690 (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-023-03823-0

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10995-023-03823-0

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