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Delivery Practices of Traditional Birth Attendants in Dhaka Slums, Bangladesh

This paper describes associations among delivery-location, training of birth attendants, birthing practices, and early postpartum morbidity in women in slum areas of Dhaka, Bangladesh. During November 1993–May 1995, data on delivery-location, training of birth attendants, birthing practices, deliver...

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Autores principales: Fronczak, N., Arifeen, S.E., Moran, A.C., Caulfield, L.E., Baqui, A.H.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2754018/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18402192
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author Fronczak, N.
Arifeen, S.E.
Moran, A.C.
Caulfield, L.E.
Baqui, A.H.
author_facet Fronczak, N.
Arifeen, S.E.
Moran, A.C.
Caulfield, L.E.
Baqui, A.H.
author_sort Fronczak, N.
collection PubMed
description This paper describes associations among delivery-location, training of birth attendants, birthing practices, and early postpartum morbidity in women in slum areas of Dhaka, Bangladesh. During November 1993–May 1995, data on delivery-location, training of birth attendants, birthing practices, delivery-related complications, and postpartum morbidity were collected through interviews with 1,506 women, 489 home-based birth attendants, and audits in 20 facilities where the women from this study gave birth. Associations among maternal characteristics, birth practices, delivery-location, and early postpartum morbidity were specifically explored. Self-reported postpartum morbidity was associated with maternal characteristics, delivery-related complications, and some birthing practices. Dais with more experience were more likely to use potentially-harmful birthing practices which increased the risk of postpartum morbidity among women with births at home. Postpartum morbidity did not differ by birth-location. Safe motherhood programmes must develop effective strategies to discourage potentially-harmful home-based delivery practices demonstrated to contribute to morbidity.
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spelling pubmed-27540182010-10-18 Delivery Practices of Traditional Birth Attendants in Dhaka Slums, Bangladesh Fronczak, N. Arifeen, S.E. Moran, A.C. Caulfield, L.E. Baqui, A.H. J Health Popul Nutr Original Papers This paper describes associations among delivery-location, training of birth attendants, birthing practices, and early postpartum morbidity in women in slum areas of Dhaka, Bangladesh. During November 1993–May 1995, data on delivery-location, training of birth attendants, birthing practices, delivery-related complications, and postpartum morbidity were collected through interviews with 1,506 women, 489 home-based birth attendants, and audits in 20 facilities where the women from this study gave birth. Associations among maternal characteristics, birth practices, delivery-location, and early postpartum morbidity were specifically explored. Self-reported postpartum morbidity was associated with maternal characteristics, delivery-related complications, and some birthing practices. Dais with more experience were more likely to use potentially-harmful birthing practices which increased the risk of postpartum morbidity among women with births at home. Postpartum morbidity did not differ by birth-location. Safe motherhood programmes must develop effective strategies to discourage potentially-harmful home-based delivery practices demonstrated to contribute to morbidity. International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh 2007-12 /pmc/articles/PMC2754018/ /pubmed/18402192 Text en © INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR DIARRHOEAL DISEASE RESEARCH, BANGLADESH http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Papers
Fronczak, N.
Arifeen, S.E.
Moran, A.C.
Caulfield, L.E.
Baqui, A.H.
Delivery Practices of Traditional Birth Attendants in Dhaka Slums, Bangladesh
title Delivery Practices of Traditional Birth Attendants in Dhaka Slums, Bangladesh
title_full Delivery Practices of Traditional Birth Attendants in Dhaka Slums, Bangladesh
title_fullStr Delivery Practices of Traditional Birth Attendants in Dhaka Slums, Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Delivery Practices of Traditional Birth Attendants in Dhaka Slums, Bangladesh
title_short Delivery Practices of Traditional Birth Attendants in Dhaka Slums, Bangladesh
title_sort delivery practices of traditional birth attendants in dhaka slums, bangladesh
topic Original Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2754018/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18402192
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