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Women's preferences for place of delivery in rural Tanzania: a population-based discrete choice experiment
- Publication Year :
- 2009
-
Abstract
- Objectives. We fielded a population-based discrete choice experiment (DCE) in rural western Tanzania, where only one third of women deliver children in a health facility, to evaluate health-system factors that influence women's delivery decisions. Methods. Women were shown choice cards that described 2 hypothetical health centers by means of 6 attributes (distance, cost, type of provider, attitude of provider, drugs and equipment, free transport). The women were then asked to indicate which of the 2 facilities they would prefer to use for a future delivery. We used a hierarchical Bayes procedure to estimate individual and mean utility parameters. Results. A total of 1203 women completed the DCE. The model showed good predictive validity for actual facility choice. The most important facility attributes were a respectful provider attitude and availability of drugs and medical equipment. Policy simulations suggested that if these attributes were improved at existing facilities, the proportion of women preferring facility delivery would rise from 43% to 88%. Conclusions. In regions in which attended delivery rates are low despite availability of primary care facilities, policy experiments should test the effect of targeted quality improvements on facility use.
- Subjects :
- Predictive validity
Program evaluation
Adult
Rural Population
Research and Practice
Population
Choice Behavior
Tanzania
Health facility
Environmental health
Health care
Medicine
Cluster Analysis
Humans
Obstetric care
Marketing
education
education.field_of_study
biology
business.industry
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Reproducibility of Results
biology.organism_classification
Delivery, Obstetric
Patient Satisfaction
Health Care Surveys
Community health
Female
Community Health
Health Facilities
Rural Health Services
Rural area
business
Attitude to Health
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....bd9bb581924c2c26a55a0f214e2ace5b