An adequacy evaluation of a maternal health intervention in rural Honduras: the impact of engagement of men and empowerment of women
Objective. To determine the impact that a 6-year maternal and child health project in rural Honduras had on maternal health services and outcomes, and to test the effect of level of father involvement on maternal health. Methods. This was a program evaluation conducted through representative househo...
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2015-02-01
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doaj-2281cfb27c66438e9ab61b54d7c5d7272020-11-24T23:27:20ZengPan American Health OrganizationRevista Panamericana de Salud Pública1020-49892015-02-013729097S1020-49892015000200004An adequacy evaluation of a maternal health intervention in rural Honduras: the impact of engagement of men and empowerment of womenPeter R. Berti0Salim Sohani1Edith da Costa2Naomi Klaas3Luis Amendola4Joel Duron5HealthBridgeCanadian Red CrossCanadian Red CrossDevEd International IncorporatedIndependent consultantHonduran Red CrossObjective. To determine the impact that a 6-year maternal and child health project in rural Honduras had on maternal health services and outcomes, and to test the effect of level of father involvement on maternal health. Methods. This was a program evaluation conducted through representative household surveys administered at baseline in 2007 and endline in 2011 using 30 cluster samples randomly-selected from the 229 participating communities. Within each cluster, 10 households having at least one mother-child pair were randomly selected to complete a questionnaire, for a total of about 300 respondents answering close to 100 questions each. Changes in key outcome variables from baseline to endline were tested using logistic regression, controlling for mother's education and father's involvement. Results. There were improvements in most maternal health indicators, including an increase in women attending prenatal checkups (84% to 92%, P = 0.05) and institutional births (44% to 63%, P = 0.002). However, the involvement of the fathers decreased as reflected by the percentage of fathers accompanying mothers to prenatal checkups (48% to 41%, P = 0.01); the fathers' reported interest in prenatal care (74% to 52%, P = 0.0001); and fathers attending the birth (66% to 54%, P = 0.05). There was an interaction between the fathers' scores and the maternal outcomes, with a larger increase in institutional births among mothers with the least-involved fathers. Conclusions. Rather than the father's involvement being key, changes in the mothers may have led to increased institutional births. The project may have empowered women through early identification of pregnancy and stronger social connections encouraged by home visits and pregnancy clubs. This would have enabled even the women with unsupportive fathers to make healthier choices and achieve higher rates of institutional births.http://www.scielosp.org/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1020-49892015000200004&lng=en&tlng=enSalud materno-infantilservicios de salud maternaconducta paternaatención prenataleducación prenatalevaluación de programas y proyectos de saludHonduras |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Peter R. Berti Salim Sohani Edith da Costa Naomi Klaas Luis Amendola Joel Duron |
spellingShingle |
Peter R. Berti Salim Sohani Edith da Costa Naomi Klaas Luis Amendola Joel Duron An adequacy evaluation of a maternal health intervention in rural Honduras: the impact of engagement of men and empowerment of women Revista Panamericana de Salud Pública Salud materno-infantil servicios de salud materna conducta paterna atención prenatal educación prenatal evaluación de programas y proyectos de salud Honduras |
author_facet |
Peter R. Berti Salim Sohani Edith da Costa Naomi Klaas Luis Amendola Joel Duron |
author_sort |
Peter R. Berti |
title |
An adequacy evaluation of a maternal health intervention in rural Honduras: the impact of engagement of men and empowerment of women |
title_short |
An adequacy evaluation of a maternal health intervention in rural Honduras: the impact of engagement of men and empowerment of women |
title_full |
An adequacy evaluation of a maternal health intervention in rural Honduras: the impact of engagement of men and empowerment of women |
title_fullStr |
An adequacy evaluation of a maternal health intervention in rural Honduras: the impact of engagement of men and empowerment of women |
title_full_unstemmed |
An adequacy evaluation of a maternal health intervention in rural Honduras: the impact of engagement of men and empowerment of women |
title_sort |
adequacy evaluation of a maternal health intervention in rural honduras: the impact of engagement of men and empowerment of women |
publisher |
Pan American Health Organization |
series |
Revista Panamericana de Salud Pública |
issn |
1020-4989 |
publishDate |
2015-02-01 |
description |
Objective. To determine the impact that a 6-year maternal and child health project in rural Honduras had on maternal health services and outcomes, and to test the effect of level of father involvement on maternal health. Methods. This was a program evaluation conducted through representative household surveys administered at baseline in 2007 and endline in 2011 using 30 cluster samples randomly-selected from the 229 participating communities. Within each cluster, 10 households having at least one mother-child pair were randomly selected to complete a questionnaire, for a total of about 300 respondents answering close to 100 questions each. Changes in key outcome variables from baseline to endline were tested using logistic regression, controlling for mother's education and father's involvement. Results. There were improvements in most maternal health indicators, including an increase in women attending prenatal checkups (84% to 92%, P = 0.05) and institutional births (44% to 63%, P = 0.002). However, the involvement of the fathers decreased as reflected by the percentage of fathers accompanying mothers to prenatal checkups (48% to 41%, P = 0.01); the fathers' reported interest in prenatal care (74% to 52%, P = 0.0001); and fathers attending the birth (66% to 54%, P = 0.05). There was an interaction between the fathers' scores and the maternal outcomes, with a larger increase in institutional births among mothers with the least-involved fathers. Conclusions. Rather than the father's involvement being key, changes in the mothers may have led to increased institutional births. The project may have empowered women through early identification of pregnancy and stronger social connections encouraged by home visits and pregnancy clubs. This would have enabled even the women with unsupportive fathers to make healthier choices and achieve higher rates of institutional births. |
topic |
Salud materno-infantil servicios de salud materna conducta paterna atención prenatal educación prenatal evaluación de programas y proyectos de salud Honduras |
url |
http://www.scielosp.org/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1020-49892015000200004&lng=en&tlng=en |
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