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Predictors of maternal health services utilization by poor, rural women: a comparative study in Indian States of Gujarat and Tamil Nadu
Vora, Kranti Suresh; Koblinsky, Sally A. & Koblinsky, Marge A.
Abstract
Background: India leads all nations in numbers of maternal deaths, with poor, rural women contributing
disproportionately to the high maternal mortality ratio. In 2005, India launched the world’s largest conditional cash
transfer scheme,
Janani Suraksha Yojana (JSY), to increase poor women’s access to institutional delivery, anticipating
that facility-based birthing would decrease deaths. Indian states have taken different approaches to implementing
JSY. Tamil Nadu adopted JSY with a reorganization of its public health system, and Gujarat augmented JSY with
the state-funded
Chiranjeevi Yojana (CY) scheme, contracting with private physicians for delivery services. Given
scarce evidence of the outcomes of these approaches, especially in states with more optimal health indicators,
this cross-sectional study examined the role of JSY/CY and other healthcare system and social factors in
predicting poor, rural women’s use of maternal health services in Gujarat and Tamil Nadu.
Methods: Using the District Level Household Survey (DLHS)-3, the sample included 1584 Gujarati and 601 Tamil
rural women in the lowest two wealth quintiles. Multivariate logistic regression analyses examined associations
between JSY/CY and other salient health system, socio-demographic, and obstetric factors with three outcomes:
adequate antenatal care, institutional delivery, and Cesarean-section.
Results: Tamil women reported greater use of maternal healthcare services than Gujarati women. JSY/CY participation
predicted institutional delivery in Gujarat (AOR = 3.9), but JSY assistance failed to predict institutional delivery in Tamil
Nadu, where mothers received some cash for home births under another scheme. JSY/CY assistance failed to predict
adequate antenatal care, which was not incentivized. All-weather road access predicted institutional delivery in
both Tamil Nadu (AOR = 3.4) and Gujarat (AOR = 1.4). Women’s education predicted institutional delivery and
Cesarean-section in Tamil Nadu, while husbands’ education predicted institutional delivery in Gujarat.
Conclusions: Overall, assistance from health financing schemes, good road access to health facilities, and
socio-demographic and obstetric factors were associated with differential use of maternity health services by poor,
rural women in the two states. Policymakers and practitioners should promote financing schemes to increase
access, including consideration of incentives for antenatal care, and address health system and social factors in
designing state-level interventions to promote safe motherhood.
Keywords
Maternal health services; Poor rural women; India; Cash transfer schemes
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