Author/Authors :
for the Tanzania IMCI MCE baseline household survey study group، نويسنده , , Joanna Armstrong Schellenberg، نويسنده , , Cesar G Victora، نويسنده , , Adiel Mushi، نويسنده , , Don de Savigny، نويسنده , , David Schellenberg، نويسنده , , Hassan Mshinda، نويسنده , , Jennifer Bryce، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background
Few studies have been done to assess socioeconomic inequities in health in African countries. We sought evidence of inequities in health care by sex and socioeconomic status for young children living in a poor rural area of southern Tanzania.
Methods
In a baseline household survey in Tanzania early in the implementation phase of integrated management of childhood illness (IMCI), we included cluster samples of 2006 children younger than 5 years in four rural districts. Questions focused on the extent to which carersʹ knowledge of illness, care-seeking outside the home, and care in health facilities were consistent with IMCI guidelines and messages. We used principal components analysis to develop a relative index of household socioeconomic status, with weighted scores of information on income sources, education of the household head, and household assets.
Findings
1026 (52%) of 1968 children reported having been ill in the 2 weeks before the survey. Carers of 415 (41%) of 1014 of these children had sought care first from an appropriate provider. 71 (26%) carers from families in the wealthiest quintile knew 2 danger signs compared with 48 (20%) of those from the poorest (p=0•03 for linear trend across quintiles) and wealthier families were more likely to bring their sick children to a health facility (p=0•02). Their children were more likely than poorer children to have received antimalarials, and antibiotics for pneumonia (p=0•0001 and 0•0048, respectively).
Interpretation
Care-seeking behaviour is worse in poorer than in relatively rich families, even within a rural society that might easily be assumed to be uniformly poor.
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