Abstract

BackgroundThe survival of pregnant women is one of great interest of the world and especially to a developing country like Ethiopia which had the highest maternal mortality ratios in the world due to low utilization of maternal health services including antenatal care (ANC). Survival analysis is a statistical method for data analysis where the outcome variable of interest is the time to occurrence of an event. This study demonstrates the applications of the Accelerated Failure Time (AFT) model with gamma and inverse Gaussian frailty distributions to estimate the effect of different factors on time to first ANC visit of pregnant women in Ethiopia.MethodsThis study was conducted by using 2016 EDHS data about factors associated with the time to first ANC visit of pregnant women in Ethiopia. A total of 4328 women from nine regions and two city administrations whose age group between 15 and 49 years were included in the study AFT models with gamma and inverse Gaussian frailty distributions have been compared using Akaike Information Criterion (AIC) and Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC) to select the best model.ResultsThe factors residence, media exposure, wealth index, education level of women, education level of husband and husband occupation are found to be statistically significant (P-value < 0.05) for the survival time of time to first ANC visit of pregnant women in Ethiopia. Inverse Gaussian shared frailty model with Weibull as baseline distribution is found to be the best model for the time to first ANC visit of pregnant women in Ethiopia. The model also reflected there is strong evidence of the high degree of heterogeneity between regions of pregnant women for the time to first ANC visit.ConclusionThe median time of the first ANC visit for pregnant women was 5 months. From different candidate models, Inverse Gaussian shared frailty model with Weibull baseline is an appropriate approach for analyzing time to first ANC visit of pregnant women data than without frailty model. It is essential that maternal and child health policies and strategies better target women’s development and design and implement interventions aimed at increasing the timely activation of prenatal care by pregnant women. The researchers also recommend using more powerful designs (such as cohorts) for the research to establish timeliness and reduce death.

Highlights

  • The survival of pregnant women is one of great interest of the world and especially to a developing country like Ethiopia which had the highest maternal mortality ratios in the world due to low utilization of maternal health services including antenatal care (ANC)

  • To identify the factors associated with time-to-first ANC visits, different Accelerated Failure Time (AFT) models with associated different shared frailty distributions were applied

  • Among these using Akaike Information Criterion (AIC) and Bayesian Information Criterion (BIC) criteria, Weibull Inverse Gaussian shared frailty model was better fitted to the time-to-first ANC visit dataset than other and AFT shared frailty models

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Summary

Introduction

The survival of pregnant women is one of great interest of the world and especially to a developing country like Ethiopia which had the highest maternal mortality ratios in the world due to low utilization of maternal health services including antenatal care (ANC). Maternal deaths in Sub-Saharan Africa accounted for over two-thirds (196,000) of all maternal deaths, whereas maternal deaths in Southern Asia accounted for nearly one-fifth of all maternal fatalities [2]. It covers a wide range of countries, from industrialized (98%) to lowincome (68%). Even though ANC services are becoming more widely available in many African countries, coverage alone does not provide enough information about the service [3]

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