Using Andersen’s behavioral model of health care use for intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy in Nigeria
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BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Abstract
Background Studies in Nigeria and elsewhere in sub-Saharan Africa (sSA) have explored factors influencing usage
of intermittent preventive treatment of malaria in pregnancy (IPTp). Most studies, however, are not model or theory
based, which provides less satisfactory guidance to malaria control programming. This study fills the knowledge gap
by adapting Andersen’s behavioral model of health care use to IPTp usage in Nigeria.
Methods This study adopted a cross-sectional design that utilized secondary data extracted from the 2018 Nigeria
Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS). A weighted sample of 4,772 women who had given birth in the past year
preceding the survey, was analyzed. Outcome variable was usage of IPTp, dichotomized into optimal or otherwise.
Explanatory variables cut across individual and community levels and were divided into predisposing, enabling and
need factors in line with the theoretical constructs of the Andersen model. Two multilevel mixed-effects logistic
regression models were fitted to identify factors which influenced optimal usage of IPTp. Analyses were performed
using STATA 14. Statistical significance was set at 5%.
Results Realised level of optimal IPTp usage was 21.8%. Factors that either predispose or enable pregnant
women to take optimal doses of IPTp were maternal education, being employed, being autonomous in their own
healthcare, health insurance enrolment, partner education, receiving antenatal care in public health facilities, rural
residence, being resident in northern geo-political zones, community literacy level and community perception of
the consequences of malaria. Two significant need factors affecting optimal usage of IPTp were timing of the first
antenatal care visit and sleeping under mosquito bed nets.
Conclusion Optimal usage of IPTp is low among pregnant women in Nigeria. There is a need to devise additional
public health educational programs promoting IPTp usage through the formation of Advocacy, Communication and
Social Mobilisation (ACSM) in every ward in all local government areas, particularly in the rural and northern parts of
the country. In addition, health planners should adopt the Andersen model for assessing key determinants of IPTp
usage among childbearing women in Nigeria.
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Solanke et al. BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth https://doi.org/10.1186/s12884-023-05648-9
