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1.
Ethiopian Journal of Health Sciences ; 32(5): 875-884, 5 September 2022. Tables
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1398087

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Maternity Waiting Homes are houses built in the healthcare settings that lodge pregnant women in their term state of pregnancy to prevent labor and delivery-related complication. This study aimed to estimate the extent of pregnant women's intention to use Maternal Waiting Homes and identify its associated factors in Metu Woreda, Western Ethiopia. METHODS: A community-based cross-sectional study was conducted from March 1-30, 2018. We used a systematic sampling method to select the study participants and Binary logistic regression analysis was used to identify factors associated with the intention of the women to use Maternal Waiting Homes. RESULTS: A total of (97%) of respondents' questionnaires were found complete and analyzed for this study. Almost half (48.8%) of the pregnant women who participated in the study were planned to use Maternal Waiting Homes in their prospective delivery. Based on multivariate logistic regression analysis; being illiterate and/or less educated in their educational status, having a history of using Maternal Waiting homes, and receiving a number of times antenatal care services were found statistically significantly associated with intention of the women to use Maternal Waiting Homes. CONCLUSION: It is trivial that more than half of the pregnant women who participated in the study were unintended to use Maternal Waiting Homes. Educational status, a number of times attending antenatal care services and experience of using Maternal Waiting Homes were found statistically significantly associated with women's intention to use Maternal Waiting Homes


Subject(s)
Delivery of Health Care , Intention , Pregnant Women , Intraoperative Complications , Hospitals, Maternity
2.
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1263472

ABSTRACT

Objective: The main aim of this study was to explore the associations between specific aspects of family functioning and adolescent suicidal ideation/behaviour. Method: Participants were 87 high school students (43 male and 44 female) aged between 14 and 16 years of age. They completed a questionnaire measuring various aspects of family functioning and suicidal ideation/behaviour. The specific dimensions of family functioning assessed were: connection; psychological control and behavioural regulation in the parent-adolescent relationship; family conflict and family structure. Results: The results of t-test and chi-square analyses indicated that adolescents who reported suicidal ideation or behaviour in the previous year experienced lower levels of connection and regulation and higher levels of conflict and psychological control in the parent-child relationship than non-suicidal adolescents. Family structure and interparental conflict were not significantly associated with suicidal ideation/behaviour. Conclusions: The quality of relationships between adolescents and both of their parents may be important in distinguishing South African adolescents with recent suicidal ideation/behaviour from non-suicidal


Subject(s)
Family , Family Relations , Intention , Pilot Projects , Suicide
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