Did professional attendance at home births improve early neonatal survival in Indonesia?

@article{Hatt2009DidPA,
  title={Did professional attendance at home births improve early neonatal survival in Indonesia?},
  author={Laurel E. Hatt and Cynthia K. Stanton and Carine Ronsmans and Krystyna Makowiecka and Asri Adisasmita},
  journal={Health policy and planning},
  year={2009},
  volume={24 4},
  pages={
          270-8
        }
}
BACKGROUND Early neonatal mortality has been persistently high in developing countries. Indonesia, with its national policy of home-based, midwife-assisted birth, is an apt context for assessing the effect of home-based professional birth attendance on early neonatal survival. METHODS We pooled four Indonesian Demographic and Health Surveys and used multivariate logistic regression to analyse trends in first-day and early neonatal mortality. We measured the effect of the context of delivery… 
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Institutional Delivery Service Utilization and Associated Factors Among Women in West Central Ethiopia
  • Meseret Ifa
  • Medicine
    Science Journal of Public Health
  • 2019
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Maternal educational status, access to mass media, family income status and antenatal care visit were important predictors of institutional delivery service utilization.
Skilled Versus Unskilled Assistance in Home Delivery: Maternal Complications, Stillbirth and Neonatal Death in Indonesia
TLDR
There was a significantly higher probability of adverse outcomes with skilled assistance than with unskilled assistance for complications at birth and for complications after giving birth, raising doubts about the impact of skilled birth assistance.
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