Factors associated with institutional delivery in south Asian countries: evidence from five recent demographic and health surveys

Abstract Background Maternal and infant mortality is a major public health concern especially in South Asian nations. A significant proportion of mothers and infant died as a result of complications during birth. The delivery of healthcare facilities plays key role to lowering these mortality rates....

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sifat Muntaha Soni, Md. Ismail Hossain, Salma Akter, Shahjadi Ireen, Shuvongkar Sarkar, Shahanaj Parvin, Mansura Begum, Rebeka Sultana
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Springer 2025-08-01
Series:Research in Health Services & Regions
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/s43999-025-00071-3
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849333760097517568
author Sifat Muntaha Soni
Md. Ismail Hossain
Salma Akter
Shahjadi Ireen
Shuvongkar Sarkar
Shahanaj Parvin
Mansura Begum
Rebeka Sultana
author_facet Sifat Muntaha Soni
Md. Ismail Hossain
Salma Akter
Shahjadi Ireen
Shuvongkar Sarkar
Shahanaj Parvin
Mansura Begum
Rebeka Sultana
author_sort Sifat Muntaha Soni
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Maternal and infant mortality is a major public health concern especially in South Asian nations. A significant proportion of mothers and infant died as a result of complications during birth. The delivery of healthcare facilities plays key role to lowering these mortality rates. The present study aimed to explore the prevalence of institutional delivery and its determinants in five South Asian countries. Methods Data were extracted from five South Asian countries latest demographic and health survey data, including Afghanistan (2015), Bangladesh (2017–18), Nepal (2016), Myanmar (2015–16), and Pakistan (2017–18), all of which were pooled for the present study. A total of 38,975 women were included in this study after data handling. A multivariate binary logistic regression model was performed to identify the factors influencing institutional delivery. Results More than half of all deliveries among the women were reported as occurring in a medical facility. The proportion of institutional deliveries was highest in Pakistan (68.80%), and lowest in Myanmar (40.60%). This study found that women who give birth at after 20 years’ age had 1.25 times higher chance of getting healthy facility during delivery (OR 1.25, [1.19, 1.32]). The odds of institutional delivery were 2.18 times higher for highly educated women (OR 2.18, [1.89, 2.52]) and 2.88 times higher for rich women (OR 2.88, [2.70, 3.07]). The likelihood of getting his wife delivered in a hospital increased with the husband’s education level. Women who accessed by any media showed 33% higher chance of getting healthy facility during child birth. Women who did not obtain ANC from a skilled provider had a reduced likelihood of selecting healthcare facility delivery by 71% (OR 0.29, [0.28, 0.31]) compared to women who did. Women who didn’t take any health care decision by-self had 16% lower chance of getting institutional delivery facility than others. Most importantly, rural area in south Asian countries presented lower odds of receiving healthy facility during delivery (OR 0.63, [0.59, 0.68]). Conclusions In conclusion, improving maternal health among South Asian countries requires addressing both individual and community-level factors. Women with higher education, better socioeconomic status, media exposure, and access to prenatal care are more likely to utilize medical services. Strengthening evidence-based health policies and ensuring strong leadership can enhance women’s quality of life through better access to health care.
format Article
id doaj-art-252c7b2c3d044c83a5558fe96e949cda
institution Kabale University
issn 2730-9827
language English
publishDate 2025-08-01
publisher Springer
record_format Article
series Research in Health Services & Regions
spelling doaj-art-252c7b2c3d044c83a5558fe96e949cda2025-08-20T03:45:45ZengSpringerResearch in Health Services & Regions2730-98272025-08-01411810.1007/s43999-025-00071-3Factors associated with institutional delivery in south Asian countries: evidence from five recent demographic and health surveysSifat Muntaha Soni0Md. Ismail Hossain1Salma Akter2Shahjadi Ireen3Shuvongkar Sarkar4Shahanaj Parvin5Mansura Begum6Rebeka Sultana7Department of Statistics, Islamic UniversityDepartment of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, BRAC UniversityDepartment of Statistics, Jagannath UniversityDepartment of Statistics, Jagannath UniversityDepartment of Statistics, Jagannath UniversityDepartment of Statistics, Jagannath UniversityDepartment of Statistics, Jagannath UniversityDepartment of Statistics, Jagannath UniversityAbstract Background Maternal and infant mortality is a major public health concern especially in South Asian nations. A significant proportion of mothers and infant died as a result of complications during birth. The delivery of healthcare facilities plays key role to lowering these mortality rates. The present study aimed to explore the prevalence of institutional delivery and its determinants in five South Asian countries. Methods Data were extracted from five South Asian countries latest demographic and health survey data, including Afghanistan (2015), Bangladesh (2017–18), Nepal (2016), Myanmar (2015–16), and Pakistan (2017–18), all of which were pooled for the present study. A total of 38,975 women were included in this study after data handling. A multivariate binary logistic regression model was performed to identify the factors influencing institutional delivery. Results More than half of all deliveries among the women were reported as occurring in a medical facility. The proportion of institutional deliveries was highest in Pakistan (68.80%), and lowest in Myanmar (40.60%). This study found that women who give birth at after 20 years’ age had 1.25 times higher chance of getting healthy facility during delivery (OR 1.25, [1.19, 1.32]). The odds of institutional delivery were 2.18 times higher for highly educated women (OR 2.18, [1.89, 2.52]) and 2.88 times higher for rich women (OR 2.88, [2.70, 3.07]). The likelihood of getting his wife delivered in a hospital increased with the husband’s education level. Women who accessed by any media showed 33% higher chance of getting healthy facility during child birth. Women who did not obtain ANC from a skilled provider had a reduced likelihood of selecting healthcare facility delivery by 71% (OR 0.29, [0.28, 0.31]) compared to women who did. Women who didn’t take any health care decision by-self had 16% lower chance of getting institutional delivery facility than others. Most importantly, rural area in south Asian countries presented lower odds of receiving healthy facility during delivery (OR 0.63, [0.59, 0.68]). Conclusions In conclusion, improving maternal health among South Asian countries requires addressing both individual and community-level factors. Women with higher education, better socioeconomic status, media exposure, and access to prenatal care are more likely to utilize medical services. Strengthening evidence-based health policies and ensuring strong leadership can enhance women’s quality of life through better access to health care.https://doi.org/10.1007/s43999-025-00071-3Institutional deliverySocio-economic and demographic factorsMaternal mortalityAntenatal visit
spellingShingle Sifat Muntaha Soni
Md. Ismail Hossain
Salma Akter
Shahjadi Ireen
Shuvongkar Sarkar
Shahanaj Parvin
Mansura Begum
Rebeka Sultana
Factors associated with institutional delivery in south Asian countries: evidence from five recent demographic and health surveys
Research in Health Services & Regions
Institutional delivery
Socio-economic and demographic factors
Maternal mortality
Antenatal visit
title Factors associated with institutional delivery in south Asian countries: evidence from five recent demographic and health surveys
title_full Factors associated with institutional delivery in south Asian countries: evidence from five recent demographic and health surveys
title_fullStr Factors associated with institutional delivery in south Asian countries: evidence from five recent demographic and health surveys
title_full_unstemmed Factors associated with institutional delivery in south Asian countries: evidence from five recent demographic and health surveys
title_short Factors associated with institutional delivery in south Asian countries: evidence from five recent demographic and health surveys
title_sort factors associated with institutional delivery in south asian countries evidence from five recent demographic and health surveys
topic Institutional delivery
Socio-economic and demographic factors
Maternal mortality
Antenatal visit
url https://doi.org/10.1007/s43999-025-00071-3
work_keys_str_mv AT sifatmuntahasoni factorsassociatedwithinstitutionaldeliveryinsouthasiancountriesevidencefromfiverecentdemographicandhealthsurveys
AT mdismailhossain factorsassociatedwithinstitutionaldeliveryinsouthasiancountriesevidencefromfiverecentdemographicandhealthsurveys
AT salmaakter factorsassociatedwithinstitutionaldeliveryinsouthasiancountriesevidencefromfiverecentdemographicandhealthsurveys
AT shahjadiireen factorsassociatedwithinstitutionaldeliveryinsouthasiancountriesevidencefromfiverecentdemographicandhealthsurveys
AT shuvongkarsarkar factorsassociatedwithinstitutionaldeliveryinsouthasiancountriesevidencefromfiverecentdemographicandhealthsurveys
AT shahanajparvin factorsassociatedwithinstitutionaldeliveryinsouthasiancountriesevidencefromfiverecentdemographicandhealthsurveys
AT mansurabegum factorsassociatedwithinstitutionaldeliveryinsouthasiancountriesevidencefromfiverecentdemographicandhealthsurveys
AT rebekasultana factorsassociatedwithinstitutionaldeliveryinsouthasiancountriesevidencefromfiverecentdemographicandhealthsurveys