Author:
Beyene Getnet Mihretie,Azale Telake,Gelaye Kassahun Alemu,Ayele Tadesse Awoke
Abstract
AbstractMaternal morbidity and mortality remain high among women who did not attend antenatal care (ANC). Antenatal care is one of the interventions given to pregnant women to detect existed problems or problems that can develop during pregnancy, which harm the health of pregnant women and fetuses. In Ethiopia, however, there is limited evidence that revealed the effect of antenatal depression on ANC service utilization. Hence, this study aimed to see the effect of antenatal depression on ANC visits among women in urban northwest Ethiopia. A population-based, prospective cohort study was done from June 2019 to March 2020. The Edinburgh postnatal depression scale was administered to 970 women in the second and third trimesters of pregnancy to screen for antenatal depression. Additional data were collected on ANC visits, the mother’s socio-demographic, obstetric, clinical, psychosocial, and behavioral factors. A logistic regression model was used to adjust confounders and determine associations between antenatal depression and inadequate ANC visits. The cumulative incidence of inadequate ANC visits was 62.58% (95% CI: 59.43, 65.63). The cumulative incidence of inadequate ANC visits among depressed pregnant women was 75% as compared to 56% in non-depressed. The incidence of inadequate ANC visits in the exposed group due to antenatal depression was 25.33%. After multivariable analysis, antenatal depression at the second and third trimesters of pregnancy remained a potential predictor of inadequate ANC visits (AOR = 1.96: (95% CI 1.22, 3.16)). In addition, antenatal depression, long travel time for ANC visits (AOR = 1.83 (95% CI 1.166, 2.870)), and late initiation of ANC visits (AOR = 2.20 (95% CI 1.393, 3.471)) were the predictors of inadequate ANC visits as compared to their counterpart. This study suggested that antenatal depression affects ANC visits in Ethiopian urban settings. Therefore, early detecting and treating depression symptoms during the antenatal period reduced significantly the impacts of depression on the health of the mother and fetus.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference59 articles.
1. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Goalkeepers Report. Data from IHME (2021). https://www.gatesfoundation.org/goalkeepers/report/2021-report/progress-indicators/maternal-mortality/.
2. Nikiéma, B., Beninguisse, G. & Haggerty, J. L. Providing information on pregnancy complications during antenatal visits: Unmet educational needs in sub-Saharan Africa. Health Policy Plan. 24(5), 367–376 (2009).
3. Pattinson, R. Basic Antenatal Care Handbook (University of Pretoria, 2007).
4. Downe, S., Finlayson, K., Tunçalp, Ӧ & Metin Gülmezoglu, A. What matters to women: A systematic scoping review to identify the processes and outcomes of antenatal care provision that are important to healthy pregnant women. BJOG Int. J. Obstet. Gynaecol 123(4), 529–539 (2016).
5. Cumber, S. N., Diale, D. C., Stanlly, E. & Monju, N. Importance of antenatal care services to pregnant women at the Buea Regional Hospital Cameroon. J. Fam. Med. Health Care 2(4), 23–29 (2016).