Where do mothers take their children for pneumonia care? Findings from three Indian states.

Childhood pneumonia accounts for 17% of IMR in India, posing a major health burden. With cultural beliefs influencing care seeking behaviour and disparities existing in health infrastructure across the country, an understanding of the underlying issues merits exploration. Study assessed prevalence o...

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Main Authors: Rani Mohanraj, Shuba Kumar, Sylvia Jayakumar, Monica Agarwal, Bhavna Dhingra, Visalakshi Jeyaseelan, Saradha Suresh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2019-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214331
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spelling doaj-03ff57c8db2a4927b12a7f4ddeca84162021-03-03T20:44:35ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032019-01-01144e021433110.1371/journal.pone.0214331Where do mothers take their children for pneumonia care? Findings from three Indian states.Rani MohanrajShuba KumarSylvia JayakumarMonica AgarwalBhavna DhingraVisalakshi JeyaseelanSaradha SureshChildhood pneumonia accounts for 17% of IMR in India, posing a major health burden. With cultural beliefs influencing care seeking behaviour and disparities existing in health infrastructure across the country, an understanding of the underlying issues merits exploration. Study assessed prevalence of probable pneumonia and examined care seeking behaviour of mothers in three states, Madhya Pradesh (MP), Uttar Pradesh (UP) and Tamil Nadu (TN). This mixed methods study involved a household survey and qualitative interviews with mothers in three districts from each state. Households with children aged 2-59 months were screened to identify those with probable pneumonia; sub-sample of mothers participated in qualitative interviews. Care seeking behaviour was explored in the context of recognition of symptoms, nature of first care provided, time when care was sought outside the home and choice of health provider. Overall 17,442 children from 13,544 households were screened, of which 729 (MP), 752 (UP) and 713 (TN) children respectively, were identified with probable pneumonia; 72 mothers participated in the qualitative interviews. Three months period prevalence was estimated in study districts at 22.2%-MP 13.3%-UP and 8.4%-TN. Most mothers in MP and UP were not perceptive to severity of illness; type of care sought was often inappropriate, delayed, with home remedies and visits to unqualified care providers being their first response. In contrast, in TN, use of home remedies was minimal, going to untrained care providers, non-existent and more than 90% mothers sought appropriate care. Private doctors were the preferred choice among all mothers but utilization of government care was highest in TN (20%). Community health workers were underutilized, with less than 10% mothers consulting them. Need for educating mothers about appropriate care seeking and development of good health infrastructure as essential to attainment of better child health indices are advocated.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214331
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rani Mohanraj
Shuba Kumar
Sylvia Jayakumar
Monica Agarwal
Bhavna Dhingra
Visalakshi Jeyaseelan
Saradha Suresh
spellingShingle Rani Mohanraj
Shuba Kumar
Sylvia Jayakumar
Monica Agarwal
Bhavna Dhingra
Visalakshi Jeyaseelan
Saradha Suresh
Where do mothers take their children for pneumonia care? Findings from three Indian states.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Rani Mohanraj
Shuba Kumar
Sylvia Jayakumar
Monica Agarwal
Bhavna Dhingra
Visalakshi Jeyaseelan
Saradha Suresh
author_sort Rani Mohanraj
title Where do mothers take their children for pneumonia care? Findings from three Indian states.
title_short Where do mothers take their children for pneumonia care? Findings from three Indian states.
title_full Where do mothers take their children for pneumonia care? Findings from three Indian states.
title_fullStr Where do mothers take their children for pneumonia care? Findings from three Indian states.
title_full_unstemmed Where do mothers take their children for pneumonia care? Findings from three Indian states.
title_sort where do mothers take their children for pneumonia care? findings from three indian states.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Childhood pneumonia accounts for 17% of IMR in India, posing a major health burden. With cultural beliefs influencing care seeking behaviour and disparities existing in health infrastructure across the country, an understanding of the underlying issues merits exploration. Study assessed prevalence of probable pneumonia and examined care seeking behaviour of mothers in three states, Madhya Pradesh (MP), Uttar Pradesh (UP) and Tamil Nadu (TN). This mixed methods study involved a household survey and qualitative interviews with mothers in three districts from each state. Households with children aged 2-59 months were screened to identify those with probable pneumonia; sub-sample of mothers participated in qualitative interviews. Care seeking behaviour was explored in the context of recognition of symptoms, nature of first care provided, time when care was sought outside the home and choice of health provider. Overall 17,442 children from 13,544 households were screened, of which 729 (MP), 752 (UP) and 713 (TN) children respectively, were identified with probable pneumonia; 72 mothers participated in the qualitative interviews. Three months period prevalence was estimated in study districts at 22.2%-MP 13.3%-UP and 8.4%-TN. Most mothers in MP and UP were not perceptive to severity of illness; type of care sought was often inappropriate, delayed, with home remedies and visits to unqualified care providers being their first response. In contrast, in TN, use of home remedies was minimal, going to untrained care providers, non-existent and more than 90% mothers sought appropriate care. Private doctors were the preferred choice among all mothers but utilization of government care was highest in TN (20%). Community health workers were underutilized, with less than 10% mothers consulting them. Need for educating mothers about appropriate care seeking and development of good health infrastructure as essential to attainment of better child health indices are advocated.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214331
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