Household wealth and maternal health: evidence from Ghana
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Emerald Publishing Ltd
Abstract
Purpose – In 2016, the World Health Organization (WHO) revised upwards the recommended contacts for
antenatal care (ANC) by expectant mothers with a health provider from a minimum of four to eight over the
pregnancy period. Although Ghana is yet to adopt the new recommendation, some women choose to adhere to
the new protocol because of its enormous health benefits to the expecting mother and the unborn child. As part
of ANC, family planning services are also provided to ensure child spacing and birth control. To reduce health
costs, government introduced the free maternal health policy, Community-based Health Planning Services,
Livelihood Empowerment Against Poverty and established the Northern Development Authority to increase
access to healthcare and also create wealth. Given these interventions, the study hypothesizes that household
wealth would not have a significant influence on antenatal visits and modern contraceptive use. Therefore, this
paper aims to examine whether household wealth would play any significant role on the new minimum
contacts proxied by antenatal visits and also on the use of modern contraceptives as a family planning
counselling tool during ANC visits. The study further examines a possible heterogeneity effect of paternal
characteristic on maternal health service utilization.
Design/methodology/approach – The study used data from the most recent Ghana Demographic and
Health Survey (GDHS, 2014). Both bivariate and multivariate analyses were used to investigate the effects of
household wealth on the number of antenatal visits and modern contraceptive use. The bivariate analysis
employed the use of chi-square test whiles, the multivariate analysis involved estimations using logistic
regressions.
Findings – The findings show that household wealth would play a critical role given the revised WHO
minimum ANC contacts by expectant mothers. Household wealth exerts a positive and significant effect on
ANC for all wealth quintiles for women who attended at least eight ANC visits, but was insignificant for the
poorer and middle quintiles of those who attended four to seven visits. Wealth, however, had an insignificant
relationship with modern contraceptive use. Generally, education, age, birth order, media exposure as well as
geographical locations had a significant influence on both ANC visits and modern contraceptive use. The study
further revealed a heterogeneous effect on ANC attendance. In particular, despite the relatively poor conditions,
women in rural areas whose partners/husbands have attained a minimum of secondary education are about
twice more likely to attend 4–7 antenatal visits compared to their counterparts whose husbands/partners are
without education. Hence, a holistic health education, which includes husbands/partners in the rural areas as
well as strengthening interventions that improve livelihoods, is crucial.
Originality/value – Health guidelines are constantly reviewed, and government policies must adapt
accordingly. This paper looks at the significant role household wealth still plays on modern contraceptive use
and ANC visits, given the revised WHO minimum ANC contacts and uniquely underscores the influence of
paternal characteristics on the utilization of these maternal health services.
Description
Research Article