6 research outputs found

    Country context.

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    <p><b>Note:</b> Data for proportion of health facility births in Malawi is from 2010; all other data under the columns marked 2011 is from 2011.</p

    Newborn care content of postnatal home visits within 3 days after delivery.

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    1<p>In Malawi, women were asked what was done by an HSA during any home visit; it was assumed that all reported actions applied to visits that occurred within 3 days of delivery for newborns that received multiple visits.</p>2<p>Counseling on breastfeeding included observation, demonstration, or assessment of breastfeeding.</p>3<p>Check the cord, counsel on breastfeeding, check temperature, and weigh baby were collected in both countries. Counseling on danger signs is excluded since it was only collected in Malawi.</p

    Proportion of mothers<sup>1</sup> and newborns receiving CHW home visits in the first week after birth.

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    <p>This figure shows the percent of mothers and newborns that received a home visit from a community health worker within 0–3 days after birth and 4–7 days after birth in each of the 3 countries included in the analysis – Bangladesh, Malawi, and Nepal. <sup>1</sup>In Nepal, separate questions were asked about postnatal care for the mother and newborn. The woman was asked about only the first two post-discharge checks on her health, but was asked about the first three post-discharge checks for her newborn. Thus the percentage of women visited at home within three days after the birth appears lower than the percentage of newborns visited (41.3% versus 49.6%). Therefore, questions on post-discharge care for the baby were used to calculate the dependent variable in Nepal.</p
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