Litcius/Paper detail

Multilevel analysis of factors associated with pregnancy termination in Ethiopia

Getahun Dejene Yemane, Birhanu Bedada Korsa, Sebwedin Surur Jemal

2022Annals of Medicine and Surgery10 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background: Pregnancy termination is a major public health issue that affects maternal mortality around the world. So the study aimed to identify factors that are associated with pregnancy termination in Ethiopia. Methods: The current study's sample included women who had their pregnancy terminated (aged 15-49) and had complete information on all factors of interest (N = 8885). The binary logistic regression model investigated the factors that contribute to pregnancy termination in Ethiopia and multilevel logistic regression were used to identify regional variation in Ethiopia. Results: The current study showed that the prevalence of pregnancy termination in Ethiopia was 8.6%. The likelihood of pregnancy termination in uneducated women was 1.5 times (AOR = 1.479, 95% CI = 1.205-1.816) lower than in women who attended elementary school, 1.5 (AOR = 1.476, 95% CI = 1.107-1.969) lower than Secondary attended women and 1.8 times (AOR = 1.755, 95% CI = 1.270-2.427) lower than Higher school attended women. The likelihood of pregnancy termination in rural women was 0.8 times (AOR = 0.753, 95% CI = 0.573-0.990) higher than in urban women. Conclusion: The current study showed that there was regional Variation among women in Ethiopia to terminate the pregnancy. The characteristics of education level, place of residency, marital status and contraceptive knowledge are significant and differ between regions of the country. As a result, increasing contraception use and enhancing women's knowledge are the most effective ways to avert the problem.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePregnancyLogistic regressionDemographyMarital statusPublic healthRural areaObstetricsFamily planningPopulationEnvironmental healthResearch methodologyNursingBiologyInternal medicineGeneticsPathologySociologyGlobal Maternal and Child HealthReproductive Health and ContraceptionGlobal Health and Epidemiology