Regional Inequalities in Maternal and Neonatal Health Services in Iraq and Syria From 2000 to 2011

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SAGE Publications Inc.

Abstract

We analyze regional inequalities in access to maternal and neonatal health services in Iraq and Syria during the period 2000–2011, before the rise of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, ISIS. Utilizing nationally representative survey data (Iraq 2000, 2006, 2011; Syria 2006, 2009), we examine changes in the rate of babies weighed at birth and women delivering at home. We calculate 4 regional inequality indicators: (1) extremal quotient, (2) interquartile quotient, (3) coefficient of variation, and (4) systematic component of variation. Despite national improvements in both countries over time, indicators show increasing regional inequalities in access to maternal and neonatal health services, particularly in Syria between 2006 and 2009. Spatial regression results indicate that these inequalities associate with inequalities in maternal education, rurality, and wealth. Regions where women experienced deteriorating access over time, reflecting overall inequalities, are those that fell under the control of ISIS. Inequalities in access to basic services (education and health) deserve more attention in understanding social and political change in the Arab region. © The Author(s) 2019.

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Access to health services, Iraq, Regional inequalities, Syria, Adolescent, Cross-sectional studies, Demography, Female, Healthcare disparities, Humans, Infant, newborn, Maternal-child health services, Middle aged, Pregnancy, Rural population, Young adult, Syrian arab republic, Equity, Health services, Health survey, Maternal health, Neonate, Political change, Article, Attention, Controlled study, Education, Human, Human experiment, Infant, Spatial regression, Cross-sectional study, Health care disparity, Maternal child health care, Newborn

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