Observational analysis of factors associated with completion of four or more antenatal care visits in Sarlahi district, Nepal
Yiwei Yue, Elizabeth A Hazel, Seema Subedi, Scott Zeger, Diwakar Mohan, Luke C Mullany, James M Tielsch, Subarna Khatry, Steven C LeClerq, Joanne Katz

TL;DR
This study identifies factors influencing whether women in Nepal attend four or more antenatal care visits, highlighting the role of education, wealth, and government programs.
Contribution
The study provides new insights into socioeconomic and biological factors associated with ANC visit completion in a low-income setting.
Findings
Higher education, wealth, and non-farming occupations are positively linked to attending ≥4 ANC visits.
Awareness of a government cash transfer program significantly increases ANC visit completion.
Caste, maternal age, and preterm birth are associated with lower ANC visit completion rates.
Abstract
A significant number of women die from pregnancy and childbirth complications globally, particularly in low and middle-income countries. Receiving at least four antenatal care (ANC) visits is important in reducing maternal and perinatal deaths. However, few studies have investigated the factors linked to the completion of ≥4 ANC visits in Nepal. To investigate factors associated with attending ≥4 ANC visits in Sarlahi district of southern Nepal. A secondary analysis was conducted on data from the Nepal Oil Massage Study (NOMS), a cluster-randomised, community-based longitudinal pregnancy trial including 34 village development committees. We investigated the associations between attendance of ≥4 ANC visits and socioeconomic, demographic, morbidity and pregnancy history factors using logistic regression; generalised estimating equations were used to account for multiple pregnancies per…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlobal Maternal and Child Health · Global Health and Epidemiology · Child Nutrition and Water Access
