Assessing delivery practices of mothers over time and over space in Uganda, 2003-2012.
Daniel A SpragueCaroline JefferyNadine CrosslandThomas HouseGareth O RobertsWilliam VargasJoseph OumaStephen K LwangaJoseph James ValadezPublished in: Emerging themes in epidemiology (2016)
Our results support the hypothesis that increased development, particularly related to education and access to health facilities, will act to increase facility-based deliveries, a factor associated with reducing perinatal associated mortality. We provide a statistical method for using inexpensive and routinely collected monitoring and evaluation data to answer complex epidemiology and public health questions in a resource-poor setting. We produced a model based on this data that explained the spatial distribution of facility-based delivery in Uganda. Finally, we used this model to make a prediction about the future priority of districts that was validated by monitoring and evaluation data collected in the next year.