4.6 Article

The Impact of Social and Economic Indicators on Maternal and Child Health

Journal

SOCIAL INDICATORS RESEARCH
Volume 116, Issue 3, Pages 935-957

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11205-013-0330-y

Keywords

Maternal and child health; Gender equality; Women's human rights; Maternity care; Developing countries; Economic and political development

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As early as 1985, Rosenfield and Maine began to look at what is called the maternal child field (MCH). More than two decades later, maternal and infant mortality is still among the worst performing health indicator in resource-poor countries and regions, and it has barely changed since 1990. Although three of the eight United Nations Millennium Development Goals aim at reducing child mortality, maternal mortality, and promoting gender equality, most literature in the field is either clinical or exclusively deals with women's health problems. In this study, I proposed an empirical model that tests the impact of gender equality, women's human rights, and maternity care on MCH with economic and political development as background factors. The proposed model was tested by using structural equation analysis. Data were obtained from 137 developing countries. The proposed model is partially supported by the data. Empirical findings demonstrate that gender equality has a pivotal role to play in the promotion of MCH. The relationship between MCH and maternity care is found to be strong and statistically significant. This finding may permit a probable verification given the current social conditions in some developing countries, particularly the neglect of many of women's health needs and the assignment of their primary responsibilities in childrearing. The women's human rights hypothesis is not supported by the data. It is perhaps that human rights instruments provide a legal discourse for political functions and social welfare issues, but that the legal approach alone does not necessarily provide a moral and social foundation to ensure the implementation of social welfare and human well-being, particularly maternal and child health in developing countries. The findings also indicate the importance of economic development in predicting maternity care. Finally, a positive and statistically significant relationship is found between economic development and gender equality. Implications and limitations of the study are discussed.

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