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Published in: BMC Public Health 1/2024

Open Access 01-12-2024 | Fertility | Research

Trends, patterns and predictors of high-risk fertility behaviour among Indian women: evidence from National Family Health Survey

Authors: Pooja Singh, Kaushalendra Kumar Singh

Published in: BMC Public Health | Issue 1/2024

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Abstract

Background

Numerous studies have demonstrated that high-risk fertility behaviour (HRFB), which includes maternal age below 18 or above 34 years, short birth intervals (less than 24 months), and high parity (birth order above 4), is associated with adverse maternal and child health outcomes. There is a substantial research gap in the domain of high-risk fertility behaviour in the Indian context. Therefore, this study is designed to investigate the current trends and patterns in the prevalence of high-risk births among Indian women, with a primary focus on identifying contributing factors associated with this prevalence.

Methods

The study utilized data from the nationally representative National Family Health Survey (NFHS), which has been conducted in five rounds since 1992–93. Data from all rounds were used to assess the overall trend. However, data from the most recent round of NFHS, conducted during 2019–21, were employed to evaluate current levels and patterns of HRFB prevalence and to identify socio-economic and demographic predictors of HRFB using binomial and multinomial logistic regression models.

Results

The prevalence of HRFB has exhibited a consistent decreasing pattern from 1992 to 93 to 2019–21 in India. However, 29.56% of married women continue to experience high-risk births with notably higher rates in several states (e.g., 49.85% in Meghalaya and 46.41% in Bihar). Furthermore, socio-demographic factors like wealth index, educational level, social group, religion, mass media exposure, family size, age at marriage, type and region of residence, and reproductive factors like birth intention, place and type of delivery, ANC visits and current contraceptive use were identified as significant predictors of high-risk births among women in India.

Conclusion

Despite a 20.4 percentage point decline in HRFB prevalence over the past three decades, a significant proportion of women in specific regions and demographic subgroups continue to experience high-risk births. Therefore, the present study recommends interventions aimed at preventing high-risk births among women in India, with particular emphasis on states with high HRFB prevalence and women from socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds.
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Metadata
Title
Trends, patterns and predictors of high-risk fertility behaviour among Indian women: evidence from National Family Health Survey
Authors
Pooja Singh
Kaushalendra Kumar Singh
Publication date
01-12-2024
Publisher
BioMed Central
Keyword
Fertility
Published in
BMC Public Health / Issue 1/2024
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2458
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-024-18046-3

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