Mali - World Health Survey - Enquête mondiale sur la santé (2003)
ID de référence | MLI-OMS-WHS-2003 |
Année | 2003 |
Pays | Mali |
Producteur(s) | World Health Organization (WHO) |
Bailleur(s) | World Health Organization - WHO - |
Collection(s) | |
Métadonnées | Documentation au format PDF |
Page web de l'étude |
Créé le
Sep 18, 2019
Dernière modification
Sep 18, 2019
Affichage par page
147939
- Documentation
- Description de l'enquête
- Dictionnaire de données
- Charger les microdonnées
- Bibliographie
where received care first
(q6563)
Fichier: WHS-Mali_F5
Fichier: WHS-Mali_F5
Aperçu
Type:
Discrète Format: numeric Largeur: 4 Décimales: 2 Intervalle: 1-6 |
Enregistrements valides: 0 Invalide: 0 |
Questions et instructions
Questions to be asked to households with children under 5 years.
During [NAME]'s last illness, did [NAME] receive any care or treatment for the illness?
If YES: Where did the child receive care?
Was it government operated or private?
If YES: Where did the child receive care?
Was it government operated or private?
Valeur | Catégorie |
---|---|
1 | Hospital |
2 | Outpatient facility |
3 | Pharmacy |
4 | Private physician |
5 | Traditional healer |
6 | Other |
Avertissement: ces statistiques indiquent le nombre d'enregistrements trouvés dans les fichiers de données, et non des nombres pondérés. Ils ne peuvent pas être interpretés comme étant représentatifs de la population concernée.
This set of questions (Q6562-6564) is only asked if the youngest child in the household under age 5 was reported to have ever been ill, and refers to the last period of illness. The interviewer should record the sources where the child first received care during the last period of illness, regardless of whether the source was from a health facility or not. If the source was a facility, probe whether it belonged to the public sector (run by the government including military) or private sector (including those run by nongovernmental organizations or religious institutionsIf the respondent is unsure of where the child received care, probe without implying that the child should have been taken elsewhere.