Burkina Faso - World Health Survey - Enquête mondiale sur la santé (2003)
ID de référence | BFA-OMS-WHS-2003 |
Année | 2003 |
Pays | Burkina Faso |
Producteur(s) | Organisation mondiale de la santé (OMS) - World Health Organization (WHO) |
Bailleur(s) | Organisation mondiale de la santé - World Health Organization - OMS - 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
152530
- Documentation
- Description de l'enquête
- Dictionnaire de données
- Charger les microdonnées
- Bibliographie
Were you told about signs of pregnancy
(q6405)
Fichier: WHS-Burkina_F5
Fichier: WHS-Burkina_F5
Aperçu
Type:
Discrète Format: numeric Largeur: 4 Décimales: 2 Intervalle: 1-8 |
Enregistrements valides: 0 Invalide: 0 |
Questions et instructions
Questions to be asked to women of reproductive age (18-49 years) with a live birth in last 5 years only.
During your pregnancy, when you were visiting a health care provider was any of the following done at least once:
Were you told about the signs of pregnancy complications and what you should do if they occur?
Were you told about the signs of pregnancy complications and what you should do if they occur?
Valeur | Catégorie |
---|---|
1 | Yes |
5 | No |
8 | Do not know |
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.
The purpose of these questions is to determine the minimal content of the antenatal care visits. For the safety of pregnancy and its outcome not only the number of visits matter, but the type of medical procedures that were performed during those visits. The procedures recommended in these questions are a bare minimum that has to be delivered to a pregnant woman. If the respondent is confused about the meaning of the "blood sample", the interviewer has to explain that this a procedure when a nurse or a doctor takes a small amount of blood from her to check if everything is alright. A response of “yes” is appropriate if the procedures were performed at any time during any antenatal care visit during the course of the woman’s last pregnancy.