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Table 5 Results of additional analyses

From: Universal health coverage of five essential health services in mothers before and after the Haiti 2010 earthquake: a retrospective cohort study using difference-in-difference

 

Household damage

Regional damage

Short-term damage

Without birth within 10 months after the earthquake

Outcome as continuous variable

Odds ratio (95% CI)

P-value

Odds ratio (95% CI)

P-value

Odds ratio (95% CI)

P-value

Odds ratio (95% CI)

P-value

Coefficient (95% CI)

P-value

Family planning

0.93 (0.75–1.17)

0.549

0.62 (0.38–1.00)

0.052

-

-

-0.05 (-0.24–0.13)

0.590

Antenatal care

1.03 (0.71–1.48)

0.893

1.06 (0.72–1.55)

0.762

0.80 (0.48–1.35)

0.408

0.85 (0.58–1.25)

0.413

0.14 (-0.19–0.46)

0.408

Delivery care

1.09 (0.77–1.54)

0.616

1.35 (0.95–1.93)

0.097

1.15 (0.69–1.90)

0.601

-

0.15 (-0.06–0.37)

0.161

Vaccination

0.88 (0.60–1.28)

0.500

0.93 (0.63–1.36)

0.697

0.82 (0.50–1.34)

0.428

-

-0.15 (-0.38–0.09)

0.226

Malaria prevention

1.19 (0.95–1.49)

0.125

1.25 (0.73–2.15)

0.415

-

-

-0.04 (-0.15–0.06)

0.44

  1. Household damage: mothers were defined as exposed if she experienced housing damage or loss of family member; Regional damage: mothers were defined as exposed if 50% of households in the region where mothers lived were exposed to the earthquake; Short-term damage: limited the earthquake exposed group to mothers who had the birth within 6 months after the earthquake; Without birth within 10 months after the earthquake: excluded mothers who had birth within 10 months since the earthquake; Outcome as continuous variable: d outcomes as continuous variables