Urban–rural differences in the incompleteness of antenatal care coverage in Indonesia: A cross-sectional study

Introduction: The estimated maternal mortality ratio in Indonesia from 2016 to 2020 was 249 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births. Currently, this ratio remains relatively high. One effort to reduce maternal mortality is to provide regular antenatal care during pregnancy. This study aimed to analy...

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Main Authors: Haerawati Idris, Rinda Nurul Karimah, Anni Yulianti
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Academy of Family Physicians of Malaysia 2025-03-01
Series:Malaysian Family Physician
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Online Access:https://e-mfp.org/wp-content/uploads/20.18_20Mar2025.pdf
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author Haerawati Idris
Rinda Nurul Karimah
Anni Yulianti
author_facet Haerawati Idris
Rinda Nurul Karimah
Anni Yulianti
author_sort Haerawati Idris
collection DOAJ
description Introduction: The estimated maternal mortality ratio in Indonesia from 2016 to 2020 was 249 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births. Currently, this ratio remains relatively high. One effort to reduce maternal mortality is to provide regular antenatal care during pregnancy. This study aimed to analyse the urban–rural differences in the incompleteness of antenatal care coverage in Indonesia. Methods: This cross-sectional study used data from Indonesian Basic Health Research 2018. A total of 64,399 women aged 15–49 years, including 26,792 and 37,607 women from urban and rural areas, respectively, were included. Univariate (percentage), bivariate (chi-square statistics) and multivariate (logistic regression statistics) analyses were conducted. Results: Approximately 18.2% and 26.4% of the urban and rural participants received incomplete antenatal care, respectively. Secondary and primary education, lack of health insurance, home-based antenatal care, parity greater than 2, travel time to health facilities exceeding 15 min, absence of abortion history, undesired pregnancy and absence of pregnancy complications were associated with incomplete antenatal care in rural areas. Secondary and primary education, home-based antenatal care, travel time to health facilities exceeding 15 min, parity greater than 2 and undesired pregnancy were associated with incomplete antenatal care in urban areas. Conclusion: Incomplete antenatal care coverage is more prevalent in rural areas than in urban areas, influenced by distinct socio-demographic and healthcare access factors. Strengthening health insurance programmes, improving healthcare facility access and promoting antenatal care education are critical to reducing disparities and ensuring better maternal health outcomes in both urban and rural areas.
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spelling doaj-art-e71d58b93da24d319c8808d143dccec92025-08-20T02:11:51ZengAcademy of Family Physicians of MalaysiaMalaysian Family Physician1985-22742025-03-01201810.51866/oa.616Urban–rural differences in the incompleteness of antenatal care coverage in Indonesia: A cross-sectional studyHaerawati IdrisRinda Nurul KarimahAnni YuliantiIntroduction: The estimated maternal mortality ratio in Indonesia from 2016 to 2020 was 249 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births. Currently, this ratio remains relatively high. One effort to reduce maternal mortality is to provide regular antenatal care during pregnancy. This study aimed to analyse the urban–rural differences in the incompleteness of antenatal care coverage in Indonesia. Methods: This cross-sectional study used data from Indonesian Basic Health Research 2018. A total of 64,399 women aged 15–49 years, including 26,792 and 37,607 women from urban and rural areas, respectively, were included. Univariate (percentage), bivariate (chi-square statistics) and multivariate (logistic regression statistics) analyses were conducted. Results: Approximately 18.2% and 26.4% of the urban and rural participants received incomplete antenatal care, respectively. Secondary and primary education, lack of health insurance, home-based antenatal care, parity greater than 2, travel time to health facilities exceeding 15 min, absence of abortion history, undesired pregnancy and absence of pregnancy complications were associated with incomplete antenatal care in rural areas. Secondary and primary education, home-based antenatal care, travel time to health facilities exceeding 15 min, parity greater than 2 and undesired pregnancy were associated with incomplete antenatal care in urban areas. Conclusion: Incomplete antenatal care coverage is more prevalent in rural areas than in urban areas, influenced by distinct socio-demographic and healthcare access factors. Strengthening health insurance programmes, improving healthcare facility access and promoting antenatal care education are critical to reducing disparities and ensuring better maternal health outcomes in both urban and rural areas.https://e-mfp.org/wp-content/uploads/20.18_20Mar2025.pdffemalepregnancyindonesiaantenatal care
spellingShingle Haerawati Idris
Rinda Nurul Karimah
Anni Yulianti
Urban–rural differences in the incompleteness of antenatal care coverage in Indonesia: A cross-sectional study
Malaysian Family Physician
female
pregnancy
indonesia
antenatal care
title Urban–rural differences in the incompleteness of antenatal care coverage in Indonesia: A cross-sectional study
title_full Urban–rural differences in the incompleteness of antenatal care coverage in Indonesia: A cross-sectional study
title_fullStr Urban–rural differences in the incompleteness of antenatal care coverage in Indonesia: A cross-sectional study
title_full_unstemmed Urban–rural differences in the incompleteness of antenatal care coverage in Indonesia: A cross-sectional study
title_short Urban–rural differences in the incompleteness of antenatal care coverage in Indonesia: A cross-sectional study
title_sort urban rural differences in the incompleteness of antenatal care coverage in indonesia a cross sectional study
topic female
pregnancy
indonesia
antenatal care
url https://e-mfp.org/wp-content/uploads/20.18_20Mar2025.pdf
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AT rindanurulkarimah urbanruraldifferencesintheincompletenessofantenatalcarecoverageinindonesiaacrosssectionalstudy
AT anniyulianti urbanruraldifferencesintheincompletenessofantenatalcarecoverageinindonesiaacrosssectionalstudy