Regarding term pregnancy [message #28873] |
Wed, 20 March 2024 17:09 |
Samia Samanta
Messages: 3 Registered: March 2024
|
Member |
|
|
For my thesis, I am using the 2022 NDHS. I want to know, how should i catagorize number of term pregnancy and delivery before term pregnancy?To find out term pregnancy number V233 was used. For analysis, using SPSS
|
|
|
|
Re: Regarding term pregnancy [message #28892 is a reply to message #28886] |
Sat, 23 March 2024 06:56 |
Samia Samanta
Messages: 3 Registered: March 2024
|
Member |
|
|
Thank you for your reply. But still now, i am not cleared how will i count term pregnancy which will include early term and full term also. It would be helpful if you could guide me, how will i count gestational age 40 weeks and above? For my thesis, i just need to differentiate delivered baby at term pregnancy and before term. Can you suggest me, which variable should i use? I wanted to use V233 and p32. There are 2 issues. When i tried to clean blank data for ANC visit, automatically data for p32 was removed ( only misscarriage and abortion were removed). And for V233 children born at 40 weeks and above, there was no data. Now, what can I do?
[Updated on: Sun, 24 March 2024 02:13] Report message to a moderator
|
|
|
Re: Regarding term pregnancy [message #28925 is a reply to message #28892] |
Thu, 28 March 2024 15:21 |
Janet-DHS
Messages: 880 Registered: April 2022
|
Senior Member |
|
|
Following is a response from DHS staff member, Tom Pullum:
I don't think v233 will be useful. If you enter "tab v233 v228,m" you will see that v233 only refers to the most recent terminated pregnancy ("terminated" means "not a live birth").
In the NR file, you can enter "tab p20 p32". The first column, for live births, has 3 at 6 months, 34 at 7 months, 287 at 8 months, 2807 at 9 months, and 46 at 10 months. I think this is the closest we can come to what you are looking for. We do not have weeks, just months. It is not clear whether, say, "9 months" means "in the 9th month of pregnancy" or "after 9 completed months of pregnancy, but not 19". These are not clinical data. Another table that could be useful is given by "tab m14 p20 if p32==1 & pidx==1". You can repeat that command for other values of p32. Your analysis should include sampling weights, which I have omitted here.
|
|
|