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Nepal
Demographic and
Health Survey
2011
Demographic andHealth Survey
Nepal 2011
Nepal
Demographic andHealthSurvey
2011
Population Division
Ministry of Healthand Population
Government of Nepal
Kathmandu, Nepal
New ERA
Kathmandu, Nepal
ICF International
Calverton, Maryland, U.S.A.
March 2012
New ERA
Ministry of Health
and Population
The 2011 NepalDemographicandHealthSurvey (2011 NDHS) was implemented by New ERA under the aegis
of the Ministry of Healthand Population (MOHP). Funding for the survey was provided by USAID. ICF
International provided technical assistance for the survey through the MEASURE DHS program, a USAID-
funded project providing support and technical assistance in the implementation of population andhealth
surveys in countries worldwide. The opinions expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily
reflect the views of the U.S. Agency for International Development.
Additional information about the survey may be obtained from the Population Division, Ministry of Healthand
Population, Government of Nepal, Ramshahpath, Kathmandu, Nepal; Telephone: (977-1) 4262987; New ERA,
P.O. Box 722, Kathmandu, Nepal; Telephone: (977-1) 4423176/4413603; Fax: (977-1) 4419562; E-mail:
info@newera.wlink.com.np. Information about the DHS program may be obtained from MEASURE DHS, ICF
International, 11785 Beltsville Drive, Suite 300, Calverton, MD 20705, USA; Telephone: 301-572-0200, Fax:
301-572-0999, E-mail: reports@measuredhs.com, Internet: http://www.measuredhs.com.
Recommended citation:
Ministry of Healthand Population (MOHP) [Nepal], New ERA, and ICF International Inc. 2012. Nepal
Demographic andHealthSurvey 2011. Kathmandu, Nepal: Ministry of Healthand Population, New ERA, and
ICF International, Calverton, Maryland.
Contents • iii
CONTENTS
Tables and Figures ix
Foreword xv
Acknowledgments xvii
Technical Advisory Committee and Technical Working Committee xix
Contributors to the Report xxi
Millennium Development Goal Indicators xxiii
Map of Nepal xxiv
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION 1
1.1 History, Geography, and Economy 1
1.1.1 History 1
1.1.2 Geography 1
1.1.3 Economy 3
1.2 Population 3
1.3 Population andHealth Policies and Programs 4
1.4 Objectives of the Survey 5
1.5 Organization of the Survey 6
1.6 Sample Design 6
1.6.1 Sampling Frame 7
1.6.2 Domains 7
1.6.3 Sample Selection 7
1.7 Questionnaires 8
1.8 Hemoglobin Testing 8
1.9 Listing, Pretest, Training, and Fieldwork 9
1.9.1 Listing 9
1.9.2 Pretest 9
1.9.3 Training of Field Staff 9
1.9.4 Fieldwork 10
1.10 Data Processing 10
1.11 Response Rates 10
CHAPTER 2 HOUSING CHARACTERISTICS AND HOUSEHOLD POPULATION 13
2.1 Household Characteristics 13
2.1.1 Water and Sanitation 13
2.1.2 Housing Characteristics 16
2.1.3 Household Possessions 18
2.2 Socioeconomic Status Index 19
2.3 Household Population by Age and Sex 20
2.4 Migration Status 22
2.5 Household Composition 25
2.
6 Birth
Registration 25
2.7 Children’s Living Arrangements, Orphanhood, and School Attendance 26
2.8 Education of Household Population 28
2.8.1 Educational Attainment of Household Population 28
2.8.2 School Attendance Ratios 30
2.8.3 Early Childhood Development Centers 33
2.9 Possession of Mosquito Nets 34
2.10 Prevalence and Causes of Food Insecurity and Coping Strategies 35
iv • Contents
CHAPTER 3 CHARACTERISTICS OF RESPONDENTS 41
3.1 Characteristics of Survey Respondents 41
3.1.1 Spousal Separation 43
3.2 Educational Attainment by Background Characteristics 44
3.3 Literacy 47
3.4 Access to Mass Media 49
3.4.1 Access to Specific Radio and Television Programs 51
3.4.2 Preferred Media Source for Health-Related Programs 53
3.5 Employment 54
3.5.1 Employment Status 54
3.5.2 Occupation 57
3.5.3 Earnings, Employers, and Continuity of Employment 60
3.6 Use of Tobacco 61
CHAPTER 4 MARRIAGE AND SEXUAL ACTIVITY 65
4.1 Current Marital Status 65
4.2 Polygyny 66
4.3 Age at First Marriage 67
4.4 Median Age at First Marriage 68
4.5 Age at First Sexual Intercourse 70
4.6 Median Age at First Sexual Intercourse 71
4.7 Recent Sexual Activity 71
CHAPTER 5 FERTILITY 75
5.1 Current Fertility 75
5.2 Fertility Differentials 76
5.3 Fertility Trends 77
5.4 Children Ever Born and Living 78
5.5 Birth Intervals 79
5.6 Postpartum Amenorrhea, Abstinence, and Insusceptibility 81
5.7 Menopause 82
5.8 Age at First Birth 82
5.9 Teenage Pregnancy and Motherhood 83
CHAPTER 6 FERTILITY PREFERENCES
85
6.
1 Desire for More Children 85
6.2 Desire to Limit Childbearing by Background Characteristics 86
6.3 Ideal Family Size 88
6.4 Fertility Planning 90
6.5 Wanted Fertility Rates 90
CHAPTER 7 FAMILY PLANNING 93
7.1 Knowledge of Contraceptive Methods 94
7.2 Current Use of Contraception 94
7.3 Current Use of Contraception by Background Characteristics 95
7.4 Trends in Current Use of Family Planning 97
7.5 Timing of Female Sterilization 98
7.6 Source of Contraception 99
7.7 Brands of Pills and Condoms Used 100
7.8 Informed Choice 101
7.9 Contraceptive Discontinuation Rates 102
7.10 Reasons for Discontinuation of Contraceptive Use 102
Contents • v
7.11 Knowledge of Fertile Period 103
7.12 Need and Demand for Family Planning Services 103
7.13 Future Use of Contraception 105
7.14 Exposure to Family Planning Messages 105
7.15 Contact of Nonusers with Family Planning Providers 107
7.16 Counseling During Postpartum and Post-abortion 108
7.17 Men’s Attitudes towards Contraception 110
CHAPTER 8 INFANT AND CHILD MORTALITY 111
8.1 Assessment of Data Quality 112
8.2 Levels and Trends in Infant and Child Mortality 113
8.3 Socioeconomic Differentials in Childhood Mortality 114
8.4 Demographic Differentials in Mortality 115
8.5 Perinatal Mortality 116
8.6 High-risk Fertility Behavior 117
CHAPTER 9 MATERNAL HEALTH 119
9.1 Antenatal Care 119
9.1.1 Number and Timing of Antenatal Visits 121
9.2 Components of Antenatal Care 121
9.3 Tetanus Toxoid Vaccination 123
9.4 Place of Delivery 124
9.5 Assistance during Delivery 126
9.5.1 Care and Support during Delivery 128
9.5.2 Birth Preparedness 130
9.6 Postnatal Care 130
9.6.1 Timing of First Postnatal Checkup for the Mother 131
9.6.2 Provider of First Postnatal Checkup for Mother 132
9.7 Newborn Care 132
9.7.1 Provider of First Postnatal Checkup for the Newborn 134
9.7.2 Newborn Care Practices 135
9.8 Abortion 136
9.8.1 Knowledge that Abortion is Legal in Nepal 137
9.8.2 Knowledge about Places That Provide Safe Abortions 138
9.8.3 Pregnancy Outcomes 139
9.8.4
Reason for the
Most Recent Abortion 140
9.8.5 Type of Abortion Procedure 141
9.8.6 Place and Provider for Abortion 142
9.8.7 Complications during and after Abortion and Contraception 143
9.8.8 Abortion and Post-abortion Cost 143
9.9 Uterine Prolapse 143
9.10 Problems in Accessing Health Care 143
9.10.1 Awareness and Practice of Health Services in the Government Sector 144
CHAPTER 10 CHILD HEALTH 147
10.1 Child’s Weight and Size at Birth 148
10.2 Vaccination Coverage 149
10.3 Vaccination by Background Characteristics 150
10.4 Trends in Immunization Coverage 152
10.5 Acute Respiratory Infection 152
10.6 Fever 153
10.7 Diarrhea 155
vi • Contents
10.8 Diarrhea Treatment 156
10.9 Feeding Practices during Diarrhea 158
10.10 Knowledge of ORS Packets 159
10.11 Disposal of Children’s Stools 160
CHAPTER 11 NUTRITION OF CHILDREN AND WOMEN 163
11.1 Nutritional Status of Children 164
11.1.1 Measurement of Nutritional Status among Young Children 164
11.1.2 Data Collection 165
11.1.3 Measures of Child Nutrition Status 165
11.1.4 Trends in Children’s Nutritional Status 168
11.2 Breastfeeding and Complementary Feeding 169
11.2.1 Initiation of Breastfeeding 169
11.3 Breastfeeding Status by Age 171
11.4 Duration of Breastfeeding 173
11.5 Types of Complementary Foods 174
11.6 Infant and Young Child Feeding (IYCF) Practices 175
11.7 Prevalence of Anemia in Children 177
11.8 Micronutrient Intake among Children 179
11.9 Nutritional Status of Women 182
11.10 Prevalence of Anemia in Women 184
11.11 Micronutrient Intake among Mothers 185
CHAPTER 12 HIV AND AIDS-RELATED KNOWLEDGE, ATTITUDES, AND BEHAVIOR 189
12.1 Introduction 189
12.2 HIV and AIDS Knowledge, Transmission, and Prevention Methods 190
12.2.1 Knowledge of AIDS 190
12.2.2 Knowledge of HIV Prevention Methods 191
12.2.3 Comprehensive Knowledge of HIV and AIDS Transmission 193
12.3 Knowledge of Prevention of Mother-to-Child Transmission of HIV 196
12.4 Accepting Attitudes toward those Living with HIV and AIDS 197
12.5 Attitudes toward Negotiating Safer Sex 199
12.6 Multiple Sexual Partners
201
12.7 Paym
ent for
Sex 202
12.8 Testing for HIV 203
12.9 Self-reporting of Sexually Transmitted Infections 206
12.10 Prevalence of Medical Injections 207
12.11 HIV and AIDS-related Knowledge and Behavior among Youth 208
12.11.1 Knowledge about HIV and AIDS and of Sources for Condoms 209
12.11.2 Age at First Sexual Intercourse among Youth 210
12.11.3 Premarital Sex 211
12.11.4 Multiple Sexual Partners among Youth 212
12.11.5 Age Mixing in Sexual Relationships among Women Age 15-19 213
12.11.6 Recent HIV Tests among Youth 214
CHAPTER 13 WOMEN’S EMPOWERMENT ANDDEMOGRAPHICANDHEALTH
OUTCOMES 215
13.1 Employment and Form of Earnings 216
13.2 Women’s Control over Their Own Earnings and Relative Magnitude of Women’s
and Their Husbands’ Earnings 218
13.3 Control over Husbands’ Earnings 219
13.4 Women’s and Men’s Ownership of Selected Assets 222
Contents • vii
13.5 Women’s Participation in Decision-making 224
13.6 Women’s Empowerment Indicators 227
13.7 Current Use of Contraception by Women’s Status 229
13.8 Ideal Family Size and Unmet Need by Women’s Status 230
13.9 Reproductive Health Care and Women’s Empowerment 231
13.10 Infant and Child Mortality and Women’s Empowerment 232
CHAPTER 14 DOMESTIC VIOLENCE 233
14.1 Measurement of Violence 234
14.1.1 Use of Valid Measures of Violence 234
14.1.2 Ethical Considerations in the 2011 NDHS 235
14.1.3 Subsample for the Violence Module 235
14.2 Experience of Physical Violence 236
14.3 Perpetrators of Physical Violence 237
14.4 Experience of Sexual Violence 237
14.5 Perpetrators of Sexual Violence 238
14.6 Experience of Different Forms of Violence 239
14.7 Forced at Sexual Initiation 239
14.8 Violence during Pregnancy 239
14.9 Marital Control by Husband 240
14.10 Forms of Spousal Violence 241
14.11 Spousal Violence by Background Characteristics 243
14.12 Violence by Spousal Characteristics and Women’s Empowerment Indicators 244
14.13 Frequency of Spousal Violence 245
14.14 Onset of Spousal Violence 247
14.15 Physical Consequences of Spousal Violence 247
14.16 Violence by Women against Their Husbands 248
14.17 Help-seeking Behavior by Women Who Experience Violence 250
REFERENCES 253
APPENDIX A SAMPLE DESIGN AND IMPLEMENTATION 261
APPENDIX B ESTIMATES OF SAMPLING ERRORS 267
APPENDIX C DATA QUALITY TABLES 281
APPENDIX D PERSONS INVOLVED IN THE 2011 NEPALDEMOGRAPHICAND
HEALTH SURVEY 287
APPENDIX E QUESTIONNAIRES 291
Tables and Figures • ix
TABLES AND FIGURES
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION
Table 1.1 Basic demographic indicators 3
Table 1.2 Results of the household and individual interviews 11
CHAPTER 2 HOUSING CHARACTERISTICS AND HOUSEHOLD POPULATION
Table 2.1 Household drinking water 14
Table 2.2 Household sanitation facilities 15
Table 2.3 Hand washing 16
Table 2.4 Household characteristics 17
Table 2.5 Household possessions 18
Table 2.6 Wealth quintiles 20
Table 2.7 Household population by age, sex, and residence 21
Table 2.8 Migration status 22
Table 2.9.1 Migration status: Men 23
Table 2.9.2 Migration status: Women 24
Table 2.10 Household composition 25
Table 2.11 Birth registration of children under age five 26
Table 2.12 Children’s living arrangements and orphanhood 27
Table 2.13.1 Educational attainment of the female household population 29
Table 2.13.2 Educational attainment of the male household population 30
Table 2.14.1 School attendance ratios: Primary school 31
Table 2.14.2 School attendance ratios: Secondary school 32
Table 2.15 Children enrolled in school-based pre-primary classes and Early Childhood
Development centers 34
Table 2.16 Possession of mosquito nets 35
Table 2.17 Household food security 37
Table 2.18 Coping strategies of households with food insecurity 38
Table 2.19 Causes of household food insecurity 39
Figure 2.1 Population Pyramid 21
Figure 2.2 Age-specific Attendance Rates of the de facto Population 5 to 24 Years 33
CHAPTER 3 CHARACTERISTICS OF RESPONDENTS
Table 3.
1
Background characteristics of respondents 42
Table 3.2 Spousal separation 44
Table 3.3.1 Educational attainment: Women 45
Table 3.3.2 Educational attainment: Men 46
Table 3.4.1 Literacy: Women 47
Table 3.4.2 Literacy: Men 48
Table 3.5.1 Exposure to mass media: Women 49
Table 3.5.2 Exposure to mass media: Men 50
Table 3.6.1 Exposure to specific health programs on radio and television: Women 51
Table 3.6.2 Exposure to specific health programs on radio and television: Men 52
Table 3.7.1 Preferred media source for health-related information: Women 53
Table 3.7.2 Preferred media source for health-related information: Men 54
Table 3.8.1 Employment status: Women 55
Table 3.8.2 Employment status: Men 57
[...]... 286 xiv • Tables and Figures FOREWORD The 2011 NepalDemographic and HealthSurvey is the fourth nationally representative comprehensive survey conducted as part of the worldwide Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) project in the country The survey was implemented by New ERA under the aegis of the Population Division, Ministry of Healthand Population Technical support for this survey was provided... Ministry of Healthand Population Chief, Administrative Division, Ministry of Healthand Population Chief, HR and Financial Resource Management Division, Ministry of Healthand Population Director, Family Health Division, Department of Health Services Director, Child Health Division, Department of Health Services Director, NCASC, Ministry of Healthand Population Director, NHIECC, Ministry of Healthand Population... countries and therefore affords national and international comparisons The first Demographic and HealthSurvey (DHS) in Nepal was the 1996 Nepal Family HealthSurvey (NFHS), conducted as part of the worldwide DHS program; subsequently, surveys have been conducted every five years, in 2001, 2006, and now in 2011 Wherever possible, the 2011 NDHS data are compared with data from the earlier DHS surveys in Nepal, ... Mr Ajit Singh Pradhan, NepalHealth Sector Support Program Mr Ashoke Shrestha, Nepal Family Health Program Dr Rajendra Bhadra, Nepal Family Health Program Mr Bharat Ban, Nepal Family Health Program Mr Dirgha Raj Shrestha, Nepal Family Health Program Mr Deepak Paudel (USAID) Dr Amit Bhandari, DFID Ms Iva Schildbach (GIZ) Mr Manav Bhattarai, World Bank Mr Satish Raj Pandey, Family Health International... the survey as chiefs of the Population Division, Ministry of Healthand Population We would like to express our heartfelt gratitude to the USAID mission in Nepal We acknowledge the technical input and support provided by Ms Anne M Peniston, Director, Office of Healthand Family Planning, Ms Shanda Steimer, Director, Office of Healthand Family Planning, Mr Han Kang, Deputy Director, Office of Health and. .. Marasini, Public Health Administrator, Ministry of Healthand Population Mr Raj Kumar Pokharel, Public Health Administrator, CHD, Department of Health Services Mr Naresh Khatiwada, Statistical Officer/Demographer, Ministry of Healthand Population Mr Anil Thapa, Demographer, Ministry of Healthand Population Mr Badri Bahadur Khadka, NHIECC Chief, Demographic Section, FHD, Department of Health Services... Population Division, Ministry of Health and Population Mr Surya Prasad Acharya, Ministry of Healthand Population Mr Upendra Adhikari, Ministry of Women and Social Welfare Dr Megha Raj Dhakal, Population Division, Ministry of Healthand Population Mr Naresh Khatiwada, Population Division, Ministry of Healthand Population Mr Anil Thapa, Population Division, Ministry of Healthand Population Ms Lila Kumari... Department of Health Services, Ministry of Healthand Population Dr Shyam Raj Uprety, Child Health Division, Department of Health Services Dr Ramesh Kharel, National Center for AIDS and STD Control Dr B.R Marasini, Ministry of Healthand Population Dr Kedar Baral (PAHS) Dr R.K Adhikari, KIST Medical College Dr Prakash Dev Pant, Family Health International 360 Dr Suresh Tiwari, NepalHealth Sector Support... population and health surveys The survey includes topics on fertility levels and determinants, family planning, fertility preferences, childhood mortality, children and women’s nutritional status, the utilization of maternal and child health services, knowledge of HIV/AIDS and STIs, women’s empowerment and for the first time, information on women facing different types of domestic violence The survey also... family planning services, and maternal, newborn, and child health services in a manner that builds local capacity and engages stakeholders (Johns Hopkins University Center for Communication Programs, 2011; USAID /Nepal, 2010) The NepalHealth Sector Program Implementation Plan (NHSP-IP 2004-2009) was launched by the Ministry of Healthand Population to improve the health status of the Nepalese population . Nepal
Demographic and
Health Survey
2011
Demographic and Health Survey
Nepal 2011
Nepal
Demographic and Health Survey
2011
.
Ministry of Health and Population (MOHP) [Nepal] , New ERA, and ICF International Inc. 2012. Nepal
Demographic and Health Survey 2011. Kathmandu, Nepal: Ministry