FR139 PDF
FR139 PDF
FR139 PDF
Hanoi—September 2003
Committee for
Population, Family and Children
Vietnam
Demographic and Health Survey
2002
September 2003
Additional information about the VNDHS may be obtained from the Committee for Population, Family and
Children, 12 Ngo Tat To Street, Hanoi, Vietnam (telephone 843-2351; fax 843-8514). Additional information about the
MEASURE DHS+ project may be obtained by contacting: MEASURE DHS+, ORC Macro, 11785 Beltsville Drive,
Suite 300, Calverton, MD 20705 (telephone 301-572-0200; fax 301-572-0999; e-mail: [email protected]; internet:
www.measuredhs.com).
Suggested citation:
Committee for Population, Family and Children [Vietnam], and ORC Macro. 2003. Vietnam Demographic and Health
Survey 2002. Calverton, Maryland, USA: Committee for Population, Family and Children and ORC Macro.
CONTENTS
Page
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 3 FERTILITY
Contents | iii
Page
iv | Contents
Page
Contents | v
TABLES AND FIGURES
Page
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER 3 FERTILITY
Figure 4.1 Current contraceptive use among currently married women ..................................40
Figure 4.2 Current use of any contraceptive method among currently married women
age 15-49, by background characteristics...............................................................42
Figure 4.3 Sources of family planning among current users of modern contraceptive
methods ................................................................................................................45
Figure 4.4 Reasons for discontinuing use of family planning methods .....................................48
Figure 4.5 Preferred method among nonusers who intend to use in the future .......................50
Figure 7.1 Trends in infant and under-five mortality, VNDHS 1997 and VNDHS 2002 ..........80
Figure 7.2 Under-five mortality by residence and education...................................................82
Figure 7.3 Under-five mortality by selected demographic characteristics ................................84
Table 11.1 Availability of family planning services in the community .................................... 116
Table 11.2 Family planning and health campaigns in the past year ....................................... 117
Table 11.3 Distance to nearest family planning services........................................................ 118
Table 11.4 Distance to nearest provider of specific contraceptive method............................ 119
Table 11.5 Availability of health services in the community .................................................. 120
Table 11.6 Distance to nearest provider of maternal and child health services...................... 121
Table 11.7 Distance to nearest facility providing specific health services for women ............. 122
Table 11.8 Distance to nearest facility providing specific health services for children ............ 123
Table B.1 List of selected variables for sampling errors ......................................................... 130
Table B.2 Sampling errors for selected variables, total sample .............................................. 131
Table B.3 Sampling errors for selected variables, urban area ................................................ 132
Table B.4 Sampling errors for selected variables, rural area .................................................. 133
Table B.5 Sampling errors for selected variables, no special project ..................................... 134
Table B.6 Sampling errors for selected variables, special project .......................................... 135
Table B.7 Sampling errors for selected variables, Northern Uplands..................................... 136
Table B.8 Sampling errors for selected variables, Red River Delta ........................................ 137
Table B.9 Sampling errors for selected variables, North Central ........................................... 138
Table B.10 Sampling errors for selected variables, Central Coast............................................ 139
Table B.11 Sampling errors for selected variables, Central Highlands ..................................... 140
The 2002 Vietnam Demographic and Health Survey (VNDHS 2002) was the third DHS survey to
be implemented in Vietnam, following similar surveys in 1988 and 1997. This survey was sponsored by
the Population and Family Health Project of the National Committee for Population and Family Planning,
which is now renamed the Committee for Population, Family and Children (CPFC). Technical assistance
was provided by ORC Macro. The General Statistical Office was responsible for execution of the survey.
The main objective of the VNDHS 2002 was to obtain current information on demographic con-
ditions, family planning, infant and child mortality, and health-related information about breastfeeding,
antenatal care, child immunizations, common children’s diseases, and HIV/AIDS. A major goal of the
survey was to measure changes in family planning indicators since the 1997 survey, especially in areas
covered by the CPFC project.
This report presents the major findings from the VNDHS 2002 survey. Although the data were
obtained from a sample survey, and weighted for the nation by main indicators, we hope the survey find-
ings will be used by policymakers to formulate appropriate population and health policies and programs
in Vietnam. It thus gives us great pleasure to present this report to all planners, policymakers, scholars,
researchers, and concerned users. I wish to warmly thank all the institutions and individuals who partici-
pated in the implementation of the survey and the compilation of this report.
Although this is not the first time we have written a DHS report, it is hardly free from errors. We
warmly welcome all comments from planners, policymakers and researchers, both within and outside
Vietnam.
Preface | xiii
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
On behalf of the Population and Family Health Project, I gratefully acknowledge leaders of the
Committee for Population, Family and Children, and technical backstopping agencies: ORC Macro and
the General Statistical Office for their fruitful contributions to the timely execution of survey activities,
and the successful completion of the survey as planned.
I am grateful to ORC Macro for its technical assistance in fieldworker training, fieldwork
supervision and data processing, and to the staff of the General Statistical Office and the Committee for
Population, Family and Children, both at the central and local levels, who have worked with enthusiasm
and whole-heartedness for the survey’s success.
Finally, I owe much gratitude to the survey respondents who generously donated their time to
fully answer the survey’s many questions.
Acknowledgments | xv
SUMMARY OF FINDINGS
The 2002 Vietnam Demographic and Fertility Differentials. There are substan-
Health Survey (VNDHS 2002) is a nationally tial differences in fertility levels in Vietnam. The
representative sample survey of 5,665 ever- TFR is a half a child higher in rural areas than in
married women age 15-49 selected from 205 urban areas (2.0 children per woman compared with
sample points (clusters) throughout Vietnam. It 1.4 children per woman). Regional differences are
provides information on levels of fertility, fam- also marked; the highest fertility is in the Central
ily planning knowledge and use, infant and child Highlands (2.9 children per woman), while the low-
mortality, and indicators of maternal and child est is in the Southeast region (1.5 children per
health. The survey included a Community/ woman), which includes Ho Chi Minh City. Differ-
Health Facility Questionnaire that was imple- ences between project and nonproject provinces are
mented in each of the sample clusters. minimal.
Maternal Health Care. The VNDHS Child Mortality. VNDHS 2002 data imply
2002 data indicate substantial increases in the a steep decline in child mortality over the past five
number of women receiving maternal care. years. Between 1992-96 and 1998-2002, infant mor-
Comparison with the VNDHS 1997 indicates tality has declined from 28 to 18 deaths per 1,000
that the percentage of women who receive ante- births, while under five mortality has declined from
natal services from a doctor, nurse, or midwife, 38 to 24 per 1,000. Although a review of the data
has increased from 71 percent in 1995-97 to 86 does not show any obvious defects in reporting, such
percent in 2000-02. All of the increase has oc- extraordinarily low rates and rapid decline should be
curred for doctors (25 to 46 percent), while the viewed cautiously.
proportion of women receiving antenatal care
from nurses and midwives has actually declined Breastfeeding Practices. Breastfeeding is
from 46 to 40 percent since 1995-97. The per- nearly universal in Vietnam; 98 percent of children
cent receiving no antenatal care also decreased are breastfed. The median duration of breastfeeding
over the same period from 28 to 13 percent. is 16 to 17 months. The VNDHS 2002 data indicate
that supplementary feeding of children begins early.
There has been a similar increase in the For example, among newborns less than two months
proportion of births for which the mother said of age, 46 percent are receiving supplementary foods
she received two or more tetanus toxoid injec- or liquids.
tions during pregnancy—from 55 to 71 percent.
Childhood Vaccination Coverage. In the
Proper medical attention and hygienic VNDHS 2002, mothers were able to show a health
conditions during delivery can reduce the risk of card with immunization data for only 40 percent of
serious illness among mothers and their babies. children age 12-23 months, although this represents
The VNDHS 2002 found that four out of five a substantial increase from 13 percent in 1997. Ac-
deliveries (79 percent) occurred in health facili- cordingly, estimates of coverage are based on both
ties, a substantial increase from 62 percent re- data from health cards and mothers’ recall. The data
ported in the VNDHS 1997. show that 67 percent of children 12-23 months are
fully vaccinated against the major childhood ill-
Awareness of AIDS. Knowledge of nesses, an increase from 57 percent in 1997.
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) is
high among ever-married women in Vietnam Child Illness and Treatment. Among chil-
(95 percent). Television and radio are the pri- dren under three years of age, one in five was re-
mary sources of information about AIDS. ported to have had symptoms of acute respiratory
Among women who know about AIDS, most are illness in the two weeks preceding the survey, of
aware that condom use and having only one whom about seven in ten were taken to a health fa-
sexual partner are ways to reduce the risk of be- cility or provider for treatment. Slightly more than
coming infected with the virus. Almost four in one-fourth of children under five had a fever in the
five are aware that a healthy-looking person can two weeks preceding the survey, while 11 percent
have the AIDS virus, while 88 percent know that had diarrhea. Forty percent of children with diarrhea
AIDS is a fatal disease. Three-fourths of ever- were given solution prepared from oral rehydration
married women say they have no risk of con- salt (ORS) packets, while 63 percent received in-
tracting the disease. creased fluids.
12 13 China
14 15
23 17
18 16
19
20 3 21 22
24 1
4 5
7 6 2
25
8 10
11 9
Laos 26
27
Thailand
28
29
List of provinces/cities
I. Red River Delta V. South Central Coast 30
1. Ha Noi 32. Da Nang East Sea
2. Hai Phong 33. Quang Nam 31
3. Vinh Phuc 34. Quang Ngai 32
4. Ha Tay 35. Binh Dinh
5. Bac Ninh 36. Phu Yen 33
6. Hai Duong 37. Khanh Hoa
7. Hung Yen
8. Ha Nam VI. Central Highlands 34
9. Nam Dinh 38. Kon Tum 38
10. Thai Binh 39. Gia Lai
11. Ninh Binh 40. Dak Lak
41. Lam Dong
35
II. Northeast 39
12. Ha Giang VII. Southeast
13. Cao Bang 42. Ho Chi Minh City
14. Lao Cai 43. Ninh Thuan 36
15. Bac Kan 44. Binh Phuoc
16. Lang Son 45. Tay Ninh
Cambodia 40
17. Tuyen Quang 46. Binh Duong
37
18. Yen Bai 47. Dong Nai
19. Thai Nguyen 48. Binh Thuan
20. Phu Tho 49. Ba Ria - Vung Tau 44 41 43
21. Bac Giang 45
22. Quang Ninh VIII. Mekong River
46 48
Delta 47
III. Northwest 50. Long An 42
23. Lai Chau 51. Dong Thap 50
51 49
24. Son La 52. An Giang
52 53
25. Hoa Binh 53. Tien Giang 54 55
54. Vinh Long 57
IV. North Central 55. Ben Tre 56 58
26. Thanh Hoa 56. Kien Giang 59
27. Nghe An 57. Can Tho 60
28. Ha Tinh 58. Tra Vinh 61
29. Quang Binh 59. Soc Trang
30. Quang Tri 60. Bac Lieu
31. Thua Thien - Hue 61. Ca Mau
Geography
The Socialist Republic of Vietnam is located in southeast Asia bordering the Peoples Republic of
China to the north, the Peoples Democratic Republic of Laos and the Kingdom of Cambodia to the west,
and the Pacific Ocean to the east. With a coastline of thousands of kilometers from north to south,
Vietnam has a land area of 330,000 square kilometers and a sea area of one million square kilometers.
There are thousands of small and large islands, some of which are isolated, while others form
archipelagos in the East Sea.
Vietnam lies in the hot region of the tropics. The climate is monsoon and subtropical in the North,
which has four distinct seasons. The southern provinces experience two seasons, a rainy season and a dry
season. Some provinces in the center of the country are characterized by the ‘hot wind’ influence in
summer caused by the Truong Son mountain range in the west adjacent to Laos.
Vietnam includes tropical rain forests, hills and mountains, and fertile agricultural land.
Mountains, highland and forests cover about 80 percent of Vietnam’s land area. These areas have low
agricultural productivity. The Red River Delta in the North and the Cuu Long River Delta in the South
provide the main source of food for the whole country.
The country is divided into 61 provinces and cities directly belonging to the central government.
There are three administrative levels in Vietnam: provinces, districts, and communes. At present, there are
600 administrative units at district level (districts, urban districts, cities belonging to provinces, and
towns) and about 11,000 administrative units at commune level or equivalent (ward, town, let).
History
Feudalism existed in Vietnam for centuries until the French Empire came to dominate the country
late in the 19th century. Thanks to the victory of the August Revolution, the Democratic Republic of
Vietnam was founded on 2nd September 1945.
Under the guise of disarming the Japanese army in the south, English troops paved the way for
the return of French colonialism to Indochina. The Vietnamese launched a national war of resistance
against the French from 1945 to 1954 to finally gain independence in the North. Vietnamese people
established socialism in the North and continued the war of liberation in the South, which was won in
1975.
Since 1975, along with overcoming the consequences of war, recovering and developing the
economy, stabilizing the sociopolitical situation in the South, Vietnam had to develop a sense of national
unity. In late June and early July 1976, Vietnam’s National Assembly was elected through a general
election held throughout the country. The National Assembly decided to name the country the Socialist
Republic of Vietnam, with Hanoi as the capital.
Introduction | 1
Economy
In the period of 1954-1975, the economy in North Vietnam was centrally planned and based
mainly on agriculture. There were only two socialist sectors in the economy, the state sector and the co-
operative sector. From 1975 to 1980, after the unification of the North and the South, the centrally
planned model was applied in the South, pursuant to the second five-year plan (1976-1980). In the period
1981-1985, the contractual system was improved, with contractual quotas being given to working groups
and individuals in agricultural co-operatives.
The period since 1995 has been characterized by a marked effort at reform and development. The
structure of gross output in 2002 is as follows: agriculture-forestry-aquaculture sector (23.0 percent);
industry and construction sector (38.5 percent); and service sector (38.5 percent).
Population
The major source of demographic data in Vietnam is the population census. Since unification in
1975, there have been three national population censuses, carried out in 1979, 1989, and 1999. Additional
population data have been collected in nationwide demographic sample surveys and other related surveys.
Some demographic indicators from the two most recent censuses are shown in Table 1.1.
According to the 1999 census, Vietnam’s population grew at the rate of 1.7 percent annually, a decline
from 2.1 percent as of the 1989 census. The total population in 2002 was estimated to be around 79.7
million persons. Thus, the population growth rate in the period 1999-2002 continued to decline.
2 | Introduction
Family Planning Policies and Programs
The Democratic Republic of Vietnam in the North was among the first developing countries to
adopt a policy to reduce the population growth rate. As early as 1961, spurred by the results of the 1960
population census in the North, the government of the Democratic Republic of Vietnam promulgated a
decree to encourage married couples to restrict family size and space births to reduce population growth.
The policy was motivated by pressure on cultivated land and chronic food shortages in the North, as well
as by the related desire to improve women’s and children’s welfare, being part of the strategy to enhance
labor productivity to meet the needs of the struggle for independence and reunification of the country. In
the South of Vietnam, prior to unification, the standing government did not promote family planning until
the U.S. Agency for International Development encouraged it to do so in 1971. Nevertheless, the family
planning program in the South remained incomplete until the end of the war.
After unification, the policies to reduce population growth received increasing attention of the
government and efforts to extend coverage of birth control services throughout the country gained the
highest priority. A series of government decisions and decrees in late 1988 showed the formal approval at
the national level of a policy advocating a family norm of one to two children. The National Health Law
approved by the National Assembly on 30 June 1989 legalized the principle of freedom for couples in
choosing family planning practices. It emphasized that individuals must be free to choose the family
planning method they wished and stated that “all acts of preventing or forcing the implementation of
family planning are prohibited.”
In January 1993, the Communist Party Central Committee for the first time approved a resolution
on population and family planning. In a strong statement, they identified excessive population growth as
contributing to a wide range of social, economic, and ecological problems. The resolution proposed the
objective of “applying small-sized family,” and recommended that “each family should have one or two
children” in order to lower fertility and stabilize population. The Strategy in Population and Family
Planning to the Year 2000, the Strategy in Population for the Period 2001-2010, the Strategy in
Reproductive Health for the Period 2001-2010, and the State Law on Population launched by the
National Assembly’s Standing Committee are comprehensive and official plans to guide efforts to
implement the above resolution.
Health care activities in each community are influenced by a series of economic, social, cultural,
and environmental factors. Although the economy is poor, Vietnam’s health care services are more
advanced than that of many other developing countries in the world. The death rate of infants and children
has declined sharply in recent years, presumably as a result of providing health education and primary
health care services more widely. The Ministry of Health has expanded the system of primary health care
services throughout the country. Almost all communes have their own health stations staffed with trained
workers. Problems that cannot be handled at the commune level are referred to district, provincial or
specialized hospitals. The efficiency of health services has increased. Even in the rural areas, 93 percent
of communes have their own heath stations (GSO, 1995:7)
Objectives
The Vietnam Demographic and Health Survey 2002 (VNDHS 2002) was the third DHS in
Vietnam, with prior surveys implemented in 1988 and 1997. The VNDHS 2002 was carried out in the
Introduction | 3
framework of the activities of the Population and Family Health Project of the Committee for Population,
Family and Children (previously the National Committee for Population and Family Planning).
The main objectives of the VNDHS 2002 were to collect up-to-date information on family
planning, childhood mortality, and health issues such as breastfeeding practices, pregnancy care,
vaccination of children, treatment of common childhood illnesses, and HIV/AIDS, as well as utilization
of health and family planning services. The primary objectives of the survey were to estimate changes in
family planning use in comparison with the results of the VNDHS 1997, especially on issues in the scope
of the project of the Committee for Population, Family and Children.
Organization
The VNDHS 2002 was conducted by the General Statistical Office (GSO) on behalf of the
Population and Family Health Project of the Committee of Population, Family and Children. Fieldwork
took place from October to December 2002. The Demographic and Health Surveys division of ORC
Macro in Calverton Maryland provided technical assistance to the project through several visits and
through e-mails.
Sample Design
The sample for the VNDHS 2002 was based on that used in the VNDHS 1997, which in turn was
a subsample of the 1996 Multi-Round Demographic Survey (MRS), a semi-annual survey of about
243,000 households undertaken regularly by GSO. The MRS sample consisted of 1,590 sample areas
known as enumeration areas (EAs) spread throughout the 53 provinces/cities of Vietnam, with 30 EAs in
each province. On average, an EA comprises about 150 households. For the VNDHS 1997, a subsample
of 205 EAs was selected, with 26 households in each urban EA and 39 households for each rural EA. A
total of 7,150 households was selected for the survey. The VNDHS 1997 was designed to provide
separate estimates for the whole country, urban and rural areas, for 18 project provinces and the
remaining nonproject provinces as well.1
Because the main objective of the VNDHS 2002 was to measure change in reproductive health
indicators over the five years since the VNDHS 1997, the sample design for the VNDHS 2002 was as
similar as possible to that of the VNDHS 1997. Although it would have been ideal to have returned to the
same households or at least the same sample points as were selected for the VNDHS 1997, several factors
made this undesirable. Revisiting the same households would have held the sample artificially rigid over
time and would not allow for newly formed households. This would have conflicted with the other major
survey objective, which was to provide up-to-date, representative data for the whole of Vietnam.
Revisiting the same sample points that were covered in 1997 was complicated by the fact that the country
had conducted a population census in 1999, which allowed for a more representative sample frame.
In order to balance the two main objectives of measuring change and providing representative
data, it was decided to select enumeration areas from the 1999 Population Census, but to cover the same
communes that were sampled in the VNDHS 1997 and attempt to obtain a sample point as close as
possible to that selected in 1997. Consequently, the VNDHS 2002 sample also consisted of 205 sample
1
Project provinces refer to 18 focus provinces targeted for the strengthening of their primary health care systems by
the Government’s Population and Family Health Project to be implemented over a period of seven years, from 1996
to 2002 (At the outset of this project there were 15 focus provinces, which became 18 by the creation of 3 new
provinces from the initial set of 15). These provinces were selected according to criteria based on relatively low
health and family planning status, no substantial family planning donor presence, and regional spread. These criteria
resulted in the selection of the country’s poorer provinces. Nine of these provinces have significant proportions of
ethnic minorities among their population (World Bank, 1995).
4 | Introduction
points and reflects the oversampling in the 20 provinces that fall in the World Bank-supported Population
and Family Health Project. The sample was designed to produce about 7,000 completed household
interviews and 5,600 completed interviews with ever-married women age 15-49.2
Prior to the fieldwork, GSO conducted a household listing operation in the 205 selected
enumeration areas. All households residing in the selected areas were listed in a systematic manner by the
teams, who also drew a sketch map of each of the selected area units, using mapping and listing forms
specifically designed for the task.
Questionnaire Content
As in the VNDHS 1997, three types of questionnaires were used in the 2002 survey: the
Household Questionnaire, the Individual Woman’s Questionnaire, and the Community/Health Facility
Questionnaire. The first two questionnaires were based on the DHS Model A Questionnaire, with
additions and modifications made during an ORC Macro staff visit in July 2002. The questionnaires were
pretested in two clusters in Hanoi (one in a rural area and another in an urban area). After the pretest and
consultation with ORC Macro, the drafts were revised for use in the main survey.
The Household Questionnaire was used to enumerate all usual members and visitors in selected
households and to collect information on age, sex, education, marital status, and relationship to the head
of household. The main purpose of the Household Questionnaire was to identify persons who were
eligible for individual interview (i.e. ever-married women age 15-49). In addition, the Household
Questionnaire collected information on characteristics of the household such as water source, type of
toilet facilities, material used for the floor and roof, and ownership of various durable goods.
The Individual Questionnaire was used to collect information on ever-married women aged 15-49
in surveyed households. These women were interviewed on the following topics:
The Community/Health Facility Questionnaire was used to collect information on all communes
in which the interviewed women lived and on services offered at the nearest health stations. The
Community/Health Facility Questionnaire consisted of four sections. The first two sections collected
information from community informants on some characteristics such as the major economic activities of
residents, distance from people’s residence to civic services and the location of the nearest sources of
health care. The last two sections involved visiting the nearest commune health centers and intercommune
health centers, if these centers were located within 30 kilometers from the surveyed cluster. For each
visited health center, information was collected on the type of health services offered and the number of
days services were offered per week; the number of assigned staff and their training; medical equipment
and medicines available at the time of the visit.
2
For a more detailed description of the sample design of the VNDHS 1997, see NCPFP, 1999.
Introduction | 5
1.5 DATA COLLECTION AND PROCESSING
Training courses for field staff were carried out in two places. The first course was in Hanoi from
9 to 27 September 2002, and the second course was in Dalat City in Lam Dong Province from 16
September to 4 October 2002. Both courses consisted of instruction on interviewing skills and fieldwork
procedures, detailed editing of questionnaires, mock interviews among trainees and practice interviews in
households in areas outside the VNDHS sample points. Team leaders and field editors were trained in
methods of editing, procedures for checking the data quality, and logistics of fieldwork coordination.
Data collection was carried out by eight interviewing teams, each team consisting of one team
leader, one field editor, four female interviewers, one interviewer for the Community/Health Facility
interview, and one driver. Supervisors from the GSO were responsible for coordinating and directly
supervising fieldwork activities. Data collection took place from 1 October to 21 December 2002.
Data Processing
The first stage of data editing was implemented by the field editors soon after each interview.
Field editors and team leaders checked the completeness and consistency of all items in the
questionnaires. The completed questionnaires were sent to the GSO headquarters in Hanoi by post for
data processing. The editing staff of the GSO first checked the questionnaires for completeness. The data
were then entered into microcomputers and edited using a software program specially developed for the
DHS program, the Census and Survey Processing System, or CSPro. Data were verified on a 100 percent
basis, i.e., the data were entered separately twice and the two results were compared and corrected. The
data processing and editing staff of the GSO were trained and supervised for two weeks by a data
processing specialist from ORC Macro. Office editing and processing activities were initiated
immediately after the beginning of the fieldwork and were completed in late December 2002.
Table 1.2 presents information on the Number of households, number of eligible women, and
response rates, Vietnam 2002
results of the household and individual inter-
views. The table shows high response rates. Of Residence
the 7,150 households selected in the sample, Result Urban Rural Total
7,056 households were occupied at the time of Household interviews
the interview, and 7,048 were successfully inter- Households selected 1,690 5,460 7,150
viewed, for a household response rate of almost Households occupied 1,664 5,392 7,056
100 percent. The household response rate was Households interviewed 1,660 5,388 7,048
high in both urban and rural areas. Household response rate 99.8 99.9 99.9
6 | Introduction
CHARACTERISTICS OF HOUSEHOLDS
AND RESPONDENTS 2
The main objective of this chapter is to describe the general characteristics of the sample
population, which include age and sex composition, residence, education, housing facilities, and presence
of durable goods. This information is not only useful by itself, but can also be used to evaluate the quality
of the 2002 VNDHS data and to investigate changes in social and economic conditions over time. Data in
this chapter will be presented for households, persons within households, and women eligible for the
individual interview. The other objective of this chapter is to describe the environment in which the
respondents (ever-married women aged 15-49) and their children live. Factors believed to influence
nuptiality, fertility, and contraceptive behavior, as well as maternal care and child morbidity and
mortality, are discussed.
In the VNDHS 2002, information was collected for usual residents of the selected households and
visitors who had spent the previous night in the households. A household was defined as a person living
alone or a group of persons who live and eat together.
The percent distribution of the de facto population by five-year age groups, according to urban-
rural residence and sex is presented in Table 2.1. By residence, the distribution of the population was 19
percent urban and 81 percent rural.
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Number 2,869 2,987 5,856 11,735 12,666 24,401 14,604 15,654 30,258
Number of persons
500
450
400
350
300
250
200
150
100
50
0
0 5 10 15 20 25 30 35 40 45 50 55 60 65 70 75 80
Age
Female Male
Vietnam 2002
Age composition is affected by past levels of fertility, mortality and migration. The population
pyramid (Figure 2.2) has a narrow top and a wide base, reflecting a pattern typical of countries with
relatively high fertility in the past. The narrowing at the base was brought about by a rapid decline in
fertility in the last decade.
There appears to be an excess of males over females at ages under 20. For ages over 20 and
especially over 50, there are more females than males. The population pyramid shows no excess of
women in the age group 50-54 compared with 45-49, which suggests that there has been no shifting of
eligible women out of age group 45-49 by interviewers seeking to reduce their workload (as has occurred
in some countries where similar surveys have been conducted).
10 8 6 4 2 0 2 4 6 8 10
Percent
Vietnam 2002
Table 2.2 compares the broad age struc- Table 2.2 Population by broad age groups from selected sources
ture of the population from the 1989 Population Percent distribution of the population by broad age group,
Census, the 1994 Intercensal Demographic Survey selected sources, Vietnam 1989-2002
(ICDS), the 1997 VNDHS, and the 2002 VNDHS.
1989 1994 1997 2002
The proportion of the population less than 15 Age group census ICDS VNDHS VNDHS
years has declined over time from 40 percent in
Less than 15 39.8 36.8 35.0 30.1
1989 to 30 percent in 2002. During the same 15-64 55.4 57.5 58.6 62.7
period, the percentage of the population aged 15- 65+ 4.8 5.7 6.3 7.2
64 increased from 55 percent in 1989 to 63
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
percent in 2002. The most likely explanation for
these changes is the recent rapid decline in
Median age 19.8 22.1 22.8 25.7
fertility.
Note: Percentages may not add to 100 due to rounding.
Household Composition Sources: 1989 Population Census (GSO, 1991), Intercensal
Demographic Survey 1994 (GSO, 1996a); Vietnam
Demographic and Health Survey 1997 (NCPFP, 1999)
Table 2.3 persents information on the per-
cent distribution of households by various charac-
teristics such as sex of head of household and size of household. The size and composition of the
household may affect the allocation of financial resources among household members, which in turn
influences the wellbeing of these individuals. Household size may be associated with crowding in the
dwelling, which can also lead to unfavorable health conditions. Single-parent families, especially if they
are headed by females, usually have limited financial resources.
Table 2.3 shows that men head 73 percent of the households in Vietnam, with only 27 percent
headed by women. Female-headed households are more common in urban areas than in rural areas (45
percent versus 22 percent).
The average household size has decreased from 4.8 persons in the ICDS-94 to 4.7 persons in the
VNDHS 1997, and 4.4 persons in the VNDHS 2002, possibly due to a decline in fertility. The average
As in the VNDHS 1997, four-person households are most common (24 percent in 1997 compared
with 29 percent in 2002). The proportion of households with 5 or more persons has declined from 69
percent in the ICDS-94 to 50 percent in the VNDHS 1997 and 43 percent in the VNDHS 2002. This may
be due to smaller family sizes as well as to improved socioeconomic conditions that have resulted in more
young couples moving out to live on their own.
Residence
Characteristic Urban Rural Total
Head of household
Male 55.1 77.6 73.2
Female 44.9 22.4 26.8
Educational attainment is closely associated with other socioeconomic factors such as income,
housing conditions and with factors related to reproductive behavior, use of contraception, and health
status of children. Education also influences an individual’s world view, and can open one’s mind to new
ideas and technology.
Formal education in Vietnam is based on a three-tier system, known as the 5-4-3 system. It
consists of 5 years of primary school education, 4 years of lower secondary education, and 3 years of
higher secondary education. Graduates of higher secondary school may then further their education by
enrolling at any of the various national universities or colleges or technical schools throughout the
country to acquire more specific skills.
Tables 2.4 and Table 2.5 indicate that among men and women there are significant differences in
level of education by background characteristics. Overall, men are slightly better educated than women:
7 percent of men and 12 percent of women age six and above have not received any formal education.
While there is a male-female gap at all levels of education, this gap has narrowed substantially in recent
years, which is especially evident in the age group 6-24. Above age 45 the gap widens substantially.
Percent distribution of the de facto male household population age 6 and over by highest level of education attended,
and median number of years of schooling, according to background chracteristics, Vietnam 2002
Level of education
Completed Completed Median
Background No Some Completed lower higher Number years of
characteristic education primary primary secondary secondary+ Total of men schooling
Age
6-9 24.2 75.8 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 1,349 1.0
10-14 1.5 30.4 67.0 1.1 0.0 100.0 1,943 4.8
15-19 2.6 9.3 29.9 46.7 11.6 100.0 1,702 8.4
20-24 5.6 15.6 32.7 18.6 27.5 100.0 1,076 7.3
25-29 4.9 13.3 32.7 25.1 23.9 100.0 1,029 7.9
30-34 5.2 12.0 27.0 32.1 23.6 100.0 1,141 8.2
35-39 3.9 11.6 25.0 38.5 21.0 100.0 1,068 8.3
40-44 3.6 10.2 23.6 39.7 23.0 100.0 1,060 8.4
45-49 4.4 13.1 22.8 37.1 22.6 100.0 789 8.3
50-54 3.7 16.6 20.9 31.1 27.8 100.0 532 8.4
55-59 5.8 14.4 23.2 33.2 23.5 100.0 301 8.2
60-64 5.6 17.3 25.3 25.8 25.9 100.0 282 8.1
65+ 13.9 32.6 25.4 14.9 13.1 100.0 904 4.2
Residence
Urban 4.3 13.6 25.2 21.2 35.7 100.0 2,636 8.5
Rural 7.1 25.3 31.5 25.4 10.7 100.0 10,539 6.0
Project province
No 6.3 23.1 30.5 23.9 16.1 100.0 8,868 6.4
Yes 7.0 22.6 29.7 26.0 14.8 100.0 4,307 6.5
Region
Northern Uplands 8.1 25.7 32.7 23.3 10.1 100.0 2,432 5.7
Red River Delta 2.9 13.3 20.9 36.2 26.7 100.0 2,949 8.4
North Central 4.7 22.5 30.9 30.4 11.4 100.0 1,729 6.8
Central Coast 6.6 22.8 32.3 23.1 15.2 100.0 1,398 6.2
Central Highlands 16.9 25.1 29.5 16.4 12.0 100.0 452 4.8
Southeast 5.6 20.1 32.2 19.9 22.2 100.0 1,580 6.8
Mekong River Delta 9.2 32.7 36.0 13.9 8.3 100.0 2,635 4.7
The level of educational attainment in Vietnam is relatively high compared with other developing
countries and the high level of education was achieved many years ago. Thus, the data on education do
not show a clear trend of improvement in education, except above age 50 compared with younger women
and above age 65 compared with younger men.
The last columns of Tables 2.4 and 2.5 show the median number of years of schooling attained by
males and females. Overall, males have a median duration of schooling of 6.5 years, a full year longer
than females. The gap in the median number of years of schooling between males and females is
negligible up to age 45 after which the gap favoring males becomes wider.
Percent distribution of the de facto female household population age 6 and over by highest level of education attended,
and median number of years of schooling, according to background chracteristics, Vietnam 2002
Level of education
Completed Completed Median
Background No Some Completed lower higher Number years of
characteristic education primary primary secondary secondary+ Total or women schooling
Age
6-9 22.5 77.1 0.4 0.0 0.0 100.0 1,287 1.1
10-14 1.8 28.8 67.8 1.5 0.0 100.0 1,925 4.9
15-19 2.8 8.2 30.1 48.6 10.2 100.0 1,636 8.3
20-24 5.9 12.7 35.2 18.6 27.7 100.0 1,176 7.3
25-29 7.1 13.9 34.3 25.1 19.6 100.0 1,227 7.2
30-34 5.2 14.6 27.2 31.7 21.4 100.0 1,196 8.1
35-39 4.9 17.4 23.2 35.0 19.5 100.0 1,168 8.1
40-44 6.7 17.7 24.6 35.2 15.8 100.0 1,130 8.0
45-49 8.5 22.0 23.0 33.7 12.8 100.0 846 7.0
50-54 13.4 23.8 24.9 24.6 13.3 100.0 594 5.1
55-59 13.0 29.5 24.5 19.8 13.3 100.0 402 4.6
60-64 19.2 42.0 21.9 9.2 7.7 100.0 416 3.0
65+ 49.4 37.6 10.2 1.9 0.9 100.0 1,280 0.1
Residence
Urban 5.8 18.1 25.4 21.3 29.3 100.0 2,788 8.0
Rural 12.8 27.6 30.2 21.9 7.5 100.0 11,494 4.9
Project province
No 10.8 26.7 29.8 20.8 11.9 100.0 9,586 5.2
Yes 12.9 23.8 28.0 23.9 11.5 100.0 4,696 5.6
Region
Northern Uplands 15.3 26.9 30.9 20.1 6.9 100.0 2,601 4.7
Red River Delta 7.8 15.4 22.6 34.9 19.2 100.0 3,305 8.1
North Central 10.2 23.1 31.2 26.5 8.9 100.0 1,948 5.8
Central Coast 10.4 27.9 31.4 17.8 12.3 100.0 1,507 5.0
Central Highlands 21.8 29.1 25.9 14.6 8.6 100.0 485 3.9
Southeast 8.2 25.0 31.6 16.1 19.0 100.0 1,724 5.8
Mekong River Delta 14.0 37.9 32.0 11.1 5.0 100.0 2,714 3.8
Tables 2.4 and 2.5 also show that educational attainment is negatively associated with age: older
persons are more likely to have no education or to stay in school for shorter periods. Urban residents are
much more likely to have been to school and to have stayed in school longer than residents of rural areas.
The proportion of the population with no education is twice as high in rural areas as in urban areas. As
expected, the median number of years of schooling is also much higher in urban than in rural areas.
Tables 2.4 and 2.5 present the differences in educational attainment by region for male and
female population, respectively. The median duration of schooling for males is longer than for females in
all regions. The median number of years of schooling is highest in the Red River Delta region (8.4 for
males and 8.1 for females), followed by the Southeast and North Central region (6.8 for males and 5.8 for
School Enrollment
Table 2.6 presents the school enrollment rate for the population age 6-24 by age, sex and urban-
rural residence. The data confirm that differences between boys and girls at the younger ages are minimal,
with around 96 percent of both boys and girls age 6-10 enrolled in school (Figure 2.3). Urban-rural
differences are also negligible. Nine in ten children age 6 to 15 years (91 percent) are attending school.
School enrollment drops substantially after age 15 to only 41 percent among those age 16-20 years, and to
7 percent among those age 21-24 years. This sudden drop may be partially due to a lack of financial
resources to continue schooling and partially due to the need to work to support the family. Nevertheless,
enrollment rates have increased substantially since 1997.
Percentage of the de facto household population age 6-24 years enrolled in school, by age,
sex, and urban-rural residence, Vietnam 2002
Male Female Total
Age group Urban Rural Total Urban Rural Total Urban Rural Total
6-10 96.8 96.5 96.5 96.7 95.9 96.0 96.7 96.2 96.2
11-15 91.8 88.6 89.1 88.6 84.2 84.8 90.2 86.3 86.9
6-15 94.1 92.4 92.7 91.8 89.7 90.0 93.0 91.1 91.3
16-20 59.6 42.2 45.4 53.2 33.7 37.1 56.6 38.0 41.4
21-24 22.1 5.2 9.0 13.3 3.4 5.7 17.4 4.3 7.2
Percent
60
40
20
0
Male Female Male Female
Age 6-10 Age 11-15
Urban Rural
Vietnam 2002
Respondents were asked about ownership of Table 2.8 Household durable goods
particular household durable goods such as radios,
Percentage of households possessing various durable
televisions and telephones (to assess access to mass consumer goods, by urban-rural residence, Vietnam 2002
media), refrigerators (to assess access to food storage),
bicycles, motorcycles and private cars (to assess access Residence
to modes of transportation). Consumer goods Urban Rural Total
Radio 64.4 46.2 49.8
Table 2.8 shows that half of households have a Television 91.1 64.9 70.0
radio, 70 percent have a television, 18 percent have a Telephone 57.4 8.3 17.9
telephone, and 14 percent have a refrigerator. Urban- Refrigerator 49.4 5.8 14.3
Bicycle 79.3 77.3 77.7
rural differences are marked, especially in terms of Motorcycle 74.7 36.9 44.2
possession of a television set, a telephone, and a Private car 2.4 0.7 1.1
refrigerator. For example, half of urban households have None of the above 1.7 7.9 6.7
a refrigerator, compared with only 6 percent of rural Number of households 1,377 5,671 7,048
households.
Urban-rural differentials can be also seen in the access to modes of transport: three-quarters of
urban households own a motorcycle, compared to just over one-third of rural households. However,
bicycles are the exception to this pattern, with almost 80 percent of both urban and rural households
possessing a bicycle. Overall, very few households have a car. Only 7 percent of households do not own
any of these consumer goods: 2 percent of urban households and 8 percent of rural households.
Ownership of most durable goods has increased since 1997. For example, the proportion of
households owning a telephone has increased from 50 percent to 70 percent, while the proportion owning
a television has more than doubled from 7 to 18 percent. Motorcycle ownership has increased from 24 to
44 percent. The only exception to this pattern is radios, which have declined since 1997.
General Characteristics
Table 2.9 shows the distribution of respondents by selected background characteristics including
age, marital status, residence, education, religion, and ethnic group. Respondents were ever-married
women age 15-49 who slept in the selected households the night before the interview.
The table shows both the actual (unweighted) and weighted number of women interviewed.
Weighting is necessary to compensate for differences in the selection probabilities and response rates.
Because the sample design was not proportional, but rather included oversampling in certain areas,
weighting is required to make the data reflect the actual proportional distribution in Vietnam. All results
presented in this report are weighted. As indicated in Chapter 1, interviews were completed for a total of
5,665 ever-married women age 15-49.
The age distribution of women reveals that only about one in nine ever-married women is under
age 25, while one-third are 40 or above. Women are mostly concentrated in the age group 30-39. This is
because the survey interviewed ever-married women only, and there are fewer ever-married women in the
younger age groups. The majority of ever-married women are currently married (94 percent) with a small
minority widowed, divorced or separated (6 percent).
Eighty-one percent of women reside in rural areas, the same proportion as in the VNDHS 1997.
The distribution of women by region shows that almost two-thirds (62 percent) are from the Northern
Uplands, Red River Delta, and Mekong River Delta regions; and 38 percent are from the other four
regions of the country.
The majority of ever-married women (94 percent) have been to school, 17 percent have some
primary education but did not finish primary school, and about one-third of women have completed lower
secondary (32 percent). Seventeen percent of women have completed at least higher secondary, which is
slightly higher than the proportion reported in the ICDS-94 (13 percent) and the VNDHS 1997 (14
percent). Almost none of the respondents were enrolled in school at the time of the survey.
A vast majority of the women surveyed are not religious (79 percent), while 12 percent are
Buddhist, 5 percent are Catholic, and 4 percent belong to other religions. As for ethnic groups, 84 percent
of ever-married women belong to the Kinh (Vietnamese) ethnic group, while 4 percent are Thai and 3
percent are Tay. Other ethnic groups account for less than 2 percent each.
Rural women are more educationally disadvantaged than urban women; 8 percent of rural women
have no education, compared with 2 percent of urban women. The urban-rural gap narrows somewhat at
higher levels of education; nevertheless, nearly four times as many urban women have completed higher
secondary school as rural women.
There are also wide differentials in level of education between regions, with women in the
Central Highlands being least educated and women in the Red River Delta being most educated (based on
the percentage with no education). By another measure, Figure 2.4 shows the distribution of women who
have completed at least lower secondary education by region. The percentage of women who have
completed lower secondary school is highest in the Red River Delta (82 percent) and lowest in the
Mekong River Delta (17 percent).
Percent distribution of ever-married women by the highest level of education completed, according to
background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Education
Completed Completed Number
Background No Some Completed lower higher of
characteristic education primary primary secondary secondary+ Total women
Age
15-19 6.6 20.8 42.9 27.0 2.6 100.0 69
20-24 8.8 16.5 41.3 20.6 12.8 100.0 552
25-29 7.6 15.0 34.6 25.8 17.1 100.0 1,000
30-34 5.3 14.5 27.5 32.1 20.6 100.0 1,105
35-39 4.5 17.7 23.3 35.0 19.5 100.0 1,098
40-44 6.2 17.3 24.6 36.1 15.9 100.0 1,046
45-49 7.8 22.0 22.6 34.8 12.8 100.0 795
Residence
Urban 1.6 10.5 20.4 26.0 41.5 100.0 1,081
Rural 7.6 18.6 30.1 32.8 11.0 100.0 4,584
Project province
No 6.2 18.3 29.3 29.9 16.2 100.0 3,814
Yes 6.8 14.4 26.0 34.6 18.2 100.0 1,851
Region
Northern Uplands 12.5 17.5 29.0 29.0 11.8 100.0 1,099
Red River Delta 0.1 2.1 16.1 53.8 27.9 100.0 1,363
North Central 2.4 9.5 32.6 41.9 13.7 100.0 722
Central Coast 5.4 16.9 34.8 23.1 19.9 100.0 594
Central Highlands 24.6 14.1 24.6 20.3 16.5 100.0 183
Southeast 3.8 21.4 33.4 20.3 21.0 100.0 648
Mekong River Delta 10.1 38.9 33.8 11.7 5.6 100.0 1,056
Percent
100
82
80
60 56
41 43 41
40 37
20 17
0
Northern Red River North Central Central Southeast Mekong River
Uplands Delta Central Coast Highlands Delta
Vietnam 2002
Respondents age 15-24 were asked whether they were attending school at the time of the survey,
and if not, the main reason for leaving school. Table 2.11 shows the distribution of those who had ever
attended school by reason for leaving school.
Percent distribution of ever-married women age 15-24 who have ever attended school by whether
currently attending school and reason for leaving school, according to highest level of education
attended, Vietnam 2002
Educational attainment
Completed Completed
Attendance/ Some Completed lower higher
reason for leaving school primary primary secondary secondary+ Total
Currently attending 1.0 1.4 0.6 4.1 1.5
Reason for leaving school
Got married 11.0 11.1 11.5 17.2 12.0
Care for younger children 0.7 0.0 0.0 2.6 0.5
Family needed help 50.7 52.0 39.6 7.7 43.2
Could not pay school fees 0.7 1.4 0.8 3.6 1.4
Needed to earn money 5.5 2.5 4.8 2.3 3.5
Graduated/had enough schooling 0.4 2.4 4.1 32.8 6.3
Did not pass exams 1.1 1.7 18.0 25.2 8.4
Did not like school 8.9 22.9 13.7 4.5 15.8
School not accessible 12.3 0.9 1.7 0.0 3.1
Other 7.2 2.3 4.6 0.0 3.4
Don’t know/missing 0.4 1.5 0.5 0.0 0.9
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Number who ever attended school 105 257 132 73 568
Less than 2 percent of ever-married women age 15-24 were in school at the time of survey. The
most common reason for dropping out of school was to help the family (43 percent). Sixteen percent
stopped school because they did not like it, and another 12 percent dropped out to get married; 8 percent
left school because they did not pass their exams.
Employment Status
In the VNDHS 2002, respondents were asked if they worked aside from doing their housework,
regardless of whether they were paid or not. Table 2.12 presents the distribution of ever-married women
by employment status, according to background characteristics.
Currently unemployed
Did not work Worked in
in the last the last 12 Currently Number
Background characteristic 12 months months employed Total of women
Age
15-19 14.4 9.4 76.2 100.0 69
20-24 11.0 4.1 84.9 100.0 552
25-29 6.6 1.9 91.5 100.0 1,000
30-34 5.6 0.8 93.5 100.0 1,105
35-39 4.9 0.8 94.2 100.0 1,098
40-44 4.8 0.9 94.3 100.0 1,046
45-49 8.2 0.4 91.4 100.0 795
Residence
Urban 15.0 2.0 83.0 100.0 1,081
Rural 4.5 1.2 94.2 100.0 4,584
Project province
No 7.2 1.4 91.4 100.0 3,814
Yes 5.1 1.4 93.5 100.0 1,851
Region
Northern Uplands 1.5 1.1 97.3 100.0 1,099
Red River Delta 2.6 0.9 96.5 100.0 1,363
North Central 2.9 0.4 96.7 100.0 722
Central Coast 7.0 0.5 92.5 100.0 594
Central Highlands 7.2 2.8 90.0 100.0 183
Southeast 17.8 2.7 79.6 100.0 648
Mekong River Delta 11.9 2.4 85.6 100.0 1,056
Education
No education 6.3 1.4 92.3 100.0 364
Some primary 7.8 2.1 90.0 100.0 966
Completed primary 8.2 2.3 89.5 100.0 1,599
Compl. lower secondary 4.7 0.3 95.0 100.0 1,783
Compl. higher secondary+ 5.8 1.1 93.1 100.0 953
The data indicate that a large majority of women are currently working (92 percent). An
additional one percent of women worked in the last 12 months, but are currently unemployed, and 7
percent did not work in the last 12 months.
Rural women are more likely to be employed (94 percent) than urban women (83 percent). There
is little difference in terms of current employment between women living in project provinces (94
percent) and nonproject provinces (91 percent).
Work status differs by region. Employment is highest in the Northern Uplands, North Central
and Red River Delta regions (97 percent each) and lowest in the Southeast region where Ho Chi Minh
City is located (80 percent). Surprisingly, work status differs little by education, ranging from a high of
Type of Employer
Table 2.13 shows that 39 percent of currently employed women work for a family member, 37
percent are self-employed, 10 percent work for the government, 7 percent work in a cooperative, and 6
percent work for someone else.
Percent distribution of currently employed, ever-married women by type of employer and background characteristics,
Vietnam 2002
Employer
Background Family Someone Self- Number of
characteristic member Cooperative Government else employed Total women
Age
15-19 68.3 1.9 3.0 1.9 24.9 100.0 53
20-24 51.8 4.0 7.5 8.1 28.2 100.0 469
25-29 40.3 7.7 12.5 6.2 33.3 100.0 914
30-34 41.2 7.7 7.9 7.4 35.7 100.0 1,033
35-39 37.0 7.3 9.1 6.4 40.3 100.0 1,035
40-44 34.5 8.5 11.1 5.0 40.8 100.0 987
45-49 35.8 7.8 9.9 4.8 41.7 100.0 727
Residence
Urban 20.1 1.0 31.8 10.1 37.0 100.0 897
Rural 43.4 8.7 5.2 5.4 37.3 100.0 4,320
Project province
No 41.4 6.0 9.7 7.5 35.3 100.0 3,487
Yes 35.5 10.1 9.8 3.5 41.1 100.0 1,730
Region
Northern Uplands 50.2 5.7 6.6 1.0 36.5 100.0 1,069
Red River Delta 31.3 23.8 13.5 4.2 27.1 100.0 1,315
North Central 73.6 0.2 4.9 0.5 20.8 100.0 698
Central Coast 54.2 0.1 13.7 2.8 29.2 100.0 550
Central Highlands 32.7 0.2 14.2 2.8 50.1 100.0 165
Southeast 5.0 1.0 15.0 15.9 62.9 100.0 516
Mekong River Delta 23.9 0.4 5.6 16.7 53.3 100.0 905
Education
No education 47.2 12.3 0.0 11.4 29.1 100.0 336
Some primary 40.4 3.7 1.0 11.4 43.4 100.0 869
Completed primary 45.5 3.8 2.4 4.9 43.3 100.0 1,431
Compl. lower secondary 42.3 11.8 3.9 4.5 37.4 100.0 1,694
Compl. higher secondary+ 20.1 6.6 44.9 4.3 24.1 100.0 887
Rural women are much more likely to work for a family member (43 percent) than urban women
(20 percent). On the other hand, 32 percent of urban women work for the government, compared with 5
percent of rural women. There is little variation in the type of employer between project and nonproject
provinces.
A high proportion of women who live in the Southeast, Mekong River Delta and Central
Highlands are self-employed (63, 53, and 50 percent, respectively). Nearly one in four (24 percent)
Level of education is related to type of employer. In general, as the level of education rises, the
percentage of women working for a family member declines and the percentage working for the
government increases. This is especially evident among women who have completed higher secondary
school, 45 percent of whom work for the government. Women with primary education are equally likely
to be self-employed or work for a family member.
Cash Earnings
All but a tiny fraction of women who work earn cash. Women earning cash for their work were
asked who mainly decides how their earnings will be used. Table 2.14 indicates that 48 percent of
respondents report that they decide jointly with their husband how their earnings will be used, while 31
percent decide by themselves, and 17 percent report that their husband decides. Among ever-married
women who are not currently married, nine in ten decide themselves how to use their earnings.
Urban working women are more likely to decide themselves on the use of their own cash earnings
(42 percent) than rural women (28 percent).
By region, the proportion of women who decide themselves on how to use their cash earnings is
highest in the Central Coast (47 percent), followed by the Central Highlands (41 percent). Sole decision-
making by women themselves is lowest in the Northern Uplands (20 percent), and Red River Delta (25
percent) regions. However, three in ten women in the Northern Uplands region state that their husband
alone makes decisions about using cash earnings, whereas one in ten women in the Red River Delta
decide jointly with their husband how cash earnings are used.
There is a strong relationship between decisionmaking and level of education. The more educated
a woman is, the less likely her husband is the sole decisionmaker. While 41 percent of women with no
education report that their husbands alone make decisions as to how to use their earnings, the proportion
drops to 9 percent among women with completed higher secondary education.
Percent distribution of employed women who receive cash earnings by person who decides how earnings will be used,
according to background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Residence
Urban 42.4 7.3 46.1 3.2 1.0 100.0 895
Rural 28.4 18.5 48.4 4.1 0.7 100.0 4,315
Project province
No 31.2 18.1 45.4 4.4 0.9 100.0 3,484
Yes 30.0 13.6 53.2 2.9 0.3 100.0 1,726
Region
Northern Uplands 20.3 29.2 44.2 5.5 0.8 100.0 1,069
Red River Delta 24.7 10.7 62.1 2.1 0.3 100.0 1,315
North Central 34.8 18.3 44.0 2.6 0.2 100.0 698
Central Coast 46.5 16.9 33.4 2.6 0.6 100.0 550
Central Highlands 40.9 13.1 43.2 2.2 0.6 100.0 164
Southeast 38.0 9.4 47.8 3.0 1.8 100.0 513
Mekong River Delta 33.4 13.4 44.8 7.2 1.1 100.0 902
Education
No education 24.1 41.2 30.0 4.4 0.4 100.0 335
Some primary 32.7 20.8 40.6 5.0 0.9 100.0 869
Completed primary 30.7 15.8 47.2 5.1 1.2 100.0 1,427
Compl. lower secondary 29.5 14.5 52.1 3.4 0.4 100.0 1,692
Compl. higher secondary+ 33.9 8.5 55.5 1.6 0.5 100.0 887
Table 2.15 presents the distribution of currently employed ever-married women who have a child
under 6 years of age by the person who cares for the child while they are at work.
Percent distribution of currently employed women by whether they have a child under six years of age and the percent distribution of employed
mothers with a child under six by person who cares for the youngest such child while mother is at work, according to background characteristics,
Vietnam 2002
—————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————
Employed
women Child’s caretaker, among employed women who have a child <6 years Number of
——————— ———————————————————————————————————— employed
One or Number Not women
No more of em- Other Neigh- Servant/ School Other Other worked with
Background child children ployed Respon- Hus- rela- bor/ hired inst. female male since child
characteristic <6 <6 women dent band tive friend help care child child birth Other Total <6
—————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————————
Residence
Urban 66.1 33.9 0,897 12.0 2.2 32.8 0.8 4.4 40.9 3.0 0.6 2.4 0.7 100.0 304
Rural 62.1 37.9 4,320 13.2 4.0 45.9 0.9 0.1 19.5 10.2 3.2 1.7 0.4 100.0 1,637
Project province
No 62.5 37.5 3,487 14.9 2.7 43.9 0.7 0.9 22.5 9.0 2.8 1.1 0.5 100.0 1,308
Yes 63.5 36.5 1,730 9.1 5.9 43.7 1.1 0.4 23.5 9.3 2.8 3.2 0.4 100.0 631
Region
Northern Uplands 63.2 36.8 1,069 9.1 3.8 53.0 0.9 0.3 16.5 12.5 2.4 0.1 0.1 100.0 393
Red River Delta 67.2 32.8 1,315 5.6 3.2 38.2 0.3 0.5 40.5 4.0 0.0 6.3 0.1 100.0 431
North Central 61.1 38.9 698 5.0 5.9 47.7 1.4 0.0 21.9 11.4 4.8 1.5 0.2 100.0 272
Central Coast 49.9 50.1 550 26.1 3.5 34.1 1.3 1.0 19.3 10.2 2.5 0.2 1.0 100.0 276
Central Highlands 48.1 51.9 165 13.5 3.5 37.6 2.1 0.5 18.3 17.5 4.0 1.2 1.7 100.0 86
Southeast 67.3 32.7 516 17.9 2.6 32.2 0.0 4.2 28.8 6.5 4.9 0.7 0.4 100.0 169
Mekong River Delta 65.2 34.8 905 20.3 3.2 53.0 0.7 0.3 8.3 8.1 4.0 0.0 0.8 100.0 315
Education
No education 53.5 46.5 336 11.3 1.9 48.5 1.1 0.0 0.6 26.8 7.2 0.0 0.9 100.0 156
Some primary 68.2 31.8 869 14.5 3.0 52.8 0.5 0.0 7.1 14.8 5.8 0.0 0.4 100.0 276
Completed primary 55.8 44.2 1,431 16.2 3.5 49.8 0.3 0.1 18.1 6.7 2.3 1.3 0.7 100.0 633
Compl. lower secondary 67.9 32.1 1,694 11.1 4.5 38.0 1.9 0.5 31.7 6.3 1.7 3.0 0.1 100.0 544
Compl. higher secondary+ 62.6 37.4 887 9.4 4.2 32.2 0.3 3.4 40.8 5.2 0.7 3.0 0.4 100.0 332
Total 62.8 37.2 5,217 13.0 3.7 43.8 0.8 0.8 22.8 9.1 2.8 1.8 0.4 100.0 1,941
Overall, almost four in ten currently employed women have a child under 6 years of age. These
women report that while they are at work, their children are cared for primarily by relatives (44 percent),
by a school or institution that the children attend (23 percent), by the women themselves (13 percent), and
by other female children (9 percent).
Relatives other than the respondent’s husband and schools/childcare institutions are the most
common caretakers for children of working women in both urban and rural areas. However, rural children
are more likely than urban children to be looked after by other relatives (46 versus 33 percent), whereas
urban children are more likely to attend school or receive institutional care than rural children (41 versus
20 percent). The role of female siblings in childcare in the absence of their mother is significant in rural
areas and in families where the mother has limited education. Children living in nonproject provinces are
more likely to be cared for by their mothers than children living in project provinces.
Access to Media
In order to assess exposure to the mass media, women were asked if they usually read a
newspaper, listen to the radio, or watch television at least once a week. This information is important for
planning the dissemination of family planning messages. Table 2.16 shows that 30 percent of women read
a newspaper, 54 percent listen to the radio, and 86 percent watch television at least once a week. Nine
percent of all respondents are not exposed to any of these mass media.
Women in rural areas are less exposed to mass media than urban women. Ten percent of rural
women have no exposure to mass media compared with 3 percent of urban women.
Another significant finding is that 14-15 percent of women in the Mekong River Delta and
Central Highlands reported having no media exposure, which is about twice as high as the national level.
Conversely, one-third of women in the Red River Delta are exposed to all three media.
There is a strong positive association between media exposure and level of education: as
education increases, exposure to mass media increases. The proportion of women exposed to all three
media rises from 0 among women with no education to almost half of those who have completed higher
secondary school.
Comparison with data from the VNDHS 1997 shows that exposure to television has increased
over the last 5 years, from 77 to 86 percent of ever-married women. However, radio listenership has
declined from 64 percent of women in 1997 to 54 percent in 2002, while newspaper readership has
remained steady at 30-31 percent.
Percentage of ever-married women who usually read a newspaper, listen to the radio, or watch
television at least once a week, by background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Age
15-19 16.2 30.5 52.4 78.5 24.5 69
20-24 11.5 30.7 52.7 81.2 19.8 552
25-29 10.3 30.0 51.6 83.1 19.2 1,000
30-34 7.1 28.6 54.8 86.6 19.6 1,105
35-39 7.0 29.8 52.3 87.9 19.4 1,098
40-44 8.4 31.4 56.3 86.8 21.1 1,046
45-49 7.7 27.3 55.3 87.9 20.0 795
Residence
Urban 3.3 61.1 51.6 95.0 38.3 1,081
Rural 9.7 22.3 54.4 83.7 15.5 4,584
Project province
No 8.9 30.4 52.4 85.3 20.2 3,814
Yes 7.7 28.0 56.9 86.9 19.1 1,851
Region
Northern Uplands 11.8 20.6 60.4 74.3 14.2 1,099
Red River Delta 1.0 42.1 72.0 97.1 32.9 1,363
North Central 7.4 20.2 47.5 87.9 12.3 722
Central Coast 9.1 28.0 39.3 86.4 13.4 594
Central Highlands 14.2 25.4 32.5 80.7 13.7 183
Southeast 7.0 48.5 48.6 89.9 28.6 648
Mekong River Delta 15.0 19.6 43.2 79.9 13.7 1,056
Education
No education 32.7 0.2 36.5 44.3 0.0 364
Some primary 19.2 10.0 42.1 72.9 6.6 966
Completed primary 7.3 21.5 50.4 87.5 13.2 1,599
Compl. lower secondary 3.2 31.0 60.5 93.2 21.6 1,783
Compl. higher secondary+ 0.4 71.9 65.7 98.3 49.0 953
The fertility measures presented in this chapter are based on the reported reproductive histories of
ever-married women age 15-49. Each woman was first asked to report the number of sons and daughters
living with her, the number living elsewhere, the number that had died, and the number of pregnancies
that did not end in a live birth (i.e., abortion, menstrual regulation, miscarriage or stillbirth). She was then
asked to report an event-by-event history of her pregnancies. For each live birth, questions were asked
about the sex of the child, date of birth, survivorship status, and current age (for surviving children) or age
at death (for deceased children).
Fertility Levels
Measures of current fertility are presented in Table 3.1 for the five-year period preceding the sur-
vey, which corresponds to the period 1998-2002. This period was chosen in order to be comparable to the
VNDHS 1997 as well as to provide data on the inter-survey period.
Several measures of current fertility are shown. Age-specific fertility rates (ASFR) are calculated
by dividing the number of births to women in a specific age group by the number of woman-years lived
during a given period.1 Age-specific fertility rates are useful in understanding the age pattern of fertility.
In an ever-married sample of women such as in the VNDHS, the calculation of all-women fertility rates
makes the implicit assumption that no births occurred among women who have never married.
The total fertility rate (TFR) is a useful summary measure of fertility levels. The TFR is calcu-
lated by summing the age-specific fertility rates and multiplying by five. It is interpreted as the number of
children a woman would bear during her lifetime if she were to experience the age-specific fertility rates
prevailing during a given period.
Two additional measures of fertility reported in this chapter are the general fertility rate (GFR)
which represents the annual number of births per 1,000 women age 15-44, and the crude birth rate (CBR)
which represents the annual number of births per 1,000 population. The CBR was estimated using the
birth history data in conjunction with the population data collected in the household schedule.
1
Numerators for the age-specific fertility rates were obtained by classifying births during the 5-year period prior to
the survey into standard five-year age groups, according to the mother’s age at the time of birth, and summing. De-
nominators for the rates were the number of person-years lived by all women in each five-year age group during the
period. Since only ever-married women were interviewed in the VNDHS, it was necessary to inflate the number of
person-years lived by ever-married women by factors representing the proportion of women who were ever-married
in each age group. These factors were calculated from the data collected in the household schedule. Never-married
women were presumed not to have given birth. In Vietnam, few births occur outside of marriage so that any under-
estimation of fertility from this source is negligible.
Fertility | 27
Fertility estimates for Vietnam are shown in Table 3.1 Current fertility rates
Table 3.1 and Figure 3.1. At the national level the TFR
Age-specific and cumulative fertility rates and crude
is 1.9 children per woman, which indicates that on av- birth rate for the five-year period preceding the survey,
erage, a Vietnamese woman will give birth to fewer by urban-rural residence and project-nonproject prov-
than two children during her lifetime. In rural areas, ince, Vietnam 2002
the TFR is 2.0 children per woman, or 42 percent Project
higher than the rate for urban areas (1.4 children per Residence province
woman). On the other hand, the difference in the TFR Age Urban Rural No Yes Total
between project and nonproject provinces is relatively 15-19 10 28 26 19 25
20-24 69 158 132 151 138
small (1.9 and 1.8 children per woman, respectively).
25-29 107 116 114 114 114
30-34 68 58 59 60 60
Fertility Trends 35-39 23 26 25 27 26
40-44 3 12 8 13 10
A series of fertility estimates from five national 45-49 2 2 1 2 2
surveys is shown in Table 3.2. The total fertility rate in
Vietnam has declined precipitously from 4.0 children TFR 15-49 1.40 1.99 1.83 1.93 1.87
per woman in 1987 to 1.9 in 1998-2002. Between the TFR 15-44 1.39 1.99 1.82 1.92 1.86
1997 and VNDHS 2002 surveys, the TFR declined by GFR 46 66 61 62 62
CBR 12.1 15.8 15.0 14.9 15.0
0.8 children or 30 percent in a period of five and a half
years.2 This is a remarkable decline, especially consid- Note: Rates are for the period 1-60 months preceding
the survey. Rates for age group 45-49 may be slightly
ering the steep decline recorded for the 1992-96 period biased due to truncation.
and the already low level of fertility in Vietnam. TFR: Total fertility rate for ages 15-49, expressed per
woman
GFR: General fertility rate (births divided by number of
women 15-44), expressed per 1,000 women
CBR: Crude birth rate, expressed per 1,000 population
2.0
1.9 1.9
1.8
1.4
Vietnam 2002
2
The TFR for the VNDHS 1997 was calculated for the calendar period 1992-96, with a mid-point of mid-1994. For
the VNDHS 2002, fertility rates refer to the 5-year period prior to the survey which corresponds roughly to mid-
1998 to mid-2002, with a mid-point of early 2000.
28 | Fertility
Table 3.2 Trends in fertility rates
Nevertheless, several countries have experienced declines in the TFR of roughly this magnitude,
e.g., Thailand, Sri Lanka, Turkey, and Morocco (Chayovan et al., 1988; DCS and IRD, 1988; Mboup and
Saha, 1998; and Azelmat et al., 1996). However, a review of the rates of fertility decline between surveys
in the DHS program would imply that the rate of decline measured in the VNDHS 2002 is unprecedented
(Mboup and Saha, 1998; Rutstein, 2002).3
A review of the VNDHS 2002 data does not indicate any obvious flaws with the data. The most
commonly suspected errors such as biases in the age reporting of women or deliberate displacement of the
dates of births outside of the reference period used for fertility calculations are not likely to have much of
an effect on the TFR for the five years before the survey. Similarly, examination of the weighting factors
used to inflate ever-married women to represent all women does not show any significant problem. Omis-
sion of births—either because respondents avoid or forget mentioning them or because interviewers de-
liberately omit them to reduce their work—could be a factor in the low reported fertility rates and analysis
of the recent childhood mortality rates suggests possible omission of recent neonatal deaths (see Chapter
7). Outright omission of births is difficult to detect.
On the other hand, there is evidence to support the fact that there has been an extremely rapid fer-
tility decline. Internal evidence from the pregnancy history in the VNDHS 2002 shows that the TFR for
the period 5-9 years prior to the survey (roughly equivalent to 1992-96) was 2.8, very close to the TFR of
2.7 reported from the VNDHS 1997. Although contraceptive use has not increased significantly between
the two surveys, there has been a decline in the proportions of women married at ages 15-24 (see Table
5.1). An increase in the total abortion rate (see Table 4.19) would also depress the TFR.
A comparison of age-specific fertility rates from the VNDHS 2002 and from the earlier sources,
indicates that fertility declines are proportionately greater for women aged 25 and older than for younger
women. This pattern is common and plausible for populations experiencing a fertility decline. It occurs
during the fertility transition when older women, who are more likely to have reached their desired family
size, make a greater effort to limit their births than do younger women, who are likely to have not yet
achieved their desired family size.
3
Using the annual percentage decline formula: r = ln (TFR0/TFR1)/ t ×100, the decline in Vietnam is 6.4 percent. Of
the 10 DHS countries examined by Mboup and Saha, the highest rate of decline between two surveys occurred in
Kenya with 5.2 percent. Of the 21 DHS countries examined by Rutstein, the highest rate of decline was noted for
Jordan at 3.5 percent (Rutstein, 2002:25).
Fertility | 29
In summary, although there has no doubt been a precipitous decline in fertility over the past five
years in Vietnam, it is also likely that there was some underreporting of births in 2002 relative to the pre-
vious surveys. Consequently, the steepness of the decline may be exaggerated somewhat.
Fertility Differentials
Table 3.3 presents fertility levels by urban-rural residence, project province status, region, and
educational attainment. Three measures of fertility are shown: the total fertility rate, the percentage of
women who were pregnant at the time of the survey and the average number of children ever born to
women age 40-49.
30 | Fertility
The results of this comparison in Table 3.3 indicate that there has been a significant fertility de-
cline in Vietnam during the past several decades and that the decline has been broadly experienced
throughout the population. At the national level, women age 40-49 have given birth to an average of 3.4
children, or one and a half children more than the current total fertility rate of 1.9 children per women.
The data for all population subgroups also indicate a fertility decline, although there are differences in the
magnitude of the decline. The difference between the two fertility measures is greater for rural areas (1.7)
than for urban areas (1.0).
The distribution of all women and currently married women by age and number of children ever
born is presented in Table 3.4. The table also shows the mean number of children ever born and mean
number of living children. The data indicate that only 2 percent of all women age 15-19 have given birth.
On average, women in their early thirties have given birth to two children, while women in their
early 40s have given birth to a three children. The statistics for currently married women do not differ
greatly from those for all women at older ages; however, at younger ages the percentage of currently mar-
ried women who have had children is much higher than the percentage among all women.
Percent distribution of all women and currently married women by number of children ever born (CEB) and mean number
ever born and living, according to age, Vietnam 2002
Number Mean
Children ever born of Mean living
Age 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10+ Total women CEB children
ALL WOMEN
15-19 98.3 1.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 1,630 0.02 0.02
20-24 61.2 28.5 9.5 0.8 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 1,155 0.50 0.49
25-29 22.8 29.8 36.0 8.3 2.8 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 1,221 1.39 1.34
30-34 10.3 14.1 46.7 19.5 7.7 1.2 0.4 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 1,197 2.06 1.98
35-39 6.6 9.6 36.5 25.8 13.2 4.9 2.0 0.8 0.5 0.1 0.0 100.0 1,162 2.59 2.45
40-44 8.4 5.3 25.7 22.5 19.4 10.4 5.4 2.0 0.7 0.2 0.2 100.0 1,128 3.08 2.89
45-49 6.7 4.9 18.1 19.3 21.6 10.8 8.0 4.9 2.4 1.6 1.7 100.0 838 3.74 3.43
Total 35.3 13.2 23.7 12.7 8.2 3.4 1.9 0.9 0.4 0.2 0.2 100.0 8,330 1.73 1.63
CURRENTLY MARRIED WOMEN
15-19 59.1 40.9 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 67 0.41 0.41
20-24 19.2 59.1 19.9 1.7 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 536 1.04 1.02
25-29 5.8 35.3 44.6 10.4 3.5 0.3 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 977 1.72 1.65
30-34 2.5 13.5 51.9 21.7 8.5 1.3 0.4 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 1,062 2.27 2.18
35-39 0.8 8.3 40.4 27.9 14.4 4.9 1.9 0.9 0.5 0.1 0.0 100.0 1,042 2.77 2.61
40-44 1.3 4.3 27.3 24.8 21.7 11.1 6.0 2.3 0.8 0.3 0.2 100.0 966 3.38 3.17
45-49 1.7 3.1 17.6 20.4 23.4 12.1 9.2 6.0 2.6 2.0 2.1 100.0 687 4.10 3.78
Total 4.9 18.4 35.6 19.0 12.1 4.8 2.7 1.4 0.6 0.3 0.3 100.0 5,338 2.56 2.41
A comparison of the mean number of children ever born (CEB) reported in the 1989 census (1.9),
the ICDS-94 (1.9), the VNDHS 1997 (1.9), and the VNDHS 2002 (1.6) is shown in Table 3.5. The com-
parison does not highlight recent changes in fertility, but rather is an indication of the cumulative changes
in fertility over the decades prior to the surveys. The data show almost no change in mean number of
Fertility | 31
children ever born among younger women until the VNDHS 2002. The decline in fertility is seen almost
exclusively among older women; for example, the mean number of children ever born among women age
45-49 has declined from 4.9 to 3.4 in 13 years. The fact that the overall mean has not fallen until 2002 is
in part due to the increasingly older age distribution among women.
There is a considerable body of research that indicates that short birth intervals are harmful to the
health of babies. This is particularly true for babies born at intervals of less than 24 months. Table 3.6
shows the percent distribution of non-first births that occurred in the five-year period before the VNDHS
2002 by the number of months since the previous birth.
The data show that birth intervals are generally long in Vietnam. Almost half (49 percent) of non-
first births occur four or more years after the previous birth, while over one-third (36 percent) take place
24-47 months after the previous birth. Fewer than one in six births (16 percent) occurs after an interval of
less than 24 months. The median birth interval is 47 months. This is considerably longer than the median
birth interval of 36 months reported for the VNDHS 1997 (NCPFP, 1999) and the 32 months reported in
the ICDS-94 (GSO, 1995).
Younger women, who are more fecund and still in the process of family building, have shorter
birth intervals than older women. The median birth interval for women age 20-29 is 32 months, compared
with more than 60 months for other women. The shortest median birth interval prevails for children
whose preceding sibling has died. This pattern presumably reflects a shortened breastfeeding period due
to the death of the prior sibling, as well as minimal use of contraception among women who have recently
experienced the loss of a child.
32 | Fertility
Table 3.6 Birth interval
Percent distribution of births in the five years before the survey by length of interval (months) since previous
birth and median length of birth interval, according to demographic and background characteristics, Viet-
nam 2002
Median
length of
Months since previous birth Number birth
Characteristic 7-17 18-23 24-35 36-47 48+ Total of births interval
Mother’s age
20-29 9.4 14.7 31.8 12.0 32.1 100.0 594 32.1
30-39 2.5 6.0 15.8 13.9 61.8 100.0 622 60.0
40+ 4.9 6.5 17.6 6.7 64.3 100.0 102 59.5
Birth order
2-3 5.9 10.3 21.8 11.9 50.1 100.0 1,053 48.1
4-6 5.1 5.1 28.6 15.2 46.0 100.0 224 43.7
7+ (7.9) (27.9) (27.1) (12.7) (24.4) 100.0 41 (29.8)
Residence
Urban 0.9 4.5 11.8 9.6 73.2 100.0 166 65.7
Rural 6.5 10.8 24.8 12.9 45.1 100.0 1,152 43.2
Project province
No 5.6 9.6 22.4 13.7 48.7 100.0 869 47.0
Yes 6.2 10.8 24.5 10.0 48.5 100.0 449 46.6
Region
Northern Uplands 14.8 10.5 24.4 14.4 35.9 100.0 262 36.1
Red River Delta 4.1 5.5 13.9 12.5 64.1 100.0 246 58.3
North Central 3.9 9.5 25.6 14.3 46.7 100.0 195 46.3
Central Coast 2.6 12.3 25.9 12.8 46.4 100.0 199 46.0
Central Highlands 7.2 15.6 41.6 9.7 25.9 100.0 80 31.6
Southeast 2.2 10.7 23.5 11.0 52.6 100.0 130 50.2
Mekong River Delta 3.0 10.4 20.2 9.8 56.5 100.0 206 53.1
Mother’s education
No education 16.8 18.9 31.6 8.0 24.6 100.0 151 30.2
Some primary 6.5 13.8 23.4 8.2 48.1 100.0 200 45.4
Completed primary 3.6 10.9 27.2 14.4 43.9 100.0 440 42.8
Compl. lower secondary 4.8 7.0 19.2 15.8 53.2 100.0 355 50.4
Compl. higher secondary+ 3.0 1.5 13.0 9.5 72.9 100.0 171 67.7
Note: First births are excluded. The interval for multiple births is the number of months since the preceding
pregnancy that ended in a live birth. Figures in parentheses are based on 25-49 unweighted cases.
Fertility | 33
Differentials in the length of birth intervals by background characteristics are inversely related to
fertility levels. The median duration is greater in urban areas (66 months) than in rural areas (43 months).
Birth intervals are longest in the three regions where fertility is lowest: the Red River Delta, the Southeast
region and the Mekong River Delta (50-58 months). By level of education, mothers with a higher secon-
dary education have a median birth interval of 68 months, compared with 30 months for mothers with no
education.
The age at which a woman has her first child has implications for her health and the health of her
child, as well as for her economic opportunities in life. In many countries, postponement of first births,
reflecting an increase in the age at marriage, has contributed to overall fertility decline. Alternatively,
early onset of childbearing tends to increase the number of children a woman will have during her repro-
ductive years. Even when family planning is widespread, the timing of first births can affect completed
family size.
Table 3.7 presents the distribution of women by age at first birth, according to the current age.
For women age 25 years and over, the median age at first birth is shown in the last column of the table.
The median age at first birth increases across age cohorts, from 22.6 years among women age 25-29 to
23.5 years among women age 45-49. Compared with data from the VNDHS 1997, the median age at first
birth has either remained the same or declined slightly.
Percent distribution of women by exact age at first birth and median age at first birth, according to current age, Vietnam
2002
Number Median
Age at first birth of age at
Age No birth <15 15-17 18-19 20-21 22-24 25+ Total women first birth
15-19 98.3 0.2 0.6 1.0 na na na 100.0 1,630 a
20-24 61.2 0.2 3.7 12.0 14.2 8.6 na 100.0 1,155 a
25-29 22.8 0.3 7.3 17.6 20.9 20.9 10.1 100.0 1,221 22.6
30-34 10.3 0.0 2.3 18.0 30.4 25.4 13.5 100.0 1,197 21.9
35-39 6.6 0.2 4.2 14.1 23.5 29.3 22.1 100.0 1,162 22.7
40-44 8.4 0.0 2.8 12.8 19.0 32.1 24.9 100.0 1,128 23.2
45-49 6.7 0.3 3.6 11.5 19.2 28.8 30.0 100.0 838 23.5
na = Not applicable
a = Omitted because less than 50 percent of women had a birth before reaching the age group
Table 3.8 shows the median age at first birth for different subgroups of the population. The meas-
ures are presented for all women age 25-49 and for five-year age groups. There are substantial differences
between urban and rural women in the median age at first birth. In all age groups, the median age at first
birth is higher for urban women than for rural women.
The median age at first birth is highest in the Southeast region (24.6 years) and lowest in the
Northern Uplands (21.9 years). Median age at first birth is positively related to women’s level of educa-
tion. It does not differ by project province status.
34 | Fertility
Table 3.8 Median age at first birth by background characteristics
Median age at first birth among women aged 25-49 years, by current age and background
characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Current age
Background characteristic 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 25-49
Residence
Urban a 24.4 24.4 24.9 24.9 24.9
Rural 21.7 21.6 22.3 22.8 23.1 22.3
Project province
No 22.7 22.0 22.7 23.3 23.4 22.8
Yes 22.2 21.8 22.8 23.0 23.7 22.7
Region
Northern Uplands 20.5 21.8 21.7 22.6 23.4 21.9
Red River Delta 23.3 21.4 23.4 23.9 24.1 23.2
North Central 21.9 21.6 22.6 22.8 23.5 22.4
Central Coast 23.3 22.2 22.9 24.1 23.1 23.0
Central Highlands 22.9 22.1 25.2 22.1 23.0 23.0
Southeast a 25.6 23.6 23.8 24.9 24.6
Mekong River Delta 23.5 22.0 22.3 22.1 22.6 22.5
Education
No education 19.9 21.1 21.8 21.6 21.9 21.2
Some primary 20.8 21.2 21.2 22.1 22.4 21.6
Completed primary 22.2 22.0 22.0 22.4 23.2 22.3
Compl. lower secondary 21.9 21.7 22.7 23.3 23.7 22.7
Compl. higher secondary+ a 23.3 24.6 25.0 25.8 24.9
a = Omitted because less than 50 percent of women had a birth before reaching the age
group.
Table 3.9 shows the percentage of women age 15-19 who are mothers or pregnant with their first
child. The sum of these two categories is defined as the percentage of teenage women who have begun
childbearing. This statistic is important because of the association between early childbearing and high
morbidity and mortality for both mothers and their children. The overall level of teenage childbearing in
Vietnam is slightly over 3 percent, of which half have given birth and half are pregnant with their first
child.
There are significant differences in the level of teenage childbearing by residence. The level in
rural areas (4 percent) is double the level in urban areas (2 percent). By comparison, the difference in the
level of teenage childbearing between project provinces and nonproject provinces is small.
Fertility | 35
By region, the percentage of teenage childbearing varies from 2 percent in the Central Highlands
to 5 percent in the Central Coast. Teenage childbearing is strongly and inversely related to level of educa-
tion. Teenage childbearing is highest among women with some primary education (10 percent), substan-
tially lower among women who have completed lower secondary school (2 percent), and lowest among
those who have completed higher secondary school (less than one percent).
Percentage of teenagers 15-19 who are mothers or pregnant with their first
child, by background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Teenage pregnancy
Percentage
Pregnant who have Number
with first begun of
Background characteristic Mothers child childbearing teenagers
Age1
15 0.6 0.0 0.6 398
17 0.2 0.3 0.5 646
18 3.2 3.4 6.6 321
19 5.3 5.2 10.5 265
Residence
Urban 0.7 0.9 1.6 275
Rural 2.0 1.8 3.7 1,351
Project province
No 2.0 1.4 3.5 1,099
Yes 1.1 2.0 3.1 531
Region
Northern Uplands 2.8 1.5 4.3 336
Red River Delta 0.7 1.8 2.5 330
North Central 1.6 1.1 2.8 235
Central Coast 3.1 1.7 4.8 152
Central Highlands 0.0 1.8 1.8 53
Southeast 0.7 2.3 3.0 184
Mekong River Delta 2.1 1.4 3.4 335
Education
No education (1.3) (6.2) (7.5) 45
Some primary 7.0 3.0 10.0 135
Completed primary 3.0 1.5 4.5 490
Compl. lower secondary 0.5 1.4 1.9 794
Compl. higher secondary+ 0.0 0.5 0.5 167
36 | Fertility
FERTILITY REGULATION 4
4.1 KNOWLEDGE OF FAMILY PLANNING METHODS
Knowledge of family planning methods and places to obtain them are crucial elements in the de-
cision of whether to use a method and which method to use. In the VNDHS 2002, each respondent was
first asked to mention all the methods she had heard of. When the respondent failed to mention a particu-
lar method spontaneously, the interviewer read the name and a short description of the method and asked
if she knew it. All methods recognized by the respondent after the method was described were recorded as
known after probing (prompted knowledge). In this analysis, overall levels of knowledge are presented,
i.e., respondents are classified as knowing a method if they recognized it spontaneously or after probing.
Information on knowledge was collected for eight modern methods—the pill, IUD, injectables,
implants, vaginal methods (foam, jelly, cream and diaphragm), the condom, female sterilization, and male
sterilization—and two traditional methods—periodic abstinence and withdrawal. In addition, provision
was made in the questionnaire to record any other methods named spontaneously by the respondent.
Table 4.1 indicates that virtually all women of reproductive age know of at least one method of
contraception. As in the previous VNDHS surveys, the most widely known methods are the IUD (99 per-
cent of currently married women), the condom (96 percent), the pill (95 percent), female sterilization (92
percent), and male sterilization (90 percent). Eighty-one percent of currently married women have heard
of withdrawal and 70 percent know about the rhythm method or periodic abstinence. The proportion of
currently married women who have heard of injectables is 60 percent. The least recognized methods—
implants and vaginal methods—were known by 15 and 10 percent of currently married women, respec-
tively.
Fertility Regulation | 37
Comparison of the levels of contraceptive knowledge between the VNDHS 1988, the VNDHS
1997 and the VNDHS 2002 indicates that the percentage of currently married women knowing specific
methods has increased for every method. Knowledge of the IUD has increased the least (6 percentage
points in comparison with the VNDHS 1988 and 1 percentage point in comparison with the VNDHS
1997) due to the fact that knowledge of the IUD was already very high in 1988. Other methods, however,
show large increases: knowledge of the condom, the pill, male sterilization and withdrawal all doubled
during period from 1988 to 2002. Knowledge of female sterilization increased from 60 to 92 percent over
the same period.
Increases in contraceptive knowledge since the VNDHS 1997 are more modest. The largest gain
is in knowledge of withdrawal, which increased from 72 to 81 percent of currently married women and
for injectables, which increased from 56 to 60 percent.
Knowledge of at least one modern method of contraception is so high that there are almost no dif-
ferences by background characteristics (data not shown). For example, there is only one group of cur-
rently married women—those age 15-19—for whom the percentage knowing any modern method is less
than 95 percent.
All women interviewed in the VNDHS 2002 who said they had heard of a method of family
planning were asked if they had ever used that method. Table 4.2 indicates that 9 out of 10 currently mar-
ried women have used a method (91 percent). As in the previous surveys, the IUD is by far the most
widely used method among currently married women (65 percent), having increased by 7 percentage
points since 1997. The proportions of women who have ever used other modern methods have also in-
creased. For example, the proportion of currently married women who have ever used condoms has in-
creased from 13 percent in 1997 to 19 percent in 2002, while the proportion who have ever used the pill
has increased from 10 to 18 percent. Six percent of currently married women reported having been steril-
ized. Few women have used other modern methods. The level of ever use of traditional methods is high in
Vietnam. More than one in three currently married women (38 percent) has used withdrawal, while al-
most one-fourth have used periodic abstinence (23 percent). In 1997, 26 and 18 percent, respectively, had
used these methods at some time.
Ever-use rates vary by age group and are lowest among the youngest women. However, the fact
that 29 percent of currently married women age 15-19 and 70 percent of those age 20-24 have used con-
traception at some time indicates that women in Vietnam understand the advantages of practicing family
planning early in their reproductive years. The level of ever use rises to an astoundingly high level of 96
percent for currently married women age 35-39, then declines to 92 percent among those age 45-49.
38 | Fertility Regulation
Table 4.2 Ever use of contraception
Percentage of ever-married women and of currently married women who have ever used any contraceptive method, by specific method and
age, Vietnam 2002
Contraceptive method
Dia- Any
Any phragm Female Male tradi- Periodic Number
Any modern Injec- foam, Con- steri- steri- tional- absti- With- Other of
Age method method Pill IUD tions jelly dom lization lization method nence drawal methods women
EVER-MARRIED WOMEN
15-19 31.0 21.2 3.2 15.0 0.0 0.0 4.7 0.0 0.0 13.8 5.1 11.3 0.0 69
20-24 69.9 58.5 17.4 41.3 0.5 0.0 9.9 0.1 0.0 26.0 9.6 21.8 0.0 552
25-29 89.3 78.5 20.3 62.6 0.9 0.2 16.7 0.7 0.2 39.0 15.9 33.7 0.0 1,000
30-34 92.8 82.7 21.9 68.1 1.4 0.0 21.8 3.3 0.3 47.6 24.0 38.5 0.2 1,105
35-39 94.1 83.1 18.2 68.7 1.1 0.2 21.7 9.0 0.9 50.3 26.4 42.8 0.1 1,098
40-44 91.5 80.6 14.6 67.2 2.2 0.2 19.8 9.9 0.7 50.0 29.1 41.1 0.4 1,046
45-49 86.7 76.0 11.4 62.8 1.2 0.0 13.1 10.3 0.5 45.9 25.0 37.5 0.5 795
Total 88.4 77.6 17.4 63.1 1.3 0.1 17.9 5.8 0.5 44.3 22.5 36.8 0.2 5,665
CURRENTLY MARRIED WOMEN
15-19 29.3 19.2 0.9 15.4 0.0 0.0 4.8 0.0 0.0 14.2 5.2 11.6 0.0 67
20-24 70.0 58.7 17.4 41.4 0.5 0.0 10.2 0.1 0.0 26.2 9.9 21.9 0.0 536
25-29 90.2 79.4 20.7 63.6 0.9 0.2 16.7 0.7 0.2 39.4 16.1 34.1 0.0 977
30-34 94.6 84.5 22.5 69.5 1.5 0.0 22.2 3.4 0.3 48.7 24.6 39.6 0.2 1,062
35-39 96.3 85.3 18.7 70.6 1.1 0.2 22.5 9.3 0.9 51.6 26.9 44.1 0.1 1,042
40-44 95.1 83.9 15.6 70.2 2.0 0.2 21.1 10.4 0.8 52.7 30.7 43.4 0.3 966
45-49 91.5 80.2 12.3 66.4 1.4 0.0 14.1 11.1 0.6 49.1 26.6 40.6 0.5 687
Total 90.5 79.6 18.1 64.9 1.3 0.1 18.6 5.9 0.5 45.7 23.1 38.1 0.2 5,338
The level of current use of contraception is one of the indicators most frequently used to assess
the success of family planning programs. It is also a widely used measure in the analysis of fertility de-
terminants. Data on current use of contraception is presented in Table 4.3 for currently married women
age 15-49.
The survey results indicate that almost 79 percent of currently married women are using family
planning, an increase of 3 percentage points from the rate in the VNDHS 1997 (75 percent). Use of mod-
ern methods (57 percent) is much higher than use of traditional methods (22 percent).
By far, the most commonly used method in Vietnam is the IUD, which is being used by 38 per-
cent of currently married women (Figure 4.1); the next most common method is withdrawal (14 percent).
Current use of modern methods other than the IUD is much lower; female sterilization, the condom, and
the pill are each used by 6 percent of married women, while use of male sterilization and injectables are
reported by less than 1 percent of women. Despite its predominance as the leading method in Vietnam,
use of the IUD has actually declined slightly since 1997 (from 39 to 38 percent). Use of the pill has in-
creased slightly (from 4 to 6 percent).
Fertility Regulation | 39
Table 4.3 Current use of contraception
Percent distribution of currently married women by contraceptive method currently used, according to age, Vietnam 2002
Contraceptive method
Any
Any Female Male tradi- Periodic Not Number
Any modern Injec- steri- steri- tional absti- With- Other currently of
Age method method Pill IUD tions Condom lization lization method nence drawal methods using Total women
15-19 22.8 14.1 0.0 14.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 8.6 2.6 6.0 0.0 77.2 100.0 67
20-24 57.7 44.5 9.0 30.9 0.4 4.1 0.1 0.0 13.2 1.6 11.6 0.0 42.3 100.0 536
25-29 73.4 56.9 8.0 42.2 0.4 5.4 0.7 0.2 16.5 3.8 12.8 0.0 26.6 100.0 977
30-34 83.1 63.3 9.2 42.9 0.4 7.1 3.4 0.3 19.6 7.8 11.8 0.2 16.9 100.0 1,062
35-39 90.2 65.0 5.3 42.3 0.3 7.0 9.3 0.8 25.2 8.5 16.8 0.0 9.8 100.0 1,042
40-44 88.8 60.1 4.7 36.9 0.5 6.9 10.4 0.7 28.7 11.2 17.5 0.0 11.2 100.0 966
45-49 68.2 42.3 1.9 25.4 0.2 3.0 11.1 0.6 25.8 10.5 15.3 0.1 31.8 100.0 687
Total 78.5 56.7 6.3 37.7 0.4 5.8 5.9 0.5 21.8 7.5 14.3 0.1 21.5 100.0 5,338
Rates of current use increase with age, reaching a maximum among women age 35-39 (90 per-
cent). Beginning with age group 20-24, more than half of women are using contraception. Women in all
age groups strongly prefer the IUD. The proportion using the IUD peaks at 43 percent among women age
30-34, while the proportion using female sterilization is highest among women age 45-49 (11 percent).
Withdrawal 14%
Other 1%
Female sterilization 6%
Condom 6%
IUD 38%
Vietnam 2002
Differentials in the use of contraception among currently married women are shown in Table 4.4
and Figure 4.2. The urban-rural differential is almost nonexistent, with 79 percent of urban women using,
compared to 78 percent of rural women. Surprisingly, urban women are slightly more likely than rural
40 | Fertility Regulation
women to use traditional methods, while rural women are more likely than urban women to use modern
methods (57 versus 55 percent, respectively). Women living in project and nonproject provinces are
about equally likely to be current users (78 and 79 percent, respectively) and their method mix is similar.
While contraceptive use has barely changed in the project provinces since 1997 (from 77 to 77.5 percent),
it has increased slightly faster in the nonproject provinces (from 75 to 79 percent).
Currently married women in the Central Highlands report the lowest rate of current use of any
method (66 percent) and of modern methods (42 percent). In contrast, the highest level of current use is in
the Red River Delta (83 percent for any method and 59 percent for modern methods). The North Central
region is the next highest for overall use (80 percent for any method), while the Central Coast is the next
highest for use of modern methods (59 percent). There is little difference in current use in the remaining
four regions where use of any method varies from 76 to 78 percent.
Percent distribution of currently married women by contraceptive method currently used, according to background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Contraceptive method
Any
Any Female Male tradi- Periodic Not Number
Any modern Injec- Con- steri- steri- tional absti- With- Other currently of
Background characteristic method method Pill IUD tions dom lization lization method nence drawal methods using Total women
Residence
Urban 79.1 54.9 6.9 30.3 0.2 12.6 4.8 0.2 24.1 11.8 12.3 0.1 20.9 100.0 1,005
Rural 78.4 57.1 6.2 39.5 0.5 4.2 6.2 0.6 21.2 6.5 14.8 0.0 21.6 100.0 4,333
Project province
No 79.0 56.9 7.0 37.5 0.4 6.3 5.5 0.3 22.1 7.1 14.9 0.0 21.0 100.0 3,586
Yes 77.5 56.2 5.0 38.3 0.5 4.8 6.8 0.9 21.2 8.2 13.0 0.1 22.5 100.0 1,752
Region
Northern Uplands 78.4 56.6 4.7 44.4 0.2 3.7 3.2 0.3 21.7 5.3 16.4 0.1 21.6 100.0 1,049
Red River Delta 82.8 59.4 4.5 42.2 0.3 7.0 5.0 0.4 23.4 10.8 12.6 0.0 17.2 100.0 1,307
North Central 79.8 57.3 3.1 42.4 0.4 3.9 6.2 1.2 22.3 8.4 13.9 0.2 20.2 100.0 677
Central Coast 77.2 58.7 3.5 36.2 0.4 10.8 7.0 0.8 18.5 3.5 15.0 0.0 22.8 100.0 547
Central Highlands 66.3 41.6 2.0 21.2 0.6 5.5 12.3 0.0 24.7 8.1 16.6 0.0 33.7 100.0 172
Southeast 75.7 52.9 10.1 25.7 0.4 7.6 9.2 0.0 22.8 10.1 12.7 0.0 24.3 100.0 598
Mekong River Delta 76.7 56.6 12.7 32.5 0.7 3.9 6.3 0.4 20.0 5.2 14.9 0.1 23.3 100.0 989
Education
No education 65.7 53.9 9.3 33.4 0.4 0.6 9.3 0.8 11.5 4.6 7.0 0.2 34.3 100.0 343
Some primary 76.1 57.7 11.1 34.5 0.6 2.9 8.2 0.4 18.3 4.0 14.3 0.1 23.9 100.0 886
Complete primary 77.7 56.4 5.8 38.7 0.5 4.3 6.6 0.5 21.2 5.3 15.9 0.1 22.3 100.0 1,506
Compl. lower secondary 82.8 58.4 3.9 42.2 0.4 5.5 5.7 0.7 24.4 9.2 15.2 0.0 17.2 100.0 1,684
Compl. higher secondary+ 79.2 54.1 5.8 32.7 0.1 13.6 2.0 0.0 25.1 12.3 12.8 0.0 20.8 100.0 919
Total 78.5 56.7 6.3 37.7 0.4 5.8 5.9 0.5 21.8 7.5 14.3 0.1 21.5 100.0 5,338
Fertility Regulation | 41
Figure 4.2 Current Use of Any Contraceptive Method Among
Currently Married Women Age 15-49, by Background
Characteristics
RESIDENCE
Urban 79
Rural 78
PROJECT PROVINCE
No 79
Yes 78
REGION
Northern Uplands 78
Red River Delta 83
North Central 80
Central Coast 77
Central Highlands 66
Southeast 76
Mekong River Delta 77
EDUCATION
No education 66
Some primary 76
Completed primary 78
Compl. lower secondary 83
Compl. higher secondary+ 79
0 20 40 60 80 100
Percent
Vietnam 2002
A strong positive relationship exists between education and current use of contraception. Signifi-
cant differences in family planning are observed between women who never attended school and women
who did attend school, even if they did not complete the primary level. Overall, the percentage of cur-
rently married women currently using contraception varies from 66 percent among women with no educa-
tion to 83 percent among women who completed lower secondary school. It falls back slightly among
women who have completed at least higher secondary school (79 percent). While contraceptive use has
increased since 1997 for all education categories except the highest, the increase is the largest for women
with no education. In 1997, only 53 percent of married women with no education were using contracep-
tion; in 2002, the rate was 66 percent.
The pattern of contraceptive use by number of living children is as expected. Prevalence is very
low among women who have no children (7 percent), peaks among women with two children (89 per-
cent), and declines slightly among women with three or more children.
In order to investigate when during the family building process couples initiate contraceptive use,
the VNDHS 2002 included a question about the number of living children a woman had when she first
used a method. Table 4.5 shows the percent distribution of ever-married women by the number of living
children at the time of first use. Overall, almost half (46 percent) of women first used contraception be-
fore having their second child and 70 percent first used before having their third child.
The data in Table 4.5 can be used to investigate changes between age cohorts in the stage of the
family building process at which contraception is first used. Such an analysis indicates that younger Viet-
namese women began using contraception earlier than older women. For example, 61 percent of women
age 20-24 first used contraception before having the second child, compared to only 43 percent of women
age 35-39 and 24 percent of women age 45-49.
42 | Fertility Regulation
Table 4.5 Number of children at first use of contraception
The trend toward earlier use of contraception in the family building process can also be seen by
comparing data from the VNDHS 1997 and the VNDHS 2002. For example, focusing on the youngest
age cohorts—ever-married women age 15-19 and 20-24—the percentages reporting first use of contracep-
tion before their second child are higher in 2002 (31 and 61 percent, respectively) than in 1997 (21 and 49
percent, respectively).
4.5 KNOWLEDGE OF THE FERTILE PERIOD Table 4.6 Knowledge of fertile period
There has been an enormous improvement in knowledge of the ovulatory cycle. In 1997, only 28
percent of ever-married women and 60 percent of periodic abstinence users could correctly identify the
fertile period.
Fertility Regulation | 43
4.6 AGE AT STERILIZATION
Information about the age at which women are sterilized is shown in Table 4.7. Of the 317 steril-
ized women, 28 percent were sterilized before age 30, while 37 percent were sterilized in their early 30s.
Overall, the median age at sterilization was 32 years. There is no discernable time trend in the median
age at sterilization. There has also been no change in the median age at sterilization since 1997.
Percent distribution of currently married sterilized women by age at the time of sterilization, according to the number of
years since the operation, Vietnam 2002
Total 4.3 23.6 37.1 26.1 8.1 0.8 100.0 317 32.4
In order to evaluate the relative importance of various sources of contraceptive methods, current
users of modern methods were asked to report the place from which they last obtained their method. Ta-
ble 4.8 shows results for all modern methods combined and for specific methods.
Table 4.8 and Figure 4.3 indicate the dominance of the public sector in providing contraceptive
services in Vietnam. Eighty-six percent of current users last obtained their method from the public sector,
compared to 14 percent who obtained their methods from the private sector. By far the single most impor-
tant source of contraception is the commune health center (45 percent), followed by government hospitals
(22 percent) and mobile clinics (9 percent). In total, these three sources were the source of supply for 76
percent of current users.
For specific methods, the most important sources of supply differ. Women using the IUD ob-
tained their supplies primarily from commune health centers, although government hospitals are also an
important source for the IUD. Pills are almost equally obtained from public fieldworkers, pharmacies, and
commune health centers. Sterilization services are almost always provided by government hospitals for
women and by government hospitals and mobile clinics for men. For condom users, the leading source of
supply is the pharmacy, followed by commune health centers and fieldworkers. There has been a shift
since 1997 in source of supply from the public sector to the private sector. A majority of condom users
now obtain their method from pharmacies.
Since 1997, there has also been a shift in the source of supply for pill users, away from reliance
on commune health centers towards greater use of fieldworkers.
44 | Fertility Regulation
Table 4.8 Source of supply
Percent distribution of currently married women who currently use a modern contraceptive method by most recent source of
supply, according to specific method, Vietnam 2002
Method
Female Male
Source of current method Pill IUD Condom sterilization sterilization Total
Public 65.1 93.9 40.4 99.8 (100.0) 85.7
Government hospital 1.2 18.6 1.1 81.1 (55.7) 21.7
Delivery house 0.0 0.5 0.2 0.0 (0.0) 0.3
Commune health center 28.3 58.5 18.0 2.6 (2.4) 44.7
Family planning clinic 0.4 3.9 1.0 4.9 (4.3) 3.3
Mobile clinic 0.0 11.3 1.8 11.0 (37.6) 9.1
Public fieldworker 33.1 0.2 16.1 0.0 (0.0) 5.5
Other public 2.0 1.0 2.3 0.2 (0.0) 1.1
Note: Total includes 21 users of injection. Figures in parentheses are based on 25-49 unweighted cases.
Mobile clinic 9%
Private doctor 2%
Vietnam 2002
Fertility Regulation | 45
4.8 CONTRACEPTIVE DISCONTINUATION
Two important issues for family planning programs are the rate at which women discontinue use
of contraception and their reasons for discontinuation. Life table discontinuation rates calculated from
information collected in the five-year, month-by-month calendar in the VNDHS 2002 questionnaires are
presented in Table 4.9. All episodes of contraceptive use between January 1997 and the date of the inter-
view were recorded in the calendar, along with the main reason for discontinuation of use during this pe-
riod.
The discontinuation rates presented here are based on all segments of use that started between 3
and 62 months before the interview date for each woman. A segment is an uninterrupted period of use of
a particular contraceptive method. The month of interview and the two preceding months are excluded
from the analysis in order to avoid the bias likely to be introduced by unrecognized pregnancy.
The rates presented in Table 4.9 are cumulative one-year discontinuation rates and represent the
proportion of users who discontinue within 12 months of starting use. In calculating rates, the reasons for
discontinuation are treated as competing risks (net rates). The reasons are classified into four mutually
exclusive and exhaustive categories: method failure (pregnancy), desire to become pregnant, side ef-
fects/health reasons, and all other reasons.
Note: Table is based on episodes of contraceptive use that began 3-59 months prior to the
survey.
1
Includes missing reasons
Discontinuation rates are relatively low in Vietnam, although they have been increasing. The data
in Table 4.9 shows that one-fourth of all users stop using within 12 months of starting use. Not surpris-
ingly, discontinuation rates for the condom (38 percent), the pill (36 percent), periodic abstinence (32 per-
cent), and withdrawal (30 percent) are higher than the rate for the IUD (13 percent).
For all methods combined, the reasons for discontinuation during the first year of use were
method failure (8 percent); desire to become pregnant (4 percent); side effects or health concerns (5 per-
cent); and other reasons (8 percent). However, the relative ranking of reasons for discontinuation varies
by method. Women who discontinued use of periodic abstinence and withdrawal most frequently reported
method failure. IUD and pill users most frequently cited side effects or health concerns as the reason for
discontinuing use. Those who discontinue condom use are likely to cite a desire to get pregnant and
method failure.
46 | Fertility Regulation
Compared with data from the VNDHS 1997, discontinuation rates have increased. Overall, dis-
continuation in the first year of use has risen from 18 to 25 percent of users. Rates have increased for all
five of the major methods used in Vietnam.
Further information on the reasons for discontinuation is presented in Table 4.10 and Figure 4.4.
The table shows the percent distribution of all discontinuations in the five years preceding the survey, re-
gardless of whether they occurred during or after the first 12 months of use. For all methods combined,
the most common reasons for discontinuation are desire to become pregnant (26 percent) and method
failure (25 percent). Side effects (17 percent) and switching to a more effective method (12 percent) also
account for a sizeable proportion of discontinuations.
Reasons for discontinuation vary by individual method. For pill and IUD users, side effects are
the most frequently reported reasons, followed by the desire to become pregnant. For periodic abstinence
and withdrawal users, method failure is the most commonly reported reason, followed by switching to a
more effective method and the desire to become pregnant. For condom users, the desire to get pregnant,
failure of the method, and inconvenience of the method are the most common reasons for discontinuation.
Percent distribution of discontinuations of contraceptive methods in the five years preceding the survey
among currently married women by main reason for discontinuation, according to specific method, Viet-
nam 2002
Contraceptive method
Periodic With-
Reason for discontinuation Pill IUD Condom abstinence drawal Total
Became pregnant 15.5 9.9 21.0 43.2 44.2 25.3
To become pregnant 22.1 32.2 32.0 21.6 20.0 26.0
Husband disapproved 0.4 0.1 4.5 1.7 2.6 1.5
Side effects 26.4 37.1 5.2 0.3 0.0 17.4
Health concerns 8.5 7.1 0.2 0.2 0.4 3.8
Access/availability 0.8 0.0 1.0 0.0 0.0 0.2
More effective method 5.7 1.7 10.9 24.2 24.3 12.2
Inconvenient to use 7.0 0.4 14.9 1.0 1.6 3.4
Infrequent sex 5.6 1.5 3.9 1.3 2.7 2.6
Cost 0.0 0.0 2.5 0.0 0.0 0.3
Menopause 1.3 3.6 1.6 2.7 2.9 2.9
Other 6.7 6.2 2.4 3.9 1.1 4.2
Note: Total includes discontinuations of injection (14), vaginal methods (2), and other methods (2).
Fertility Regulation | 47
Figure 4.4 Reasons for Discontinuing Use of
Family Planning Methods
Desire to become
pregnant 26% Became pregnant 25%
Health concerns 4%
Other 15%
Vietnam 2002
To obtain information about future use of contraception, currently married women who were not
using contraception at the time of the survey were asked about their interest in using family planning
methods in the future. Table 4.11 presents the distribution of currently married nonusers by their intention
to use in the future, according to the number of living children.
Percent distribution of currently married women who are not using a contraceptive method by inten-
tion to use in the future, according to number of living children, Vietnam 2002
48 | Fertility Regulation
Fifty-nine percent of currently married nonusers say that they intend to use family planning in the
future: 45 percent within the next 12 months, 13 percent some time after 12 months, and 1 percent unsure
about timing. Three percent of nonusers indicate they are unsure about using contraception at all in the
future and 37 percent indicate that do not intend to use in the future.
Among nonusers, the timing of intended use varies with the number of living children. Nonusers
with no children are much less likely than nonusers with children to express an intention to use within the
next 12 months.
Preferred Methods
Method preferences among women not using contraception at the time of the survey but who in-
tend to use in the future are shown in Figure 4.5. The chart indicates that the vast majority of women who
intend to use prefer modern methods (84 percent). Given the high level of IUD use in Vietnam, it is not
surprising that 60 percent of nonusers who intend to use in the future report the IUD as their preferred
method. Fourteen percent say they prefer to use the pill, while another 14 percent prefer traditional meth-
ods, withdrawal and periodic abstinence.
Fertility Regulation | 49
Figure 4.5 Preferred Method Among Nonusers Who Intend to
Use in the Future
IUD 60%
Condom
9%
Pill
14% Periodic abstinence
Other Withdrawal 4%
3% 10%
Vietnam 2002
Activities to inform and educate couples about the use of contraception are an important compo-
nent of the Vietnamese family planning program. The VNDHS 2002 obtained information on a number of
aspects of women's exposure to family planning information. Table 4.13 shows the percentage of ever-
married women who had heard a message about family planning on radio or television during the last few
months prior to the interview.
At the national level, the effort to spread family planning information through radio and televi-
sion has succeeded in reaching almost nine in ten ever-married women (88 percent). Table 4.13 also in-
dicates that the majority of ever-married women have been exposed to messages on both radio and televi-
sion (66 percent).
There are some differences in the level of exposure to family planning messages by age. Younger
women (under 25) are less likely to have been exposed to broadcast media than older women. Three in
ten ever-married women age 15-19 and two in ten women age 20-24 reported that they had neither heard
a family planning message on the radio nor seen one on television in the few months prior to the inter-
view, while among women age 25 and older only 9 to 13 percent reported no exposure to messages
through the broadcast media.
Urban women are slightly more likely than rural women to have been exposed to family planning
messages, especially those on television. There are only very slight differences in exposure to family
planning messages between women in project provinces and nonproject provinces.
Among regions, the proportion of ever-married women who have been exposed to a family plan-
ning message during the months before the interview varied from a high of 98 percent in the Red River
Delta, 81 percent in the Mekong River Delta and 79 percent in the Central Highlands.
50 | Fertility Regulation
Exposure to family planning messages is strongly correlated with educational attainment. Only 68
percent of women with no education reported hearing a family planning message on radio or television,
compared with 96 percent of women with completed higher secondary education. Except for women in
Northern Uplands and women without schooling, all women are more likely to see family planning mes-
sages on television than to hear them on the radio.
Percent distribution of ever-married women by whether they had heard a radio or television message
about family planning in the few months preceding the interview, according to background characteris-
tics, Vietnam 2002
Residence
Urban 68.1 1.1 21.6 9.2 100.0 1,081
Rural 65.2 6.4 16.0 12.4 100.0 4,584
Project province
No 64.8 5.3 17.8 12.1 100.0 3,814
Yes 67.7 5.6 15.5 11.2 100.0 1,851
Region
Northern Uplands 64.9 14.2 11.4 9.6 100.0 1,099
Red River Delta 82.7 2.7 12.4 2.2 100.0 1,363
North Central 67.2 6.7 13.6 12.5 100.0 722
Central Coast 55.4 2.0 28.0 14.7 100.0 594
Central Highlands 46.8 3.2 29.2 20.8 100.0 183
Southeast 60.9 1.7 19.9 17.4 100.0 648
Mekong River Delta 55.7 3.5 21.4 19.4 100.0 1,056
Education
No education 26.4 24.1 17.9 31.6 100.0 364
Some primary 49.2 7.7 20.6 22.5 100.0 966
Complete primary 66.0 4.6 17.7 11.7 100.0 1,599
Compl. lower secondary 75.4 3.2 15.2 6.2 100.0 1,783
Compl. higher secondary+ 79.0 1.3 15.7 4.0 100.0 953
Women were also asked whether or not they considered it acceptable for family planning infor-
mation to be provided on radio or television. Table 4.14 indicates that 93 percent of women consider such
messages to be acceptable. Ambivalence (“unsure”) regarding the acceptability of broadcasting family
planning messages on radio and television is more common among younger women, women in the Me-
kong River Delta, and Southeast regions, and women with little or no education. More than one-fourth of
uneducated women were not sure about using electronic mass media to broadcast messages about family
planning.
Fertility Regulation | 51
Table 4.14 Acceptability of family planning messages in the media
Percentage of ever-married women who believe that it is acceptable to have messages about
family planning (FP) on the radio or television, by background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Acceptability of FP messages
in the media
Not Number
Background characteristic acceptable Acceptable Unsure Total of women
Age
15-19 0.0 82.5 17.5 100.0 69
20-24 0.4 91.7 7.9 100.0 552
25-29 0.8 93.1 6.1 100.0 1,000
30-34 0.8 93.5 5.7 100.0 1,105
35-39 0.2 95.6 4.2 100.0 1,098
40-44 0.6 93.7 5.7 100.0 1,046
45-49 1.1 90.1 8.8 100.0 795
Residence
Urban 1.1 94.5 4.3 100.0 1,081
Rural 0.5 92.8 6.7 100.0 4,584
Project province
No 0.5 92.6 6.9 100.0 3,814
Yes 0.8 94.1 5.1 100.0 1,851
Region
Northern Uplands 0.3 93.0 6.7 100.0 1,099
Red River Delta 0.4 99.0 0.6 100.0 1,363
North Central 0.7 96.0 3.3 100.0 722
Central Coast 0.3 94.9 4.7 100.0 594
Central Highlands 1.3 90.9 7.8 100.0 183
Southeast 1.1 89.7 9.3 100.0 648
Mekong River Delta 1.0 85.1 13.9 100.0 1,056
Education
No education 1.0 71.4 27.5 100.0 364
Some primary 0.6 86.5 12.9 100.0 966
Complete primary 0.6 94.4 4.9 100.0 1,599
Compl. lower secondary 0.5 97.1 2.4 100.0 1,783
Compl. higher secondary+ 0.7 98.5 0.9 100.0 953
Women were also asked if they had read about family planning in a newspaper, magazine, poster,
or leaflet during the last few months before the interview. Responses to these questions are presented in
Table 4.15.
Far fewer women receive information about family planning through the print media than through
the electronic media. Overall, 59 percent of women said that they had read about family planning: 31 per-
cent through newspapers or magazines, 48 percent through posters, and 22 percent through leaflets or
brochures. As expected, women in rural areas are less likely to have read messages on family planning
than urban women (54 and 78 percent, respectively). Women in Red River Delta and Southeast regions,
as well as better educated women, are more likely to have received a family planning message through the
printed media.
52 | Fertility Regulation
Table 4.15 Family planning messages in print media
Percentage of ever-married women who saw a message about family planning in the print media in the
few months preceding the interview, by background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Residence
Urban 78.2 57.6 65.0 27.8 1,081
Rural 54.1 24.2 44.5 20.9 4,584
Project province
No 58.3 31.2 47.8 21.2 3,814
Yes 59.5 29.2 49.7 24.5 1,851
Region
Northern Uplands 50.6 23.6 40.6 22.9 1,099
Red River Delta 78.1 43.8 64.7 37.2 1,363
North Central 54.1 23.6 43.7 24.9 722
Central Coast 52.2 31.3 41.4 16.1 594
Central Highlands 49.4 27.8 41.7 6.6 183
Southeast 67.3 47.7 54.6 16.5 648
Mekong River Delta 45.0 14.9 40.1 10.2 1,056
Education
No education 23.0 1.3 22.2 3.4 364
Some primary 35.2 11.7 30.4 7.6 966
Complete primary 52.2 22.1 42.5 18.5 1,599
Compl. lower secondary 69.0 33.2 56.0 29.0 1,783
Compl. higher secondary+ 87.5 70.0 72.2 38.0 953
There has been a substantial increase in reported exposure to family planning messages in the
print media since 1997. The proportion of women who say they have read a message in the few months
prior to the survey increased from 37 percent in 1997 to 59 percent in 2002.
Visits by family planning fieldworkers from the Vietnamese Family Planning Program to nonus-
ers are an important outreach activity. Additionally, when women visit health facilities, the staff there
should inform them about the benefits of family planning and the methods available through the Viet-
namese program. Failure to do so represents a missed opportunity to provide services to potential users of
contraception.
Overall, 15 percent of nonusers reported being visited by a family planning fieldworker in the last
12 months (Table 4.16). Another 19 percent were not visited by a fieldworker but reported visiting a
health facility where they were told about the benefits of family planning. However, two-thirds of nonus-
Fertility Regulation | 53
ers have neither received a visit from a fieldworker nor been informed about family planning by health
facility staff in the last year (66 percent).
The data indicate that there is a large pool of nonusers who have not been recently contacted by
either family planning fieldworkers or health facility staff. Moreover, most of these women did not visit a
health facility during the past year, so the primary means of reaching them is through outreach efforts by
family planning fieldworkers. However, those workers have contacted only one in seven nonusers in the
past year. If the nonusers who are not being contacted are primarily women who do not want or need con-
traception (e.g., young women trying to become pregnant or older menopausal women), the failure of
fieldworkers to contact nonusers might be understandable, but that does not appear to be the case. In all
age groups, less than 20 percent of nonusers were visited by a family planning fieldworker. The data
suggest a need for greater effort by the outreach component of the family planning program.
Percent distribution of currently married nonusers by whether they were visited by a family planning (FP) worker or spoke with a health facility
staff member about family planning methods during the 12 months preceding the interview, according to background characteristics, Vietnam
2002
Residence
Urban 5.2 2.0 4.3 13.4 41.9 33.4 75.2 100.0 210
Rural 9.7 3.6 2.9 20.4 31.5 31.8 63.3 100.0 936
Project province
No 8.6 3.0 2.7 19.3 32.2 34.1 66.3 100.0 753
Yes 9.5 3.9 3.9 18.7 35.8 28.2 64.0 100.0 394
Region
Northern Uplands 5.9 4.8 2.0 26.9 26.9 33.5 60.4 100.0 226
Red River Delta 17.4 4.9 1.3 25.0 36.2 15.2 51.4 100.0 225
North Central 6.7 0.9 2.3 23.9 33.3 32.5 65.8 100.0 137
Central Coast 13.2 0.5 5.3 12.3 29.4 39.3 68.7 100.0 125
Central Highlands 15.8 4.2 8.4 25.3 23.5 22.7 46.2 100.0 58
Southeast 4.0 3.6 1.0 14.1 37.5 39.8 77.3 100.0 145
Mekong River Delta 3.9 2.8 5.4 8.1 39.2 40.5 79.8 100.0 231
Education
No education 9.3 3.7 2.8 18.6 24.0 41.6 65.6 100.0 118
Some primary 5.6 4.7 3.6 9.4 31.7 45.0 76.7 100.0 212
Complete primary 8.5 3.6 3.1 22.0 33.9 28.7 62.6 100.0 337
Compl. lower secondary 13.4 3.4 3.4 21.9 31.9 26.1 58.0 100.0 289
Compl. higher secondary+ 6.1 1.0 2.6 20.7 42.6 27.1 69.7 100.0 191
Total 8.9 3.3 3.1 19.1 33.4 32.1 65.5 100.0 1,146
54 | Fertility Regulation
4.12 DISCUSSION OF FAMILY PLANNING WITH HUSBAND
All currently married women who knew a method of contraception and who were not sterilized
were asked how often they talked with their husband about family planning in the past year. These
women were also asked whether they approved or disapproved of the use of family planning and their
perception about their husband’s attitude toward family planning.
Table 4.17 indicates that 77 percent of currently married women reported discussing family plan-
ning with their husbands—36 percent on one or two occasions and 41 percent more frequently. Only one
woman in four (23 percent) said she had not discussed the topic with her husband in the previous year.
Two age groups of women were less likely to have discussed family planning with their husband than
other women: the youngest and the oldest age groups (women age 15-19 and 45-49).
Percent distribution of currently married non-sterilized women who know a contraceptive method by
the number of times they discussed family planning with their husbands in the past year, according to
current age, Vietnam 2002
A positive attitude toward family planning is one of the prerequisites for the successful use of
contraception. Data on respondents’ attitudes and their perceptions of their husband’s attitude toward
family planning are shown in Table 4.18. Overall, the data indicate a high degree of approval of family
planning among Vietnamese couples. According to women, in 92 percent of couples both the wife and her
husband approve of family planning. In only 3 percent of couples do either one partner or both partners
disapprove of family planning.
Because of the high level of approval of family planning by both husbands and wives, there is lit-
tle room for variation by respondents’ background characteristics. Nevertheless, it is worth noting that
there is a positive correlation between respondent’s education and approval of family planning by both
spouses. Joint approval was reported by 79 percent of women with no education and by 96 percent of
women who had completed higher secondary school.
Fertility Regulation | 55
Table 4.18 Attitudes of couples toward family planning
Percent distribution of currently married, nonsterilized women who know a method of family planning (FP) by approval of family planning and their
perception of their husband’s attitude toward family planning,, according to background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Respondent Respondent
approves of disapproves of Percentage Percentage
family planning family planning of respon- of hus-
Husband Husband’s Husband’s Both Respon- dents who bands who Number
Both dis- attitude Husband attitude disap- dent approve approve of
Background characteristic approve approves unknown approves unknown prove unsure Missing Total of FP of FP women
Age
15-19 83.9 0.0 3.5 0.0 0.9 1.0 10.7 0.0 100.0 87.4 86.0 63
20-24 89.5 0.5 5.0 0.0 0.3 0.1 4.5 0.0 100.0 95.0 90.5 530
25-29 93.1 0.5 1.7 0.5 1.5 0.1 2.7 0.0 100.0 95.3 94.1 965
30-34 93.2 0.6 1.8 0.4 1.3 0.3 2.2 0.1 100.0 95.7 94.1 1,022
35-39 93.5 0.4 1.5 0.5 1.5 0.1 2.3 0.1 100.0 95.5 94.9 936
40-44 92.0 1.0 1.9 0.5 1.0 0.6 2.9 0.2 100.0 95.1 92.6 858
45-49 87.8 0.8 3.7 1.5 1.2 0.6 4.5 0.0 100.0 92.3 90.1 601
Residence
Urban 91.8 0.8 2.2 0.6 1.6 0.1 2.8 0.0 100.0 94.8 93.1 954
Rural 91.9 0.6 2.3 0.5 1.1 0.3 3.1 0.1 100.0 94.9 93.0 4,021
Project province
No 91.8 0.6 2.3 0.4 1.2 0.3 3.3 0.1 100.0 94.8 93.0 3,369
Yes 91.9 0.7 2.4 0.7 1.2 0.3 2.7 0.0 100.0 95.1 93.1 1,607
Region
Northern Uplands 96.3 0.1 1.5 0.1 0.1 0.1 1.8 0.0 100.0 97.9 96.7 1,012
Red River Delta 98.5 0.2 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.7 0.0 100.0 99.0 98.7 1,237
North Central 92.9 0.4 0.8 0.8 1.8 0.4 2.9 0.1 100.0 94.2 94.3 623
Central Coast 89.6 0.8 0.3 0.6 6.1 0.1 2.5 0.0 100.0 90.7 90.5 501
Central Highlands 84.3 1.1 2.2 2.1 7.5 1.0 1.9 0.0 100.0 87.5 86.3 147
Southeast 88.0 0.6 4.5 0.8 0.7 0.6 4.3 0.5 100.0 93.5 89.4 543
Mekong River Delta 82.0 1.9 6.8 0.8 0.2 0.7 7.5 0.1 100.0 90.7 85.1 913
Education
No education 79.0 0.2 5.3 1.3 0.4 1.7 12.1 0.0 100.0 84.5 81.6 302
Some primary 84.8 1.1 5.4 1.0 1.6 0.4 5.4 0.3 100.0 91.5 87.3 804
Completed primary 93.0 0.6 2.2 0.4 0.9 0.3 2.6 0.0 100.0 95.8 93.8 1,391
Compl. lower secondary 94.8 0.6 1.1 0.4 1.2 0.1 1.7 0.1 100.0 96.5 95.6 1,577
Compl. higher secondary+ 95.7 0.4 0.9 0.3 1.6 0.1 1.0 0.0 100.0 97.0 96.3 901
Total 91.9 0.6 2.3 0.5 1.2 0.3 3.1 0.1 100.0 94.9 93.0 4,975
56 | Fertility Regulation
Information on pregnancy termination was collected in the reproductive section of the VNDHS
2002 questionnaire.1 A word of caution is in order concerning the completeness of the data. International
experience with the collection of data on deliberate pregnancy termination in household surveys is poor.
Seriously defective data is virtually guaranteed for countries where pregnancy termination is illegal or
where social stigma is attached to its use. While the practice of terminating unwanted pregnancies is legal
and widely practiced in Vietnam, a comparison of data from surveys and the Ministry of Health indicates
that there can be serious underreporting in surveys (GSO, 1996b and NCPFP and GTZ, 1995). Neverthe-
less, data from the VNDHS 2002 indicate that 22 percent of pregnancies in the three years prior to the
survey were intentionally terminated either through menstrual regulation (17 percent) or induced abortion
(5 percent) (data not shown).
Table 4.19 shows age-specific induced abortion rates for the five-year period preceding the sur-
vey. The age-specific rates are all-woman rates and, as was the case with fertility rates, are derived by
inflating the respondents to the women questionnaire (ever-married women) by a factor that compensates
for never-married women. Overall, the data indicate that a Vietnamese woman will have an average of 0.6
induced abortions during her reproductive years. The total abortion rate for rural women (0.7) is higher
than that of urban women (0.5). The rate is also slightly higher among women who live in the provinces
that fall in the NCPFP project (0.7 versus 0.6).
Age-specific induced abortion rates and total abortion rates for all women for the five-year
period preceding the survey, Vietnam 2002
1
Survey eligibility was limited to ever-married women. The omission of never-married women from the survey is
not a serious concern for the calculation of fertility rates because relatively few births occur among never-married
women. However, this is not the case when calculating abortion rates where it is estimated that about 10 percent of
pregnancy terminations occur among never-married women.
Fertility Regulation | 57
Table 4.20 presents abortion rates for the five-year period preceding the survey by background
characteristics. These are total abortion rates (TAR) and are based on reporting of both menstrual regula-
tion and abortion. The TAR is interpreted as the number of pregnancy terminations a woman would have
in her lifetime at the observed age-specific rates.2 Table 4.20 also shows the mean number of abortions
per woman age 40-49.
Abortion rates
Mean number
Total of abortions
induced among
Background characteristic abortion rate1 women 40-49
Residence
Urban 0.49 0.50
Rural 0.65 0.39
Project province
No 0.56 0.39
Yes 0.73 0.46
Region
Northern Uplands 1.35 0.66
Red River Delta 0.84 0.63
North Central 0.52 0.33
Central Coast 0.09 0.07
Central Highlands 0.27 0.31
Southeast 0.31 0.23
Mekong River Delta 0.27 0.25
Education
No education 0.63 0.14
Some primary 0.52 0.25
Complete primary 0.58 0.35
Compl. lower secondary 0.72 0.54
Compl. higher secondary+ 0.59 0.57
Similar to the VNDHS 1997, the data show that abortion is reportedly higher among rural
women, women who live in the project provinces, and women who live in the Northern Uplands. Unlike
the 1997 survey, the VNDHS 2002 does not show a clear relationship between the TAR and education of
women; however, the mean number of abortions per woman 40-49 does increase with education.
Additional questions were included in the VNDHS 2002 for pregnancy terminations occurring in
the three years immediately preceding the survey. These questions concerned the desired status of the
pregnancy at the time of conception, whether contraception was used at that time, whether there were any
health problems following the termination and, if so, whether in-patient medical treatment was required.
2
Total abortion rates are analogous to total fertility rates and are calculated from age-specific rates of pregnancy
termination in the same manner as total fertility rates are calculated from age-specific rates.
58 | Fertility Regulation
Table 4.21 indicates that almost two-thirds (64 percent) of pregnancy terminations occurred
among women who were using contraception at the time of becoming pregnant. The percentage is higher
for terminations by menstrual regulation (67 percent) than by abortion (54 percent).
Type of termination
Menstrual Induced
Method of contraception regulation abortion Total
No contraceptive method 32.7 46.5 35.6
Any contraceptive method 67.3 53.5 64.4
Any modern method 13.7 20.7 15.2
Pill 4.0 4.7 4.1
IUD 6.5 10.3 7.3
Injections 0.2 0.0 0.2
Condom 3.0 5.7 3.6
Traditional method 53.5 32.7 49.1
Periodic abstinence 19.7 10.8 17.8
Withdrawal 33.9 22.0 31.4
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0
Number of women 327 88 415
Half of all pregnancy terminations occurred among women using traditional methods, especially
withdrawal (31 percent). This is disconcerting, given the fact that withdrawal is one of the few methods
whose use has increased since 1997. Greater diligence in the use of withdrawal and periodic abstinence,
or the use of more reliable methods of contraception, would reduce the need for pregnancy termination.
Table 4.22 indicates that about half of women reported having a health problem following a preg-
nancy termination. Of these women, 69 percent sought medical advice or treatment. As expected, fewer
complications were associated with menstrual regulation than with abortion, although differences are
small.
Table 4.22 Health problems and treatment seeking following pregnancy ter-
mination
Fertility Regulation | 59
PROXIMATE DETERMINANTS OF FERTILITY 5
As in many countries of the world, marriage in Vietnam indicates the start of women’s exposure
to the risk of childbearing; postpartum amenorrhea and sexual abstinence affect the intervals between
births; and the onset of menopause marks the end of women’s reproductive years. These factors are im-
portant for understanding fertility, since they determine the length and pace of reproductive activity. This
chapter presents discussions on these proximate determinants of fertility.
Table 5.1 presents the distribution of all women age 15-49 by marital status. The data indicate
that 32 percent of women of reproductive age have never been married, 64 percent are currently married,
2 percent are widowed, and over 2 percent are either divorced or separated (not living together). Com-
pared to 1997, there has been a very slight increase in the overall proportion of women who are currently
married, from 63 to 64 percent. Since in Vietnam births are largely confined to married couples, this
would imply that changes in marriage are not the factors in explaining the steep decline in fertility over
the recent past. Nevertheless, although the overall proportion of women who are currently married has
increased very slightly between the two surveys, the proportion of women age 15-24 who are currently
married has declined. For example, 52 percent of women age 20-24 were married in 1997, compared with
46 percent in 2002. Since the age-specific fertility rates are highest at ages 20-24 (see Table 3.1), reduc-
tions in the proportions of women married in that age group would be expected to have a larger effect on
the overall level of fertility. Changes in the proportion of women who have never married are shown in
Table 5.2 by age group for several recent surveys.
Percent distribution of women by current marital status, according to age, Vietnam 2002
In Vietnam, marriage generally indicates the earliest point at which a woman begins her child-
bearing. Early age at marriage often results in early age at childbearing and high fertility since women
who marry early will have, on average, longer exposure to the risk of pregnancy. In the VNDHS 2002,
information on age at marriage was obtained by asking women the month and year (or age, if year was
not known) when they started living together with their husband (or first husband, in the case of women
who married more than once).
Table 5.3 presents the percentage of women who were first married by exact ages and the median
age at first marriage for different age groups. The latter indicates the exact age by which half of an entire
cohort has married. Unlike the pattern observed in many countries, the median age at first marriage in
Vietnam has not increased over the last 25 years. Instead, the median age has been stable at about 21
years for age cohorts 25-29 through 45-49.
Percentage of women who were first married by specific exact ages and median age at first marriage, by cur-
rent age, Vietnam 2002
Median
First married by exact age Number age at
Never of first
Age 15 18 20 22 25 married women marriage
15-19 0.3 na na na na 95.8 1,630 a
20-24 0.7 11.1 27.6 na na 52.2 1,155 a
25-29 1.6 17.1 40.2 56.3 73.8 18.1 1,221 21.1
30-34 0.9 12.1 44.1 67.1 84.1 7.7 1,197 20.5
35-39 1.0 14.6 37.8 57.0 79.3 5.5 1,162 21.3
40-44 0.7 12.2 32.9 55.7 76.4 7.2 1,128 21.4
45-49 1.2 11.6 32.6 54.9 76.7 5.1 838 21.5
Median for women 20-49 1.0 13.2 36.1 55.6 72.9 16.5 6,700 a
Median for women 25-49 1.1 13.7 37.9 58.4 78.1 9.0 5,545 21.1
na = Not applicable
a = Omitted because less than 50 percent of the women were married for the first time before reaching the
age group
There is a close association between level of education and age at first marriage. The lowest me-
dian age at marriage is found for women with no education (19.3 years), followed by women with some
primary (19.9 years) and women with primary level completed (20.6 years). Women who have completed
higher secondary education have the highest median age at first marriage (23.4 years).
RESIDENCE
Urban 23.6
Rural 20.6
REGION
Northern Uplands 20.0
Red River Delta 21.5
North Central 20.9
Central Coast 21.6
Central Highlands 21.0
Southeast 22.8
Mekong River Delta 20.9
EDUCATION
No education 19.3
Some primary 19.9
Completed primary 20.6
Compl. lower secondary 21.0
Compl. higher secondary+ 23.4
0.0 5.0 10.0 15.0 20.0 25.0 30.0
Years
Vietnam 2002
The risk of pregnancy is much lower during postpartum amenorrhea—the interval between child-
birth and the return of menstruation. The duration and intensity of breastfeeding (which delays the re-
sumption of menstruation) affects the length of this interval, as does the length of time sexual intercourse
is delayed following a birth. Women who are not exposed to the risk of pregnancy, either because they are
amenorrheic or are still abstaining from sex are considered insusceptible. In the VNDHS 2002, questions
on the duration of postpartum amenorrhea and sexual abstinence were asked of all women who had a
birth since January 1999.
Table 5.4 shows the percentage of births occurring in the 36 months prior to the survey for which
the mother was postpartum amenorrheic, abstaining and insusceptible, by the number of months since the
birth. The results indicate that postpartum amenorrhea is substantially longer than the period of sexual
abstinence and is, therefore, the principle determinant of the length of postpartum insusceptibility to preg-
nancy in Vietnam. The median duration of amenorrhea is almost 8 months, while the median duration of
abstinence is 4 months. The median duration of postpartum insusceptibility to pregnancy is almost 9
months.
Percentage of births in the three years preceding the survey for which mothers are
postpartum amenorrheic, abstaining, and insusceptible, by number of months since
birth, and median and mean durations, Vietnam 2002
Data in Table 5.5 show that postpartum insusceptibility varies only moderately by age of mother.
Insusceptibility is slightly longer for rural than for urban women and for mothers residing in project prov-
inces as opposed to those who do not. Some regional variation is apparent. The longest insusceptibility is
found in the Central Highlands and the shortest in the Northern Uplands. A roughly inverse relationship
between duration of insusceptibility and education is evident from Table 5.5. Mothers with some primary
have a median duration of postpartum insusceptibility of 10 months, in contrast to 6 months for mothers
who have completed higher secondary education. The small number of births occurring at specific peri-
ods prior to the survey for some background characteristics makes it difficult to interpret the medians in
Table 5.5 and caution is advised.
Postpartum
Number
Background characteristic Amenorrheic Abstaining Insusceptible of births
Age
<30 7.4 3.8 8.2 901
30+ 7.9 4.4 9.3 412
Residence
Urban 6.6 4.4 7.5 225
Rural 7.6 3.8 8.8 1,088
Project province
No 6.2 3.7 7.5 881
Yes 8.9 4.4 9.5 432
Region
Northern Uplands 4.3 2.2 6.0 254
Red River Delta 10.5 3.0 10.7 272
North Central 6.2 6.0 7.2 161
Central Coast 10.3 5.6 10.3 196
Central Highlands 10.1 3.9 11.9 65
Southeast 4.7 5.3 6.3 132
Mekong River Delta 6.4 3.8 7.1 234
Education
No education 3.1 3.1 3.6 108
Some primary 9.2 3.8 9.8 188
Completed primary 7.9 4.7 8.6 474
Compl. lower secondary 7.4 3.4 8.6 325
Compl. higher secondary+ 5.6 4.0 6.2 218
Total 7.5 3.9 8.5 1,313
The inclusion of women who are currently pregnant complicates the measurement of views on
future childbearing preferences. For these women, the question on desire for more children was rephrased
to refer to desire for another child after the one that they were expecting. To take into account the way in
which the preference variable is defined for pregnant women, the results have been classified by number
of living children, including current pregnancies. In addition, the question on preferred waiting time
before the next birth was rephrased for pregnant women to make clear that the information wanted is the
preferred waiting time after the birth of the child the respondent was expecting.
Data of women who have been sterilized for contraceptive purposes also require special analytic
treatment. The general strategy in some tables in this chapter is to classify these women as wanting no
more children.
Table 6.1 presents the percent distribution of currently married women by desire for more
children, according to the number of living children. Almost seven in ten currently married women (69
percent) do not want any more children, three percentage points more than in 1997. Another 6 percent
have been sterilized or have husbands who have been sterilized. Among women who express a desire for
another child, the majority want to delay the next birth by two or more years (15 percent); only 6 percent
of currently married women want another child soon (within two years) (see Figure 6.1).
There is a close association between the number of living children and the percentage of women
who want no more children. Desire for additional children decreases as the number of living children
increases. Only 1 percent of women who have not yet begun childbearing reported wanting no children;
this increases to 15 percent among women with one living child and reaches a high of 88 percent among
women with two children, four percentage points more than in 1997. Not surprisingly, the desire to have a
child soon is most prevalent among women who have not yet begun childbearing; 81 percent of women
Fertility Preferences | 67
Table 6.1 Fertility preferences
Percent distribution of currently married women by desire for children, according to number of living
children, Vietnam 2002
Sterilized 6%
Vietnam 2002
68 | Fertility Preferences
with no children want a child soon. Among women with one child, the majority (63 percent) wants to
delay the next birth.
Table 6.2 shows the distribution of currently married women by the desire for more children,
according to current age. The proportion wanting more children decreases sharply with age. While 87
percent of women in the youngest cohort want more children, by age group 30-34, the proportion drops to
only 18 percent. The desire to space births is concentrated among young women (under age 25). Interest
in limiting childbearing increases rapidly with age, from 7 percent among women age 15-19 to 84 percent
among women age 40-44.
Current age1
Desire for more children 15-19 20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 Total
Have another soon2 22.7 8.9 8.2 7.5 4.2 2.6 0.9 5.6
Have another later3 64.4 58.3 31.0 9.9 2.6 0.7 0.0 14.9
Wants, unsure timing 0.0 1.2 1.0 0.9 0.7 0.2 0.1 0.7
Undecided 5.8 4.2 2.8 1.7 1.3 0.3 0.1 1.7
Wants no more 7.1 27.3 56.0 75.4 80.5 84.1 77.5 69.0
Sterilized4 0.0 0.1 0.9 3.7 10.1 11.1 11.8 6.4
Declared infecund 0.0 0.0 0.3 0.9 0.6 1.0 9.6 1.8
The proportion of women who want no more children is an important measure of fertility
preference. Table 6.3 presents the percentage of currently married women who want no more children or
have been sterilized, according to the number of living children. The results indicate that more urban
women want to limit family size at lower parities than rural women, but the differences are not marked.
For example, 94 percent of urban women with two children say they do not want another child, compared
with 91 percent of rural women. Women who live in project provinces are somewhat more likely than
women in nonproject provinces to want no more children (78 versus 74 percent).
The proportion of married women who want no more children in Northern Vietnam—the
Northern Uplands, Red River Delta, and North Central regions—ranges from 79 to 81 percent, compared
with less than 73 percent among women living in the remaining four regions.
The absence of a definite association between level of education and the proportion wanting no
more children among all currently married women is at least partially a result of the concentration of
more educated women at lower parities, where women are more likely to express a desire for more
children. However, among currently married women with two or more children, there is a generally
positive relationship between level of education and the percentage wanting no more children. For
example, among women with two children, 97 percent of those who have completed higher secondary
school want no more children, compared with 85 percent of women with no education. The small sample
sizes in some cells of the table make interpretation difficult.
Fertility Preferences | 69
Table 6.3 Want no more children by background characteristics
Percentage of currently married women who want no more children by number of living children and
background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Project province
No 1.4 14.6 91.1 93.6 94.5 96.4 88.1 74.2
Yes (1.9) 18.1 93.6 94.4 94.8 95.8 96.2 77.9
Region
Northern Uplands * 16.6 93.7 94.4 93.7 95.3 86.6 80.4
Red River Delta (0.0) 17.5 97.9 97.9 96.7 * * 79.2
North Central * 7.8 90.8 94.1 93.3 (92.1) (89.3) 80.6
Central Coast * 4.5 88.1 91.5 94.7 (97.2) (89.5) 72.9
Central Highlands * (10.2) 75.7 (79.6) (95.7) * * 67.2
Southeast (2.8) 21.7 86.1 94.6 93.8 (100.0) * 69.7
Mekong River Delta (2.0) 17.8 87.0 91.2 95.9 98.4 98.6 67.8
Education
No education * 11.6 85.1 88.4 93.4 100.0 91.2 77.7
Some primary * 21.7 87.2 91.9 95.9 95.7 96.8 78.8
Completed primary 1.9 11.1 88.9 92.7 96.2 94.4 95.0 70.9
Compl. lower secondary 3.5 17.9 93.3 96.3 94.1 98.2 * 80.3
Compl. higher secondary+ 0.0 17.1 97.0 94.8 (80.3) * * 69.7
Note: Women who have been sterilized are considered to want no more children. Figures in parentheses
are based on 25-49 unweighted cases. An asterisk indicates that a figure is based on fewer than 25
unweighted cases and has been suppressed.
There has been an increase at all education levels in the number of women who want no more
children. As Figure 6.2 shows, the proportion of currently married women with two children who want no
more children increased substantially between 1997 and 2002 for all levels of education, and substantially
for less educated women.
70 | Fertility Preferences
Figure 6.2 Trend in Proportion of Currently Married Women
with Two Children Who Want No More Children,
by Level of Education
Percent
100 97
94
89 91 93
85 87
78 78
80 75
60
40
20
0
No education Some Completed Completed Completed
primary primary lower higher
secondry secondary+
1997 2002
Vietnam 2002
Information on fertility preferences alone is not sufficient to assess the need for family planning
services. Many women who do not want to have another child or who want to space the next birth are
already using contraception or are not exposed to the risk of pregnancy because they are menopausal or
infecund. It is possible to estimate the extent to which couples’ need for family planning is being met by
examining information about contraceptive practice, desire for additional children, desired timing of the
next child for women who want more children, and indicators of women’s fecund status.
Currently married women who are fecund and who say that they do not want any more children
or that they want to wait two or more years before having another child, but are not using contraception,
are considered to have an unmet need1 for family planning. Current users of family planning methods are
said to have a met need for family planning. The total demand for family planning is the sum of the met
and unmet need plus women whose method failed.
Table 6.4 shows the percentage of currently married women with unmet need and met need for
family planning and the total demand for family planning services by background characteristics. Only 5
percent of currently married women in Vietnam have an unmet need for family planning services.
Combined with the 79 percent of currently married women, who are currently using a contraceptive
method, the total demand for family planning is 84 percent. It is estimated that 94 percent of the total
demand for family planning is being met, though the level is far lower (67 percent) for women age 15-19.
Unmet need is highest among the youngest age group (15-19), and among women in the Central
Highlands. It is lowest among women in the Red River Delta (3 percent) and the Mekong River Delta (4
percent). Except for the Central Highlands (84 percent), all the other six regions have a very high
percentage of demand satisfied (93 to 96 percent).
There is an inverse relationship between level of education and the percentage having an unmet
need for family planning. Unmet need varies from a high of 10 percent among women with no education
to a low of 3 percent among women who have completed higher secondary school.
1
A more complete description of the procedure for calculating unmet need is given in Table 6.4, footnote 1.
Fertility Preferences | 71
Table 6.4 Need for family planning
Percentage of currently married women with unmet need for family planning, and with met need for family planning, and the total
demand for family planning, by background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Met need for
Unmet need for family planning Total demand for Percentage
family planning1 (currently using)2 family planning3 of
–––––––––––––––––––––– ––––––––––––––––––––––– ––––––––––––––––––––– demand Number
Background For For For For For For satis- of
characteristic spacing limiting Total spacing limiting Total spacing limiting Total fied women
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Age
15-19 12.1 1.3 13.4 17.8 5.0 22.8 34.3 6.2 40.6 67.1 67
20-24 7.8 1.6 9.4 41.2 16.5 57.7 50.8 18.2 68.9 86.4 536
25-29 3.6 3.1 6.7 29.8 43.6 73.4 33.8 47.4 81.2 91.8 977
30-34 0.9 4.0 4.8 14.0 69.1 83.1 15.3 74.1 89.4 94.6 1,062
35-39 1.1 2.1 3.2 5.1 85.2 90.2 6.3 87.9 94.2 96.6 1,042
40-44 0.1 2.6 2.7 1.8 87.0 88.8 1.9 89.8 91.8 97.1 966
45-49 0.0 3.4 3.4 0.1 68.1 68.2 0.1 71.5 71.6 95.3 687
Residence
Urban 1.5 2.1 3.6 16.7 62.5 79.1 18.6 64.6 83.3 95.7 1,005
Rural 2.1 3.0 5.1 13.3 65.1 78.4 15.9 68.7 84.6 93.9 4,333
Project province
No 1.9 2.5 4.5 14.7 64.3 79.0 17.0 67.1 84.1 94.7 3,586
Yes 2.1 3.5 5.6 12.4 65.2 77.5 15.0 69.7 84.7 93.4 1,752
Region
Northern Uplands 2.3 3.7 6.0 9.5 69.0 78.4 12.0 73.0 85.0 92.9 1,049
Red River Delta 1.0 2.1 3.1 12.2 70.6 82.8 13.9 73.5 87.4 96.4 1,307
North Central 2.8 3.4 6.2 10.4 69.5 79.8 13.7 73.6 87.3 92.9 677
Central Coast 2.3 2.1 4.4 15.7 61.5 77.2 18.6 64.5 83.1 94.7 547
Central Highlands 4.9 7.4 12.3 18.0 48.3 66.3 23.1 55.7 78.8 84.4 172
Southeast 2.5 2.5 5.0 17.5 58.2 75.7 20.6 60.9 81.5 93.8 598
Mekong River Delta 1.4 2.3 3.7 19.6 57.0 76.7 21.2 59.7 80.9 95.4 989
Education
No education 2.3 7.8 10.1 9.7 55.9 65.7 12.8 64.2 76.9 86.9 343
Some primary 1.3 4.2 5.5 11.5 64.6 76.1 12.8 69.2 82.0 93.3 886
Completed primary 3.1 2.2 5.3 17.6 60.0 77.7 20.9 62.8 83.7 93.6 1,506
Compl. lower secondary 1.5 2.5 3.9 10.9 71.9 82.8 12.9 75.1 88.0 95.5 1,684
Compl. higher secondary+ 1.6 1.5 3.1 17.3 61.9 79.2 20.1 63.5 83.6 96.3 919
Total 2.0 2.8 4.8 13.9 64.6 78.5 16.4 67.9 84.3 94.3 5,338
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
1
Unmet need for spacing includes pregnant women whose pregnancy was mistimed, amenorrheic women who are not using family
planning and whose last birth was mistimed, and fecund women who are neither pregnant nor amenorrheic and who are not using any
method of family planning and say they want to wait two or more years for their next birth. Also included in unmet need for spacing are
fecund women who are not using any method of family planning and say they are unsure whether they want another child or who want
another child but are unsure when to have the birth unless they say it would not be a problem if they discovered they were pregnant in
the next few weeks. Unmet need for limiting refers to pregnant women whose pregnancy was unwanted, amenorrheic women whose
last child was unwanted, and to fecund women who are neither pregnant nor amenorrheic and who are not using any method of family
planning and who want no more children. Excluded from the unmet need category are pregnant and amenorrheic women who became
pregnant while using a method (these women are in need of better contraception).
2
Using for spacing is defined as women who are using some method of family planning and say they want to delay their next child or
are undecided whether to have another. Using for limiting is defined as women who are using and who want no more children.
Note that the specific methods used are not taken into account.
3
Nonusers who are pregnant or amenorrheic and women whose pregnancy was the result of a contraceptive failure are not
included in the category of unmet need, but are included in total demand for contraception (since they would have been using
had their method not failed).
72 | Fertility Preferences
6.3 IDEAL FAMILY SIZE
Another attitudinal dimension of childbearing considered in the survey is the total number of
children a woman would ideally like to have, if it were entirely up to her. In the VNDHS 2002, the ideal
family size (preferred number of children) for women is estimated from responses to two questions.
Women who had no living children were asked: “If you could choose exactly the number of children to
have in your whole life, how many would that be?” For women who had children, the question was
rephrased as follows: “If you could go back to the time you did not have any children and could choose
exactly the number of children to have in your whole life, how many would that be?”
Table 6.5 shows the distribution of ever-married women by ideal family size, according to the
number of living children. In spite of the hypothetical nature of these two questions, all but a tiny fraction
of women were able to give a numeric response.
Household surveys typically find a correlation between actual family size and the ideal number of
children women desire. There are several reasons for this. First, women who desire larger families tend to
achieve larger families. Second, women may adjust their ideal family size upwards, as the actual number
of children increases. It is possible that women with large families, being on average older than women
with small families, have a larger ideal family size, because of attitudes they acquired 20 to 30 years ago.
Despite the likelihood that some rationalization occurs, it is common to find that respondents’ stated ideal
family size is lower than their actual number of living children.
Percent distribution of ever-married women by ideal number of children and mean ideal number of children for
ever married women and currently married women, according to number of living children, Vietnam 2002
1
Includes current pregnancy
2
Means are calculated excluding the women giving non-numeric responses.
Fertility Preferences | 73
Table 6.5 indicates that, on average, the ideal family size for ever-married women is 2.4 children.
This is identical to the mean found in the VNDHS 1997 and a decline of 0.9 children from a mean of 3.3
found in the VNDHS 1988.
Table 6.5 indicates that most women want small families. Three-fourths of ever-married women
(74 percent) prefer the one- or two-child family norm that the government family planning program has
been promoting. Less than one-fourth (24 percent) consider a three- or four-child family ideal. Less than
2 percent of Vietnamese women want five or more children.
As expected, higher parity women show a preference for more children; the mean ideal number of
children among ever-married women increases from 2 among childless women to 2.5 among women with
three children and to 4 among women with six or more living children.
The table also shows that many women already have more children than they would consider
ideal. For example, well over half of women with three children (58 percent) say their ideal family size is
only one or two children. Similarly, 65 percent of women with four children would ideally like fewer than
four.
Table 6.6 presents the mean ideal number of children for ever-married women by age and
selected background characteristics. The mean ideal family size increases directly with age, from 2.2
children among ever-married women age 15-19 to 2.3 children among women age 30-34 and to 2.7
children among women age 45-49.
Mean ideal number of children for ever-married women by age and background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Current age
Background characteristic 15-19 20-24 25-29 30-34 35-39 40-44 45-49 Total
Residence
Urban * 2.0 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.4 2.4 2.2
Rural 2.2 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.6 2.8 2.4
Project province
No 2.2 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.6 2.8 2.4
Yes * 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.3 2.5 2.7 2.3
Region
Northern Uplands * 2.1 2.2 2.2 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.3
Red River Delta * 2.1 2.0 2.0 2.1 2.1 2.3 2.1
North Central * 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.6 2.6 2.6 2.4
Central Coast * 2.2 2.3 2.5 2.5 2.6 3.1 2.5
Central Highlands * * (2.6) (3.1) (2.4) (2.9) (4.1) 2.9
Southeast * 2.0 2.1 2.3 2.5 2.8 2.7 2.4
Mekong River Delta * 2.0 2.2 2.3 2.5 3.0 3.3 2.6
Education
No education * 2.4 2.4 2.9 3.0 3.5 4.2 3.1
Some primary * 2.1 2.3 2.4 2.7 3.0 3.2 2.7
Completed primary (2.2) 2.1 2.2 2.4 2.5 2.7 2.7 2.4
Compl. lower secondary * 2.1 2.1 2.2 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.2
Compl. higher secondary+ * 1.9 2.0 2.1 2.1 2.1 2.3 2.1
Total 2.2 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.6 2.7 2.4
Note: Figures in parentheses are based on 25-49 unweighted cases. An asterisk indicates that a figure is based
on fewer than 25 unweighted cases and has been suppressed.
74 | Fertility Preferences
Other differentials for ideal number of children in Table 6.6 parallel those observed for fertility.
There is little difference by residence, although the mean for rural women is slightly higher than the mean
for urban women. Strong regional variations are apparent. The lowest ideal family size is found in the
Red River Delta where women want only 2.1 children. In contrast, the highest ideal family size is found
in the Central Highlands, where women want to have an average of 2.9 children. Women in the Northern
Uplands want only 2.3 children, the second lowest level in the country.
Educational attainment is closely associated with ideal family size—the higher the level of
education, the lower the preferred number of children. Thus, women with no education reported an
average ideal family size of just over 3 children, while women with completed higher secondary school
want, on average, one child fewer.
In order to estimate the levels of unwanted fertility, the VNDHS 2002 included a question on
whether each birth in the three years before the survey was planned (wanted then), mistimed (wanted but
at a later time), or unwanted (not wanted at all). Measures based on these data are likely to underestimate
unwanted fertility because women may rationalize mistimed and unwanted pregnancies and declare them
as wanted once the children are born.
Table 6.7 shows the percent distribution of births in three years before the survey by planning
status. Overall, three-fourths (76 percent) of births were planned, 14 percent were mistimed, and 9 percent
were not wanted at all. Comparison with data from the VNDHS 1997 indicates that birth planning has
improved somewhat. The proportion of births that were planned increased from 73 to 76 percent, while
the proportion of births that were unwanted dropped from 12 to 9 percent.
Age at birth
<20 85.4 13.2 0.0 1.4 100.0 137
20-24 79.9 17.9 1.8 0.5 100.0 558
25-29 74.6 13.6 10.3 1.5 100.0 528
30-34 68.9 8.7 21.8 0.6 100.0 245
35-39 66.3 6.5 23.4 3.8 100.0 90
40-49 (66.6) (0.0) (33.3) (0.0) 100.0 28
Fertility Preferences | 75
As expected, the proportion of unplanned births is Table 6.8 Wanted fertility rates
smallest for first births and increases directly with birth
order. Less than one percent of first births were not Total wanted fertility rates and total fertility rates
for the three and five years preceding the survey,
wanted, compared with 44 percent of fourth and higher
respectively, by background characteristics,
births. Similarly, a larger proportion of births to older Vietnam 2002
women were unwanted.
Total
Table 6.8 presents wanted fertility rates. These are wanted Total
calculated in the same manner as conventional age-specific fertility fertility
fertility rates, except that only births classified as wanted Background characteristic rates rates
are included in the numerator. A birth is considered wanted Residence
if the number of living children at the time of conception Urban 1.5 1.4
was less than or equal to the current ideal number of chil- Rural 1.6 2.0
dren reported by the respondent. Wanted fertility rates
Project province
express the level of fertility that would theoretically result No 1.6 1.8
if all unwanted births were prevented. Comparison of Yes 1.7 1.9
actual fertility rates and wanted fertility rates suggests the
potential demographic impact of the elimination of Region
unwanted births. Northern Uplands 1.6 2.0
Red River Delta 1.6 1.7
Overall, the total wanted fertility rate is 16 percent North Central 1.6 1.9
lower than the total fertility rate. Thus, if unwanted births Central Coast 2.0 2.4
Central Highlands 2.3 2.9
could be eliminated, total fertility in Vietnam would be Southeast 1.4 1.5
around 1.6 births per woman, instead of 1.9. The differ- Mekong River Delta 1.5 1.7
ences in wanted fertility rates by various background char-
acteristics are similar to those for actual fertility rates, ex- Education
cept they are all slightly lower. Wanted fertility rates range No education 1.7 2.8
from lows of 1.4 to 1.6 children per woman in Southeast, Some primary 1.6 2.0
Mekong River Delta, Red River Delta, Northern Uplands Completed primary 1.8 2.1
Compl. lower secondary 1.5 1.7
and North Central to a high of 2.0 and 2.2 children in
Compl. higher secondary+ 1.4 1.4
Central Coast and Central Highlands.
Total 1.6 1.9
76 | Fertility Preferences
INFANT AND CHILD MORTALITY 7
This chapter contains information on the levels, trends, and differentials in neonatal, postneonatal,
infant, child, and under-five mortality, and the prevalence of high-risk fertility behavior. This information
is important for the assessment of the demographic situation in Vietnam. It is also central to the design of
policies and programs geared towards the reduction of infant and child mortality and the avoidance of
high-risk fertility behavior.
Mortality estimates are calculated from information in the pregnancy history section of the
Woman's Questionnaire in the VNDHS 2002. In this survey, reproductive histories were obtained from all
ever-married women age 15-49. Each woman was first asked about the number of sons and daughters
living with her, the number living elsewhere, the number who had died, and the number of pregnancies
that did not end in a live birth. She was then asked for a history of all her pregnancies, including the type
of pregnancy outcome and the month and year of pregnancy termination. For each pregnancy ending in a
live birth, the mother was asked the child’s name, sex, age (if alive) or age at death (if dead), and whether
the child was living with her.
The information on live births is used to directly estimate mortality rates. In this report, infant
and child mortality are measured using the following five rates:
Neonatal mortality: the probability of dying within the first month of life;
Postneonatal mortality: the difference between infant and neonatal mortality;
Infant mortality: the probability of dying before the first birthday;
Child mortality: the probability of dying between the first and fifth birthday;
Under-five mortality: the probability of dying before the fifth birthday.
All rates are expressed per 1,000 live births, except for child mortality, which is expressed per
1,000 children surviving to 12 months of age.
Under-five mortality in the most recent five-year calendar period is 24 per 1,000 births (Table
7.1). This means that about one in every 42 children born in Vietnam dies before reaching age five.
Nearly three in four of these deaths occur in the first year of life—infant mortality is 18 deaths per 1,000
births. Child mortality accounts for 6 deaths before age five among 1,000 children who survive to 12
months of age. Similarly, during infancy, the risk of neonatal deaths (12 per 1,000) is double the risk of
postneonatal death (6 per 1,000).
These rates imply an extraordinary decline in child mortality levels in Vietnam over the past dec-
ade. Under-five mortality is 40 percent lower for the five years before the survey than it was for the pe-
riod 5-9 years before the survey. The decline in child mortality is slightly greater (45 percent) than the
decline in infant mortality (39 percent). The corresponding declines in neonatal and postneonatal mor-
tality are 29 percent and 42 percent, respectively.
Mortality trends can also be examined by comparing data from the VNDHS 2002 with data from
earlier sources. Because of the similarities in survey design, method of analysis, time references, and
Neonatal, postneonatal, infant, child, and under-five mortality for five-year periods preceding the
survey, Vietnam 2002
Mortality rate
Years Neonatal Postneonatal Infant Child Under-5
before Approximate cal- mortality mortality1 mortality mortality mortality
survey endar period (NN) (PNN) (1q0) (4q1) (5q0)
0-4 1998-2002 12.2 6.0 18.2 5.6 23.6
5-9 1993-1997 21.2 8.4 29.6 10.2 39.5
10-14 1988-1992 24.4 11.3 35.7 12.1 47.4
1
Computed as the difference between infant and neonatal mortality rates
sample coverage, a logical comparison is between the VNDHS 1997 and the VNDHS 2002. Such a com-
parison shows a substantial decline for all five mortality rates calculated. The decline is particularly sharp
for infant mortality (Figure 7.1).
Such low levels of mortality and such rapid declines—particularly for neonatal mortality—
without evidence of major success in child survival programs, call into question the quality of the data.
One concern is possible underreporting of births that die early in the early neonatal period (i.e., within the
first week of life). Evidence of this type of error can be found by examining the ratio of deaths under the
age of seven days to all deaths in the first month of life.1 Appendix Table C.4 shows that this ratio is 0.89
for the period 0-4 years prior to the survey, which suggests that underreporting of births ending in early
neonatal deaths was not a problem, though the ratio is lower (0.71) for the period 5-9 years before the
survey.
0
1984 1990 1995 2000 2002
Calendar Year
VNDHS 1997
VNDHS 2002
________________________
1
There are no models for mortality patterns during the neonatal period. However, one review of data from several
developing countries concluded that, at neonatal mortality levels of 20 per 1,000 or higher, approximately 70 percent
of neonatal deaths occur within the first six days of life (Boerma, 1988).
The reliability of mortality estimates depends on the completeness of the counts for births and
child deaths and the accuracy with which their dates of birth and ages at death are reported. Omission of
births and deaths directly affects mortality estimates; displacement of dates has an impact on mortality
trends; and misreporting of age at death may distort the age pattern of mortality. An examination of the
data shows that complete information on both month and year of birth was given for all children, regard-
less of their survival status (Appendix Table C.3). Although there is some fluctuation in the number of
births by calendar year, it does not seem to be systematic and the impact on mortality estimates is proba-
bly minimal because those estimates are for five-year and ten-year periods.
Another indicator of data quality is the ratio of male to female births (sex ratio). International ex-
perience from countries with reliable data indicates that this ratio typically lies between 104 and 107
(Shryock and Siegel, 1973). Appendix Table C.3 shows a sex ratio of births within this range for the pe-
riod 1998-2002 (106), which suggests that underreporting of female births was not a problem in the
VNDHS 2002.
The review of the quality of the mortality data has not revealed any data defects. Additional reas-
surance of data quality is provided by the fact that the mortality rates for the period 5-9 years prior to the
2002 survey approximate very closely those for the period 0-4 years prior to the VNDHS 1997, roughly
the same time period. For example, the under-five mortality rate for the 5-9 years prior to the VNDHS
2002 was 40, compared to 38 for the period 0-4 years before the VNDHS 1997.
Nevertheless, the extremely low mortality levels measured in the VNDHS 2002 require cautious
interpretation. Omission of even a few births that died in early infancy could account for some of the ap-
parent declines in mortality, yet be so subtle as to be undetectable. Another reason for caution is that at
such low mortality levels, sampling errors are quite large. The 95 percent confidence intervals for the in-
fant mortality estimate of 18 per 1,000 are 9 and 27 per 1,000 (Appendix B) indicating that, given the
sample size of the VNDHS 2002, the estimate of 18 per 1,000 is possible when the true value is as much
as 9 points higher.
Table 7.2 presents socioeconomic differentials in childhood mortality. Mortality rates are calcu-
lated for the 10-year period before the survey (approximately 1993-2002) in order to ensure a sufficient
number of cases for statistical reliability.
Mortality is consistently lower in urban areas than in rural areas; most of the rates are less than
half as high in urban areas as they are in rural areas (Table 7.2 and Figure 7.2). Mortality is also lower in
the project provinces compared with the nonproject provinces. Rates by region should be interpreted cau-
tiously due to the high level of sampling errors (see Appendix B).
Neonatal, postneonatal, infant, child, and under-five mortality, by socioeconomic characteristics for the
ten-year period preceding the survey, Vietnam 2002
Mortality rate
Neonatal Postneonatal Infant Child Under-5
Socioeconomic mortality mortality1 mortality mortality mortality
characteristic (NN) (PNN) (1q0) (4q1) (5q0)
Residence
Urban 9.0 3.1 12.1 4.1 16.2
Rural 18.9 8.1 26.9 8.9 35.6
Project province
No 18.7 7.5 26.2 8.1 34.1
Yes 14.8 7.0 21.8 8.5 30.1
Region
Northern Uplands 31.6 9.2 40.9 11.4 51.8
Red River Delta 15.9 4.7 20.5 5.9 26.3
North Central 17.8 13.1 30.9 5.5 36.3
Central Coast 6.1 7.1 13.1 2.8 15.9
Central Highlands 15.3 7.3 22.7 18.6 40.9
Southeast 9.2 2.1 11.3 11.6 22.8
Mekong River Delta 16.0 6.3 22.3 8.8 30.9
Education
No education 53.0 5.6 58.6 8.1 66.2
Some primary 14.7 9.9 24.5 11.5 35.7
Completed primary 8.9 9.1 17.9 8.9 26.7
Compl. lower secondary 19.8 7.1 26.9 6.5 33.3
Compl. higher secondary+ 10.8 2.4 13.2 5.9 19.0
Percent
80
70 66
60
50
40 36 36
33
30 27
19
20 16
10
0
Urban Rural No Some Completed Compl. Compl.
education primary primary lower higher
secondary secondary+
Residence Education
Vietnam 2002
Mortality risks are also affected by demographic characteristics. Table 7.3 and Figure 7.3 show
the relationship between mortality and sex of the child, mother’s age at birth, birth order and birth inter-
vals. Contrary to expectations infant mortality is not higher for males than females, and neonatal mortality
is almost the same for males and females. However, under-five mortality is higher for males than females.
The data in Table 7.3 indicate that children born to women age 20-29 have the lowest mortality
rates while the highest rates are among children born to younger mothers. For example, infant mortality
for children born to mothers under 20 is twice as high as for children born to mothers age 20-29. Children
born to mothers age 30-39 are one and a half times as likely to die before 12 months of age as children
born to mothers age 20-29.
As expected, higher-order births experience higher mortality, with infant mortality being consid-
erably higher among births of order 4-6 (30 per 1,000) than among first births (20 per 1,000).
Neonatal, postneonatal, infant, child, and under-five mortality by demographic characteristics for the
ten-year period preceding the survey, Vietnam 2002
Mortality rate
Neonatal Postneonatal Infant Childhood Under-5
Demographic mortality mortality1 mortality mortality mortality
characteristic (NN) (PNN) (1q0) (4q1) (5q0)
Sex of child
Male 17.5 7.0 24.5 9.9 34.2
Female 17.4 7.8 25.1 6.5 31.4
Birth order
1 15.1 4.8 19.9 7.3 27.1
2-3 16.3 9.0 25.2 5.7 30.8
4-6 21.2 8.7 29.9 13.6 43.1
Note: Data for children born to women age 40-49 and of birth order 7 or higher are not shown be-
cause of the small number of cases.
1
Computed as the difference between infant and neonatal mortality rates
SEX OF CHILD
Male 34
Female 31
BIRTH ORDER
1 27
2-3 31
4-6 43
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
Deaths per 1,000 live births
Note: Rates are for the 10-year period preceding the survey. Vietnam 2002
Birth intervals are strongly related to mortality risk. Mortality is generally much higher among
children born within two years of a previous birth. For example, infant mortality is 51 per 1,000 for this
group, compared with 12 per 1,000 for children born after an interval of four years or more.
Numerous studies have found a strong relationship between children’s chances of dying and cer-
tain fertility behaviors. Typically, the probability of dying in infancy is much greater for children born to
mothers who are too young or too old, if they are born after a short birth interval, or if they are born to
mothers with high parity. For purposes of this analysis a mother is classified as “too young” if she is less
than 18 years of age and “too old” if she is over 34 years of age at the time of delivery; a “short birth in-
terval” is defined as a birth occurring within 24 months of a previous birth; and a mother is considered to
be of “high parity” if she has had three or more children at the time of birth.
Table 7.4 shows the percent distribution of children born in the five years before the survey by
these risk factors. The table also shows the risk ratio of mortality for children by comparing the propor-
tion of dead children in each high-risk category with the proportion of dead children not in any high-risk
category.
One-fourth of children born in Vietnam in the five years before the survey fall into a high-risk
category (25 percent), with 20 percent in a single high-risk category and 6 percent in a multiple high-risk
category. The most common high-risk factor is high birth order; however, only 12 percent of children fall
into this category.
The final column of Table 7.4 addresses the question of what percentage of currently married
women have the potential for a high-risk birth. This was obtained by simulating the distribution of cur-
rently married women by the risk category in which a birth would fall, if a woman were to conceive at the
time of the survey. Overall, 62 percent of currently married women have the potential for having a high-
risk birth.
Percent of children born in the last five years at elevated risk of mortality and
percent of currently married women at risk of conceiving a child with an elevated
risk of mortality, according to category of increased risk, Vietnam 2002
Note: Risk ratio is the ratio of the proportion dead of births in a specific high-risk
category to the proportion dead of births not in any high risk category. Figures in
parentheses are based on 25-49 births; an asterisk indicates that a figure is based
on fewer than 25 births and has been suppressed.
na = Not applicable
1
Women are assigned to risk categories according to the status they would have
at the birth of a child if they were to conceive at the time of the survey: current
age less than 17 years and 3 months or older than 34 years and 2 months, latest
birth occurred less than 15 months ago, or latest birth being of order 3 or higher.
2
Includes the combined categories age<18 & birth order >3
a
Includes sterilized women
Table 8.1 shows the percent distribution of births in the three years preceding the survey by
source of antenatal care received during pregnancy, according to background characteristics. Interviewers
were instructed to record all persons a woman had seen for care, but the statistics in Table 8.1 are based
on the provider with the highest qualifications. For almost nine in ten births in Vietnam, the mothers re-
ceived antenatal care from a doctor (46 percent) or trained nurse or midwife (40 percent). Mothers re-
ceived care from a traditional birth attendant (TBA) in less than 1 percent of births. A significant finding
is that mothers received no antenatal care for 13 percent of births.
Comparison with the VNDHS 1997 indicates that the utilization of antenatal services has in-
creased dramatically during the last five years, especially from doctors. The percentage of women who
receive antenatal services from a doctor, nurse, or midwife, has increased from 71 percent in 1995-97 to
86 percent in 2000-02. All of the increase has occurred for doctors (25 to 46 percent), while the propor-
tion of women receiving antenatal care from nurses and midwives has actually declined from 46 to 40
percent since 1995-97. The percent receiving no antenatal care also decreased over the same period from
28 to 13 percent.
Women in the age group 20-34 are more likely to use antenatal services than older women (age
35 and above) or younger women (age less than 20). This is especially true with regard to care from doc-
tors. Similarly, lower birth order is associated with greater use of services provided by medically trained
health workers, especially doctors. This pattern could occur because young women tend to be more edu-
cated than older women and are more likely to have knowledge about the benefits of antenatal care. It
could also be that women who are pregnant for the first time are more anxious because of their lack of
previous experience and are more likely to seek care from trained professionals.
There are substantial differences in the use of antenatal services between urban and rural areas.
Overall, the percentage of women seeing trained medical staff for antenatal care is higher in urban than in
rural areas (96 versus 84 percent) and urban women receive care from doctors much more frequently than
rural women. In contrast, rural women are more likely to see trained nurses or midwives for antenatal
care. Utilization of antenatal services is slightly higher in the nonproject provinces than in the project
provinces. Regionally, antenatal care coverage is highest in the Red River Delta (98 percent). The Cen-
tral Highlands and the Northern Uplands are comparatively underserved, with about one-fourth of moth-
ers having received no antenatal services.
Percent distribution of live births in the last 3 years by source of antenatal care (ANC) during pregnancy, according
to background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Antenatal care
Trained Traditional
nurse/ birth Number of
Background characteristic Doctor midwife attendant No one Missing Total births
Age at birth
< 20 34.8 45.3 0.0 19.9 0.0 100.0 115
20-34 48.2 39.5 0.3 12.0 0.0 100.0 1,107
35+ 40.0 39.0 0.8 19.6 0.6 100.0 100
Birth order
1 53.9 36.6 0.1 9.4 0.0 100.0 560
2-3 43.5 43.7 0.6 12.1 0.0 100.0 630
4-5 34.0 36.7 0.0 28.7 0.6 100.0 103
6+ (9.7) (34.8) (0.0) (55.5) (0.0) 100.0 29
Residence
Urban 85.2 10.8 0.9 3.1 0.0 100.0 229
Rural 38.3 46.1 0.2 15.3 0.1 100.0 1,092
Project province
No 47.7 40.3 0.4 11.5 0.1 100.0 888
Yes 43.9 39.2 0.3 16.7 0.0 100.0 433
Region
Northern Uplands 34.2 42.5 0.0 23.2 0.0 100.0 254
Red River Delta 47.0 50.7 0.0 2.3 0.0 100.0 277
North Central 38.3 51.9 0.0 9.8 0.0 100.0 161
Central Coast 48.8 36.3 0.4 14.3 0.3 100.0 196
Central Highlands 48.5 23.8 0.6 27.2 0.0 100.0 65
Southeast 65.7 25.3 0.0 9.1 0.0 100.0 133
Mekong River Delta 51.2 32.2 1.4 15.2 0.0 100.0 235
Education
No education 23.1 27.1 1.4 48.4 0.0 100.0 109
Some primary 37.8 29.3 0.7 32.2 0.0 100.0 188
Completed primary 44.3 45.4 0.2 10.1 0.0 100.0 475
Compl. lower secondary. 43.2 52.4 0.2 3.9 0.2 100.0 326
Compl. higher secondary+ 74.4 25.4 0.0 0.2 0.0 100.0 223
Note: If more than one source of ANC was mentioned, only the provider with the highest qualifications is consid-
ered in this tabulation. Figures in parentheses are based on 25-49 unweighted cases.
Table 8.1 shows that as a woman’s education increases the likelihood that she will receive no an-
tenatal care decreases sharply, from 48 percent for births to women with no education to less than 1 per-
cent for births to women who have completed higher secondary school. Use of a doctor for antenatal care
increases from 23 percent for births to uneducated women to 74 percent for births to women who have
completed higher secondary school.
Antenatal care can be more effective in avoiding adverse pregnancy outcomes when it is sought
early in the pregnancy and continues through to delivery. Obstetricians generally recommend that antena-
tal visits be made on a monthly basis to the 28th week (seventh month), fortnightly to the 36th week
(eighth month), and then weekly until the 40th week (i.e., the time of birth). If the first antenatal visit is
Information about the number and timing of antenatal visits made Table 8.2 Number of antenatal
by pregnant women is presented in Table 8.2. As mentioned above, for 13 care visits and stage of pregnancy
percent of births mothers did not make any visit for antenatal care during Percent distribution of live births
pregnancy. For births in the three years before the survey, 10 percent had in the last 3 years by number of
only one antenatal visit, while almost half of women had 2-3 visits, and 29 antenatal care (ANC) visits, and
percent had four or more visits. The median number of antenatal care visits by the stage of pregnancy at the
time of the first visit, Vietnam
for those who received antenatal care was only 2.5, which is far fewer than 2002
the recommended 12-13 visits. Eighty-five percent of births for which
mothers received antenatal care in Vietnam (74 percent of all births) benefit Number and timing
of ANC visits Total
from antenatal care during the first five months of gestation. Among wom-
Number of ANC visits
en who received antenatal care, the median duration of the pregnancy at the
None 13.2
first visit was 3.6 months. 1 10.1
2-3 visits 47.4
Tetanus Toxoid Coverage 4+ visits 29.3
Don’t know/missing 0.0
An important component of antenatal care is ensuring that pregnant Total 100.0
women and children are adequately protected against tetanus. Tetanus
Median number of
toxoid injections are given during pregnancy for the prevention of neonatal visits (for those with
tetanus, an important cause of death among infants. For full protection, a ANC) 2.5
pregnant woman should receive two doses of the toxoid. However, if a Number of months
woman has been vaccinated during a previous pregnancy, she may require pregnant at time of
only one dose during the current pregnancy. first ANC visit
No antenatal care 13.2
Less than 6 months 73.8
Table 8.3 provides information on tetanus toxoid coverage during 6-7 months 10.5
pregnancy for all births in the three years preceding the survey. For seven 8+ months 2.4
in ten births (71 percent), mothers received two or more doses of tetanus Don’t know/missing 0.1
toxoid during pregnancy, while 14 percent received one dose. For 15 per- Total 100.0
cent of births, mothers did not receive any tetanus toxoid injections. Median (for those
with ANC) 3.6
Percent distribution of live births in the last 3 years by number of tetanus toxoid injections mother re-
ceived during pregnancy, according to background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Birth order
1 10.2 9.4 80.3 0.2 100.0 560
2-3 13.9 18.5 67.4 0.2 100.0 630
4-5 38.3 11.9 48.3 1.5 100.0 103
6+ (46.3) (25.4) (26.2) (2.1) 100.0 29
Residence
Urban 6.4 10.9 81.6 1.0 100.0 229
Rural 16.7 15.0 68.1 0.2 100.0 1,092
Project province
No 13.6 12.0 74.1 0.3 100.0 888
Yes 17.6 18.9 63.0 0.5 100.0 433
Region
Northern Uplands 26.9 11.4 61.5 0.2 100.0 254
Red River Delta 2.9 16.0 81.1 0.0 100.0 277
North Central 10.7 16.8 72.6 0.0 100.0 161
Central Coast 12.5 8.9 78.3 0.3 100.0 196
Central Highlands 23.1 37.7 39.2 0.0 100.0 65
Southeast 12.9 13.2 72.5 1.4 100.0 133
Mekong River Delta 20.0 12.2 67.1 0.6 100.0 235
Education
No education 48.8 15.5 35.1 0.6 100.0 109
Some primary 27.9 14.2 57.5 0.5 100.0 188
Completed primary 12.7 14.3 72.5 0.5 100.0 475
Compl. lower secondary 7.1 15.7 77.1 0.2 100.0 326
Compl. higher secondary+ 3.8 11.6 84.6 0.0 100.0 223
Place of Delivery
An important component of the effort to reduce the health risks of mothers and children is to in-
crease the proportion of babies delivered under medical supervision. Proper medical attention and hygi-
enic conditions during delivery can reduce the risk of complications and infections that can cause the
death or serious illness of the mother and/or the baby.
Percent distribution of live births in the last 3 years by place of delivery, according to background char-
acteristics, Vietnam 2002
Place of delivery
Health Don’t know/ Number
Background characteristic facility At home missing Total of births
Age at birth
< 20 65.1 34.9 0.0 100.0 115
20-34 79.4 20.4 0.2 100.0 1,107
35+ 83.9 15.5 0.6 100.0 100
Birth order
1 84.8 15.1 0.1 100.0 560
2-3 77.9 21.7 0.4 100.0 630
4-5 59.2 40.3 0.6 100.0 103
6+ (35.7) (64.3) (0.0) 100.0 29
Residence
Urban 99.2 0.7 0.2 100.0 229
Rural 74.1 25.6 0.3 100.0 1,092
Project province
No 80.2 19.5 0.3 100.0 888
Yes 74.9 25.0 0.1 100.0 433
Region
Northern Uplands 43.7 56.1 0.3 100.0 254
Red River Delta 98.7 1.3 0.0 100.0 277
North Central 74.3 25.7 0.0 100.0 161
Central Coast 74.8 24.9 0.3 100.0 196
Central Highlands 63.6 36.4 0.0 100.0 65
Southeast 96.0 4.0 0.0 100.0 133
Mekong River Delta 92.4 6.8 0.8 100.0 235
Education
No education 34.5 65.5 0.0 100.0 109
Some primary 63.6 35.4 1.0 100.0 188
Completed primary 78.9 21.0 0.1 100.0 475
Compl. lower secondary 89.3 10.5 0.2 100.0 326
Compl. higher secondary+ 95.8 4.2 0.0 100.0 223
Women who receive antenatal services are more likely to deliver in a health facility. While the
majority of births among women with no antenatal visits were delivered at home (53 percent), the major-
ity of births among women with one or more antenatal visits were delivered in a health facility. In fact,
only 5 percent of women with four or more antenatal visits delivered at home.
Assistance at Delivery
The level of assistance a woman receives during birth has important health consequences for both
the mother and the child. Births delivered at home are more likely to be delivered without professional
assistance, whereas births delivered at a health facility are more likely to be delivered by trained medical
personnel. Table 8.5 shows that 85 percent of births are delivered under the supervision of a doctor (50
percent) or nurse or midwife (35 percent). This has changed dramatically since 1997, with the proportion
of births attended by doctors almost doubling from 27 to 50 percent. The proportion of births attended by
nurses and midwives actually declined from 50 percent to 35 percent. Traditional birth attendants assist in
the delivery of 5 percent of births, while another 10 percent of births are assisted by relatives and others.
Teenagers are more likely to have received delivery assistance from a relative or friend than older
women, who are more likely to have been assisted by a doctor. First births are also more frequently deliv-
ered under a doctor’s supervision than higher order births.
Urban women are much more likely than rural women to receive the benefit of medical supervi-
sion during delivery; births in urban areas are more than twice as likely to be delivered with the assistance
of a doctor than births in rural areas. Also, as the differentials in place of delivery would suggest, more
educated women and women living in the Southeast region are much more likely to have the advantage of
a medically-supervised delivery.
Supervision of births by a doctor is positively related to the number of antenatal care visits. Only
25 percent of births to women who had no antenatal care visits were attended by a doctor, in contrast to
43 percent of births to women who had 1-3 visits and 74 percent of births to women who had four or
more visits. More than one-third of births (36 percent) to women without any antenatal care are assisted at
delivery by friends and other non-medical persons.
Percent distribution of live births in the last 3 years by type of assistance during delivery, according to background
characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Birth order
1 61.8 28.0 4.2 6.0 0.0 100.0 560
2-3 43.7 41.4 5.3 9.5 0.0 100.0 630
4-5 29.4 40.6 8.1 20.7 1.2 100.0 103
6+ (19.3) (26.9) (14.9) (36.8) (2.0) 100.0 29
Residence
Urban 92.3 6.7 0.5 0.5 0.0 100.0 229
Rural 40.8 41.4 6.3 11.4 0.2 100.0 1,092
Project province
No 50.8 35.9 3.1 10.0 0.2 100.0 888
Yes 47.6 34.2 9.7 8.4 0.1 100.0 433
Region
Northern Uplands 27.9 28.0 6.5 37.3 0.2 100.0 254
Red River Delta 62.8 37.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 277
North Central 39.3 42.3 11.4 6.9 0.0 100.0 161
Central Coast 49.1 40.5 2.2 7.6 0.6 100.0 196
Central Highlands 54.8 29.0 11.0 5.1 0.0 100.0 65
Southeast 68.8 30.5 0.7 0.0 0.0 100.0 133
Mekong River Delta 53.5 36.4 9.6 0.4 0.0 100.0 235
Education
No education 23.7 17.9 6.9 50.4 1.1 100.0 109
Some primary 40.8 29.4 11.6 18.2 0.0 100.0 188
Completed primary 45.2 43.2 6.7 4.8 0.0 100.0 475
Compl. lower secondary 51.8 43.5 0.5 4.1 0.2 100.0 326
Compl. higher secondary+ 76.7 20.1 3.2 0.0 0.0 100.0 223
Note: If more than one provider was mentioned, only the provider with the highest qualifications is considered in
this tabulation. Figures in parentheses are based on 25-49 unweighted cases.
According to mothers’ reports, 10 percent of babies born in Vietnam are delivered by caesarean
section (Table 8.6), a large increase from the 3 percent reported in 1997. Caesarean sections (C-sections)
are less common among young women, women with a large number of children, rural women, and those
with little or no education. Surprisingly, more than one-fourth of births to women age 35 or older are de-
livered by C-section. The Red River Delta and Southeast regions have exceptionally high percentages of
births delivered by C-section (17 and 14 percent, respectively). Deliveries by caesarean section have in-
creased substantially among women living in urban areas (23 percent) and women who have completed
higher secondary education (22 percent). Corresponding figures from the VNDHS 1997 for these two
subgroups were 12 percent and 8 percent, respectively.
Table 8.6 Delivery characteristics: Caesarean section, birth weight, and size
Among births in the three years preceding the survey, the percentage delivered by caesarean section, and percent distribution
by birth weight and size of child at birth, according to background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Birth order
1 12.9 6.0 79.9 14.1 1.0 9.9 89.1 0.0 560
2-3 8.8 4.6 75.5 19.9 1.6 5.8 92.5 0.1 630
4-5 3.1 9.3 49.4 41.3 2.9 14.1 82.4 0.6 103
6+ (0.0) (6.0) (48.2) (45.8) (0.0) (8.5) (91.5) (0.0) 29
Residence
Urban 22.9 3.9 95.4 0.6 1.1 4.0 94.9 0.0 229
Rural 7.2 5.9 70.4 23.7 1.5 9.1 89.3 0.1 1,092
Project province
No 11.1 5.4 76.3 18.3 1.8 8.4 89.8 0.1 888
Yes 7.4 5.9 71.6 22.5 0.6 8.0 91.2 0.1 433
Region
Northern Uplands 5.5 3.9 42.6 53.5 4.2 9.3 86.2 0.2 254
Red River Delta 17.2 4.5 94.2 1.3 0.0 8.8 91.2 0.0 277
North Central 4.1 2.7 71.4 25.9 0.4 7.1 92.5 0.0 161
Central Coast 9.6 5.7 73.7 20.6 1.9 9.3 88.5 0.3 196
Central Highlands 3.3 16.6 62.5 20.8 2.5 7.5 89.9 0.0 65
Southeast 14.2 7.3 88.7 4.0 1.4 4.3 94.3 0.0 133
Mekong River Delta 9.6 6.5 85.1 8.4 0.0 8.7 91.3 0.0 235
Education
No education 4.4 6.3 32.0 61.7 0.0 8.1 91.3 0.6 109
Some primary 9.3 7.6 60.3 32.1 4.5 9.1 86.4 0.0 188
Completed primary 5.8 5.1 74.4 20.5 1.3 9.1 89.6 0.0 475
Compl. lower secondary. 9.8 6.5 84.9 8.7 0.6 7.6 91.6 0.2 326
Compl. higher secondary+ 22.0 3.3 93.8 2.9 1.0 6.6 92.4 0.0 223
Total 9.9 5.6 74.7 19.7 1.4 8.2 90.3 0.1 1,321
The VNDHS collected information on vaccination coverage for all children born in the three
years preceding the survey. The data presented here are for children age 12-23 months, the youngest co-
hort of children who have reached the age by which they should be fully vaccinated. The Vietnamese
Government is closely following the guidelines of the Expanded Program on Immunization set by the
World Health Organization. In order to be considered fully vaccinated, a child should receive the follow-
ing vaccinations: one dose of BCG, three doses each of DPT and polio, and one dose of measles vaccine.1
Information on vaccination coverage was collected in two ways: from children’s health cards
seen by the interviewer and from mothers’ verbal reports. If a mother was able to present a health card to
the interviewer, this was used as the source of information, with the interviewer recording vaccination
dates directly from the card. In addition to collecting vaccination information from cards, there were two
ways of collecting the information from the mother herself. Even in cases when the mother had a health
card, she was asked if the child had received any vaccinations that were not recorded on the card. If the
mother was not able to provide a card for the child at all, she was asked to recall whether or not the child
had received BCG, polio and DPT (including the number of doses for each), and measles vaccinations. In
the VNDHS 2002, mothers were able to provide health cards for only 40 percent of children 12-23
months of age, a tremendous increase from 13 percent in the VNDHS 1997.
Information on vaccination coverage is presented in Table 8.7, according to the source of infor-
mation used to determine coverage, i.e., the child health card or mother’s report. Forty percent of children
age 12-23 months had a BCG vaccination recorded on their health card. However, not all children who
are vaccinated have cards available since health cards are often retained at the health centers; an addi-
tional 54 percent of children did not have a card but were reported by their mothers to have received the
BCG vaccine. Thus, overall, 93 percent of children age 12-23 months are reported to have been vacci-
nated against tuberculosis. Vaccinations are most effective when given at the proper age; according to the
health cards, 91 percent of children received the BCG vaccine by 12 months of age.
1
BCG, which should be given at birth or first clinical contact, protects against tuberculosis. DPT protects against
diphtheria, pertussis, and tetanus. DPT and polio require three vaccinations at approximately 6, 10 and 14 weeks of
age (since this regime is not always followed, emphasis is placed on getting all three doses by the time the child
reaches the age of 12 months). Measles should be given at or soon after reaching nine months. It is recommended
that children receive the complete schedule of vaccinations before 12 months of age.
Among children 12-23 months of age, the percentage who have received each vaccine at any time before the interview and before 12 months of
age, according to whether the information is from the vaccination card or from the mother, Vietnam 2002
Vaccinated by
12 months of age2 90.9 85.7 80.0 67.6 91.1 85.3 73.1 77.0 58.1 6.3 - 457
1
BCG, measles, and three doses each of DPT and polio vaccine (excluding polio vaccine given at birth)
2
For children whose information was based on the mother’s report, the proportion of vaccinations given during the first year of life was assumed
to be the same as for children with a written record of vaccination.
Coverage for the first dose of DPT (88 percent) is slightly lower than for BCG (93 percent), while
coverage for the first dose of polio is the same as for BCG—93 percent (Figure 8.1). Coverage declines
after the first dose, and dropout rates are high. For DPT, coverage falls to 72 percent for the third dose;
therefore, one-fifth of children who start the DPT series do not complete it. The dropout rate is similar
for the polio series as expected, since polio and DPT are commonly administered together. Eighty-three
percent of children age 12-23 months are vaccinated against measles.
Overall, 67 percent of children age 12-23 months had all the recommended vaccinations, 58 per-
cent before their first birthday. Five percent of children age 12-23 months had not received any vaccina-
tions.
Percent
100
93 93
88 89
84 83
80 76
72
67
60
40
20
0
BCG 1 2 3+ 1 2 3+ Measles All None
DPT Polio
Note: Based on health card information and mothers' reports Vietnam 2002
Table 8.8 presents vaccination coverage (according to information from health cards and moth-
ers’ reports) among children age 12-23 months, by background characteristics. There is little difference
in full immunization coverage by sex of the child, by birth order, and by whether the children lived in a
project or nonproject province.
Among children 12-23 months, the percentage who had received each vaccine by the time of the survey (according to vaccination card
or mother’s report) and the percentage with a vaccination card, by background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Percentage
Percentage of children who had received:
with a Number
DPT Polio1
vaccina- of chil-
Background characteristic BCG 1 2 3 1 2 3 Measles All2 None tion card dren
Child's sex
Male 94.4 87.7 84.0 72.0 93.2 88.3 75.4 84.2 65.9 4.0 39.6 237
Female 92.2 88.9 83.5 72.7 93.6 88.9 76.2 82.2 67.6 5.6 40.2 219
Birth order
1 93.7 89.9 85.2 73.3 94.6 90.6 79.1 83.8 67.3 4.1 42.3 195
2-3 93.3 86.8 82.3 72.6 92.4 87.5 75.0 83.0 67.4 4.8 41.8 218
4-5 (93.4) (89.4) (86.9) (74.3) (93.4) (86.6) (74.0) (85.2) (68.4) (6.6) (27.0) 31
Residence
Urban 99.1 99.1 95.4 89.7 99.1 98.6 94.8 94.3 87.1 0.9 58.9 85
Rural 92.1 85.8 81.1 68.4 92.1 86.3 71.4 80.7 62.1 5.6 35.6 372
Project province
No 94.5 87.6 83.8 72.9 93.7 89.5 75.9 84.3 68.1 4.3 37.3 303
Yes 91.2 89.6 83.7 71.3 92.7 86.8 75.5 81.1 63.9 5.7 45.0 154
Region
Northern Uplands 90.5 75.3 70.0 49.8 86.8 81.9 56.2 79.5 45.1 8.9 14.1 95
Red River Delta 100.0 98.2 94.3 90.4 100.0 100.0 96.0 98.0 88.4 0.0 65.3 88
North Central 93.4 87.6 79.6 59.1 93.6 85.7 63.7 81.9 55.9 5.2 28.8 63
Central Coast 95.9 96.3 91.1 78.8 97.2 90.7 81.0 89.5 76.0 0.0 34.7 64
Southeast 91.1 86.9 83.4 83.4 93.4 84.7 79.0 82.9 76.0 6.6 58.9 52
Mekong River Delta 92.5 86.2 83.5 72.4 90.4 85.4 75.3 65.8 60.8 6.8 48.7 74
Mother’s education
No education (62.9) (52.2) (52.2) (46.6) (52.2) (52.2) (45.1) (49.2) (39.5) (30.9) (14.0) 32
Some primary 90.2 78.2 74.9 65.8 94.9 84.7 74.5 59.7 50.0 4.1 30.2 72
Completed primary 94.5 89.2 83.2 67.4 94.5 87.3 72.3 86.3 63.5 3.9 38.6 153
Compl. lower secondary. 97.7 95.1 90.1 80.5 97.7 95.1 82.7 92.1 77.4 2.3 38.5 119
Compl. higher secondary+ 100.0 100.0 96.1 85.9 100.0 99.3 85.5 98.9 82.9 0.0 63.4 81
Total 93.4 88.3 83.8 72.4 93.4 88.6 75.8 83.2 66.7 4.7 39.9 457
Note: Total includes 13 children of sixth or higher birth order and 21 children in Central Highlands, who are not shown separately.
Figures in parentheses are based on 25-49 unweighted cases.
1
Polio 0 is the polio vaccination given at birth and is not shown in the table.
2
BCG, measles, and three doses each of DPT and polio vaccine (excluding polio vaccine given at birth)
However, there are substantial differences in the percentage of children fully immunized by resi-
dence, region, and mother’s education. Children in urban areas are much more likely to be fully immu-
nized than rural children (87 versus 62 percent). Coverage is highest in the Red River Delta (88 percent)
and lowest in the Northern Uplands region (45 percent). Maternal education is strongly linked to immuni-
zation status: 83 percent of children whose mothers have completed higher secondary school are fully
vaccinated, compared with only 40 percent of children whose mothers have no education.
Table 8.10 presents data on the prevalence of diarrhea in children under three years of age.
Eleven percent of children had experienced diarrhea at some time in the two weeks preceding the survey;
less than 1 percent of children had experienced bloody diarrhea that can be an indication of dysentery.
Diarrhea prevalence increases with age to peak at age 6-11 months (19 percent).
Diarrhea is more prevalent among male children and children living in rural areas. It is least
prevalent in the Southeast region (5 percent) and more prevalent in the Central Coast (19 percent) and
Northern Uplands (16 percent). The higher the birth order, the higher is the prevalence of diarrhea. The
relationship between maternal education and diarrheal prevalence in children is marked. It ranges from
only 4 percent among children of women who have completed higher secondary education to 19 percent
among children whose mothers have no education.
General knowledge of ORS is quite widespread among mothers in Vietnam (Table 8.11). Seven
in ten mothers who gave birth in the three years preceding the survey knows about ORS (70 percent). Re-
garding specific eating and drinking regimes for sick children, the findings are encouraging. Three-
quarters of recent mothers know that a child with diarrhea should get more to drink, while 13 percent
think the child should receive the same amount to drink as usual; only 9 percent think a sick child should
be given less to drink.
Differentials in mothers’ knowledge of appropriate child feeding practices during a diarrhea epi-
sode indicate that the percentage who report that a child should receive greater amounts of liquids is
smaller among younger mothers, those living in rural areas and in project provinces, and among women
with less education. Additionally, North Central and Northern Uplands stand out as areas where fewer
mothers know that children with diarrhea should be given more liquids than usual.
Percentage of mothers with births in the last three years who know about ORS packets and appropriate feeding during diarrhea, by
background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Residence
Urban 83.4 3.3 4.5 91.7 0.4 28.0 51.7 19.0 1.2 220
Rural 67.1 10.0 15.2 72.3 2.5 39.6 43.7 14.0 2.8 995
Project province
No 70.8 7.4 11.5 79.0 2.1 37.6 45.3 14.6 2.4 812
Yes 68.5 11.6 16.9 69.3 2.2 37.1 44.7 15.4 2.7 403
Region
Northern Uplands 60.5 11.3 24.1 63.8 0.8 40.3 43.5 15.6 0.6 225
Red River Delta 82.5 4.9 4.7 90.2 0.2 28.0 42.3 29.7 0.0 259
North Central 74.8 19.7 21.1 57.6 1.6 56.1 34.9 6.6 2.4 148
Central Coast 66.9 4.1 9.4 85.5 1.0 41.4 51.5 6.1 1.0 178
Central Highlands 45.3 10.8 14.3 74.8 0.0 31.5 60.0 8.5 0.0 58
Southeast 65.8 6.8 4.0 85.8 3.4 36.7 49.6 9.2 4.5 124
Mekong River Delta 73.4 7.6 15.3 70.1 7.0 32.1 45.4 14.3 8.1 223
Education
No education 38.5 6.2 39.8 50.6 3.5 29.9 59.5 6.7 3.9 89
Some primary 59.2 11.8 19.9 62.5 5.8 38.0 46.4 9.2 6.5 178
Completed primary 64.8 12.7 11.5 73.0 2.8 43.4 38.9 14.6 3.1 426
Compl. lower secondary. 79.4 5.6 10.7 83.5 0.2 38.7 45.4 15.7 0.2 307
Compl. higher secondary+ 89.1 4.1 4.1 91.8 0.0 26.7 50.2 22.4 0.7 215
Total 70.1 8.8 13.3 75.8 2.1 37.5 45.1 14.9 2.5 1,215
Forty percent of children with diarrhea were given a solution prepared from ORS packets, while 6
percent were treated with recommended home fluids (RHF). Almost two-thirds (63 percent) of children
with diarrhea were given more to drink than before the diarrhea. Overall, 26 percent of children received
neither oral rehydration therapy (ORS or RHF) nor increased fluids. One in four children with diarrhea
was given antibiotics, and 13 percent were provided some sort of home-based traditional remedies. One in
six children with diarrhea received no treatment.
Percent
100
80
63
60
60
40 42
40
26
23
20 16
13
6
0
Taken to ORS RHF ORS or Increased No ORS, Home- Antibiotic No
health RHF fluids RHF, or based treatment
facility increased traditional
fluids remedies
Vietnam 2002
To measure breastfeeding practices, mothers were asked a series of questions for each birth
occurring in the three years preceding the survey. Mothers were asked if the child was breastfed and, if
so, how long after childbirth breastfeeding was initiated. For surviving children, additional questions
were asked to determine if the mother was still breastfeeding, and, if not, how long she had breastfed each
child and why she stopped. Mothers who were still breastfeeding were asked questions about the
frequency of breastfeeding and about supplemental feeding.
The data in Table 9.1 indicate that breastfeeding is very common in Vietnam. Overall, 98 percent
of Vietnamese children are breastfed for some period of time. Differentials in the proportion of children
breastfed are small; at least 90 percent of children in every subgroup are breastfed.
The timing of initiation of breastfeeding is also examined in Table 9.1. Fifty-seven percent of
recent mothers reported initiating breastfeeding within an hour of giving birth and 87 percent reported
initiating breastfeeding within one day of birth. The proportion of women who reported starting
breastfeeding within an hour after childbirth is significantly higher in the VNDHS 2002 than in the 1997
survey (28 percent).
The most striking differentials in the initiation of breastfeeding are by region. Only 39 percent of
children in the Central Highlands were breastfed within an hour following childbirth, compared with 68
percent of children in the Northern Uplands. Differences by other background characteristics are small,
though children living in the nonproject provinces are more likely than those living in the project
provinces to be breastfed in the first hour after birth. Despite variations in starting breastfeeding in the
first hour of life, at least eight in ten newborns are put to the breast within a day of birth.
Percentage of all children who were ever breastfed, and percentage who started
breastfeeding within one hour and within one day of birth, among children born in
the three years before the survey, by background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Residence
Urban 93.9 52.2 81.5 229
Rural 98.5 58.0 88.1 1,092
Project province
No 97.4 61.2 87.1 888
Yes 98.3 48.6 86.8 433
Region
Northern Uplands 96.7 67.6 87.3 254
Red River Delta 99.8 59.0 88.5 277
North Central 100.0 65.3 93.8 161
Central Coast 97.7 62.9 91.3 196
Central Highlands 100.0 39.1 83.3 65
Southeast 93.2 47.5 85.9 133
Mekong River Delta 96.6 42.5 77.8 235
Mother’s education
No education 90.8 50.3 82.4 109
Some primary 97.8 46.0 79.8 188
Completed primary 98.2 57.5 88.3 475
Compl. lower secondary 98.1 64.6 90.4 326
Compl. higher secondary+ 99.3 57.2 87.2 223
Assistance at delivery2
Medically trained 97.6 56.5 88.0 1,124
Traditional midwife 100.0 50.6 79.4 70
Other or none 97.3 65.6 82.2 127
Place of delivery
Health facility 97.6 56.7 87.8 1,036
At home 97.9 58.8 84.2 281
Note: Table is based on all births whether the children are living or dead at the
time of interview.
1
Includes children who started breastfeeding within one hour of birth
2
Doctor, nurse/midwife, or auxiliary midwife
Breast milk alone is considered to be a nutritionally ideal food during the first four to six months
of infancy. Neither plain water, other liquids, nor solid or semi-solid foods are recommended by health
specialists during early infancy. Children who receive breast milk only are defined as exclusively
breastfed. Children who are given breast milk and plain water only are defined as fully breastfed. The
breastfeeding promotion campaign in Vietnam recommends that children be exclusively breastfed during
the first four months of life and that no solid food be given before six months of age.
In the VNDHS 2002, mothers who were breastfeeding a child were asked whether various types
of liquids or solid foods were given to the child at any time during the preceding day or night. This
information is used to determine the proportion of children who are exclusively breastfeeding,
breastfeeding and receiving supplemental foods, or not breastfeeding at all.
Percent distribution of living children under three years of age by breastfeeding status,
according to child's age in months, Vietnam 2002
Breastfeeding and
consuming:
Number
Not Exclusive Plain Supple- of
Age in months breastfeeding breastfeeding water only ments Total children
0-1 1.8 30.8 37.7 29.6 100.0 50
2-3 0.9 12.1 36.1 50.8 100.0 78
4-5 5.5 7.7 19.0 67.9 100.0 67
6-7 8.9 0.0 6.1 85.1 100.0 64
8-9 7.0 0.0 2.4 90.6 100.0 64
10-11 5.2 0.0 9.5 85.4 100.0 66
12-13 14.5 0.0 0.8 84.7 100.0 87
14-15 23.5 0.0 0.0 76.5 100.0 78
16-17 41.9 0.0 0.0 58.1 100.0 82
18-19 53.2 0.0 0.0 46.8 100.0 76
20-21 67.7 0.0 0.0 32.3 100.0 60
22-23 79.7 0.0 0.0 20.3 100.0 73
24-25 89.7 0.0 0.0 10.3 100.0 87
26-27 82.6 0.0 0.0 17.4 100.0 66
28-29 93.6 0.0 0.0 6.4 100.0 73
30-31 93.4 0.0 0.0 6.6 100.0 76
32-33 93.7 0.0 0.0 6.3 100.0 72
34-35 92.4 0.0 3.1 4.5 100.0 83
The percentage of children who are fully breastfed (breast milk and plain water only) drops from
38 percent for children less than two months of age and 36 percent for children 2-3 months of age to 19
percent for children 4-5 months old.
Percentage
100
75
Not BF
Exc. BF
50
BF+Water
BF+Supp.
25
0
0-1 4-5 8-9 12-13 16-17 20-21 24-25 28-29 32-33 .
Age in months
Vietnam 2002
In Vietnam, supplemental foods other than plain water are given to children at an early age.
Among children less than two months of age, 30 percent are given supplements and that proportion
increases to 51 percent among children 2-3 months of age.
Comparison with data from the VNDHS 1997 implies a trend away from exclusive breastfeeding
towards earlier supplementation. For example, the proportion of children under 4 months who are
exclusively breastfed has declined from 27 percent in 1997 to 20 percent in 2002, while the proportion
who are receiving supplementary food in addition to breast milk has increased from 39 to 43 percent.
Estimates of the median duration of breastfeeding are shown in Table 9.3. At the national level,
the median duration of breastfeeding is 18 months. The early introduction of supplements is reflected in
the short duration of exclusive breastfeeding (0.5 months). In addition, relatively few children receive
only plain water in addition to breast milk so that the median duration of full breastfeeding (2.2 months)
also is quite short.
Differentials in the median duration of breastfeeding by background characteristics are not large.
The median duration for each population subgroup is within one or two months of the national median
(18 months) in all groups except for children of uneducated women, who are breastfed for only 15 months
on average. Differentials in exclusive breastfeeding are smaller, with only North Central and the Central
Highlands standing out as having slightly longer durations than average.
Health specialists generally recommend that throughout the first six months of infancy mothers
breastfeed frequently and allow the infant to feed whenever hungry, both day and night, rather than
feeding on a fixed schedule. Frequent suckling stimulates milk production and tends to increase the birth
spacing impact of breastfeeding.
Median durations of any, exclusive, and full breastfeeding, and the percentage of children under six months of age who
were breastfed six or more times in the 24 hours preceding the interview, by background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Breastfeeding children
Median duration of breastfeeding under 6 months1
Number of
Breastfed 6+ children
Any Exclusive Full Number of times in past under
Background characteristic breastfeeding breastfeeding breastfeeding2 children 24 hours 6 months
Sex
Male 17.7 0.6 2.1 682 97.8 97
Female 18.4 0.5 2.6 638 93.9 98
Residence
Urban 18.1 0.6 0.8 229 (84.3) 35
Rural 18.0 0.5 2.4 1,092 98.4 160
Project province
No 17.7 0.5 1.9 888 94.3 121
Yes 18.5 0.7 2.8 433 98.4 74
Region
Northern Uplands 19.1 0.5 0.6 254 (95.0) 25
Red River Delta 18.3 0.6 2.1 277 100.0 56
North Central 18.5 1.8 3.1 161 * 20
Central Coast 16.6 0.4 2.2 196 (100.0) 24
Central Highlands 20.3 2.5 3.6 65 * 7
Southeast 17.4 0.5 1.3 133 * 20
Mekong River Delta 16.2 0.4 2.9 235 (98.4) 44
Education
No education 15.3 0.4 3.1 109 * 6
Some primary 16.9 0.5 3.2 188 (100.0) 23
Completed primary 17.9 0.5 1.8 475 95.4 86
Compl. lower secondary 19.1 0.6 2.3 326 (93.8) 47
Compl. higher secondary+ 18.0 0.6 2.4 223 (100.0) 34
Assistance at delivery
Medically trained 17.4 0.5 2.2 1,124 96.2 182
Traditional midwife 19.7 0.4 2.2 70 * 7
Other or none 20.6 0.4 2.4 127 * 6
Total 18.0 0.5 2.2 1,321 95.9 195
Mean for all children 19.0 1.7 3.8 na na na
Note: Median and mean durations are based on current status. Figures in parentheses are based on 25-49
unweighted cases. An asterisk indicates that a figure is based on fewer than 25 unweighted cases and has been
suppressed.
na = Not applicable
1
Excludes children who do not have a valid answer on the number of times breastfed
2
Either exclusively breastfed or received breast milk and plain water only (excludes other milk)
Table 9.3 also shows information on the frequency of breastfeeding for children under six months
of age during the 24 hours preceding the survey interview. Overall, 96 percent of children under six
months of age were breastfed six or more times in the 24 hours preceding the survey. There are only
small differences in this indicator between population subgroups.
Table 10.1 presents the percentage of women who have ever heard about AIDS and their sources
of information on this issue. In Vietnam, the HIV/AIDS Prevention Office in the Ministry of Health,
which is a member of the National Committee of HIV/AIDS and Social Evils Prevention headed by the
Deputy Prime Minister, is responsible for propagating information on HIV/AIDS. The information im-
parted to people includes information on the modes of HIV/AIDS transmission as well as strategies to
prevent its spread. Vietnamese people receive this information through different channels.
The results in Table 10.1 indicate that knowledge of AIDS is very widespread; 95 percent of
women have heard of AIDS, an increase of 4 percentage points since 1997. Young women (age 15-19)
are the least likely to have heard of AIDS; nevertheless, 91 percent of them said they knew about the dis-
ease. The level of knowledge of AIDS differs by marital status. Ninety-six percent of currently married
women have heard of AIDS, compared with only 89 percent of formerly married (widowed, divorced and
separated) women. Urban women are slightly more likely to have heard of AIDS than rural women (99
vs. 95 percent). The proportion who know of AIDS is the same in the project and nonproject provinces.
Women in the Central Highlands are the least likely to have heard of AIDS (86 percent), while almost all
women in Red River Delta know about AIDS. The largest differentials in knowledge of AIDS are by level
of education. While only three-fourths of uneducated women report knowing of AIDS, virtually all
women who have completed secondary education have heard of AIDS.
Table 10.1 shows that information on AIDS is propagated broadly through different sources. The
most commonly mentioned source of information is television, reported by 85 percent of women, fol-
lowed by radio, reported by 63 percent of women. About one-third of women mention friends and rela-
tives as major sources of information about AIDS, while about one-quarter mention newspapers. Pam-
phlets (18 percent), community meetings (15 percent), and health workers (13 percent) are less frequently
reported sources of information.
In comparison with 1997, only the proportion of women who have heard of AIDS on the radio
declined, while the proportions citing all other sources increased. The proportions of respondents who
indicated pamphlets and leaflets, health workers, and friends or relatives as sources of AIDS information
increased remarkably. For example, pamphlets were mentioned by only 5 percent of respondents in 1997,
but by 18 percent of respondents in 2002. These increases might be caused by the following reasons.
First, in recent years, many pamphlets and leaflets have been printed and distributed free of charge in or-
der to diffuse knowledge on AIDS. Second, health workers have been trained on AIDS and have been
encouraged to discuss AIDS with people in the field. The decrease in the proportion of women hearing
AIDS information on the radio (from 68 to 63 percent) and the increase in television coverage (from 76 to
85 percent) might be caused by respondents’ preference for television over radio. This is understandable,
because television is an audio-visual media, so that television programs are more interesting and attract
more viewers. Also, living standards have increased in recent years, giving more people the chance to
watch television.
Percentage of ever-married women who have heard of AIDS and percentage reporting various sources of information, according to background
characteristics, Vietnam 2002
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Source of information about AIDS
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Community Number
Background Has heard Tele- News- Pamph- Health Church/ meet- Friends/ Work- Other of
characteristic of AIDS Radio vision papers lets worker temple School ings relatives place sources women
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Age
15-19 90.6 67.0 72.9 23.7 13.0 16.0 2.6 6.1 5.1 32.1 2.3 2.0 69
20-24 94.7 60.7 81.4 27.5 15.0 11.8 1.0 2.2 9.3 31.3 2.8 2.1 552
25-29 95.6 61.1 82.2 28.8 17.3 16.9 0.4 2.4 14.7 28.1 4.7 2.3 1,000
30-39 95.7 62.2 85.8 26.7 17.8 12.6 0.5 1.8 15.2 33.6 4.0 2.9 2,203
40-49 95.1 63.9 86.2 26.9 18.6 10.0 0.5 1.6 16.7 31.5 4.5 2.3 1,842
Marital status
Currently married 95.7 62.9 85.1 27.2 17.6 12.8 0.6 1.9 15.1 32.1 4.3 2.5 5,338
Formerly married 89.4 55.8 77.7 25.9 18.1 6.6 0.3 1.2 11.7 25.5 2.2 2.2 327
Residence
Urban 98.8 63.6 94.5 54.1 30.8 9.9 0.8 2.5 11.7 30.5 8.9 4.6 1,081
Rural 94.5 62.2 82.4 20.8 14.5 13.1 0.5 1.8 15.6 32.0 3.0 2.0 4,584
Project province
No 95.4 61.0 84.3 27.7 19.8 12.8 0.6 1.7 15.3 32.5 4.4 3.0 3,814
Yes 95.3 65.5 85.5 26.1 13.2 11.8 0.4 2.3 14.1 30.1 3.7 1.4 1,851
Region
Northern Uplands 93.9 71.0 72.9 20.5 6.6 15.5 0.2 0.5 19.7 28.8 2.2 0.4 1,099
Red River Delta 99.8 81.2 97.2 39.1 19.1 17.3 0.2 2.2 19.8 45.0 5.9 0.1 1,363
North Central 93.8 54.9 82.3 20.0 7.8 11.1 0.7 2.2 15.6 20.6 0.2 0.4 722
Central Coast 91.4 41.1 87.4 29.5 20.2 11.5 0.4 3.4 18.4 26.3 3.1 2.0 594
Central Highlands 85.8 43.2 79.3 25.1 14.1 14.5 3.2 4.1 9.4 27.9 5.7 2.4 183
Southeast 98.2 57.6 91.0 43.0 45.6 6.8 1.6 2.6 12.2 27.0 6.9 5.5 648
Mekong River Delta 94.3 52.9 78.1 13.0 16.0 7.7 0.2 1.0 3.7 31.8 5.2 7.7 1,056
Education
No education 76.4 39.3 39.5 1.6 7.7 14.7 1.1 0.0 9.7 36.9 2.6 3.2 364
Some primary 90.0 47.0 71.0 6.8 14.1 8.9 0.7 0.1 7.7 33.4 2.6 4.5 966
Completed primary 96.7 58.9 86.5 18.6 16.9 11.2 0.4 0.7 14.3 28.6 1.9 2.6 1,599
Compl. lower level 98.5 70.4 93.1 28.8 16.3 13.8 0.4 0.7 17.4 33.2 3.3 1.6 1,783
Compl. higher
secondary+ 99.7 78.1 97.3 68.9 28.7 14.7 0.7 8.6 20.4 30.3 11.8 1.8 953
Total 95.3 62.5 84.7 27.2 17.6 12.5 0.5 1.9 14.9 31.7 4.2 2.5 5,665
Two questions were asked to determine whether respondents know about ways of AIDS preven-
tion. Respondents were first asked “Is there anything a person can do to avoid getting AIDS or the virus
that causes AIDS?” Those who answered affirmatively were asked what a person could do. Table 10.2
shows data on knowledge of AIDS prevention.
Percentage of ever-married women who have heard of AIDS who know of specific ways to avoid AIDS and percentage who have misinformation, by
background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Avoid Avoid
No way sex sex Misinfor-
to Abstain One with with Avoid Avoid Avoid Don’t mation Number
Background avoid from Use sexual prosti- homo- trans- injec- Avoid mosquito Other know about of
characteristic AIDS sex condoms partner tutes sexuals fusions tions kissing bites ways any way1 AIDS women
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Age
15-19 0.9 8.6 41.8 49.4 29.2 5.6 4.2 55.3 0.0 0.0 4.1 18.0 4.1 62
20-24 3.9 3.6 49.7 61.2 27.4 2.4 12.9 52.0 0.2 0.1 7.3 13.1 7.6 522
25-29 1.6 5.7 52.4 68.2 28.3 2.1 14.1 51.7 0.1 0.3 6.6 8.5 7.0 956
30-39 1.6 4.5 51.7 70.8 33.6 3.1 13.3 54.3 0.2 0.8 8.5 7.9 9.3 2,109
40-49 2.4 4.5 47.5 68.2 34.4 2.8 13.6 55.0 0.1 0.5 9.2 10.0 9.8 1,751
Marital status
Currently married 2.1 4.7 50.3 68.7 32.1 2.8 13.5 54.1 0.2 0.5 8.3 9.1 8.9 5,109
Formerly married 1.9 4.4 46.5 60.8 35.6 3.2 11.2 49.9 0.0 0.7 6.3 12.8 7.0 292
Residence
Urban 1.8 3.3 52.4 74.2 42.7 4.9 17.8 59.1 0.1 0.7 8.9 7.0 9.6 1,068
Rural 2.1 5.0 49.6 66.9 29.7 2.3 12.3 52.6 0.2 0.5 8.0 9.9 8.6 4,333
Project province
No 2.1 3.8 51.1 70.1 32.7 2.8 12.9 54.2 0.1 0.6 8.2 9.7 8.8 3,638
Yes 1.9 6.4 48.1 64.7 31.5 2.9 14.4 53.1 0.3 0.4 8.2 8.5 8.8 1,763
Region
Northern Uplands 3.0 5.1 55.2 68.5 13.0 0.8 8.6 56.7 0.0 0.3 10.6 8.6 10.9 1,031
Red River Delta 0.4 7.4 63.9 88.9 28.8 1.9 12.8 81.3 0.2 0.3 9.2 1.1 9.7 1,359
North Central 1.5 6.7 34.0 59.6 23.7 0.9 8.4 33.5 0.2 0.8 8.0 10.1 8.4 677
Central Coast 1.4 0.6 64.7 74.6 31.6 3.5 9.0 43.6 0.0 1.5 3.7 5.7 5.1 543
Central Highlands 0.3 4.1 52.4 77.9 44.4 15.4 10.3 42.0 0.0 0.4 2.5 8.2 2.9 157
Southeast 3.4 3.3 47.6 67.1 54.3 7.5 19.4 50.6 0.5 0.8 8.0 12.7 9.2 637
Mekong River Delta 3.6 2.2 30.4 41.8 47.2 2.1 21.7 37.0 0.1 0.3 8.1 20.8 8.4 996
Education
No education 11.3 7.9 25.2 40.9 21.1 4.0 8.9 25.7 0.4 0.0 2.5 39.8 2.9 278
Some primary 3.7 3.6 36.4 45.7 32.3 2.7 13.9 37.0 0.0 0.2 5.2 21.0 5.4 869
Completed primary 1.9 4.1 47.9 65.3 32.4 2.2 12.1 48.0 0.2 0.6 6.3 9.3 7.0 1,547
Compl. lower level 0.7 4.7 55.3 76.0 29.5 2.0 12.2 62.7 0.2 0.4 11.4 3.4 11.8 1,757
Compl. higher
secondary+ 0.6 5.4 64.1 87.8 40.3 5.0 18.5 70.6 0.1 1.1 9.9 0.6 11.1 950
Total 2.1 4.6 50.1 68.3 32.3 2.8 13.4 53.9 0.1 0.5 8.2 9.3 8.8 5,401
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
1
Believes there is something a person can do to avoid AIDS, but cannot spontaneously mention any specific way
The data indicate that AIDS prevention knowledge is widespread. Only 2 percent of women be-
lieve that there is no way to prevent AIDS. More than two-thirds (68 percent) say that staying with only
one sexual partner can help prevent the spread of the disease, while just over half (54 percent) mentioned
avoiding injections and half mentioned using condoms as means of preventing AIDS. One-third of
women say that AIDS can be prevented by avoiding prostitutes. Nine percent of women say they do not
know any specific way to avoid AIDS but believe that AIDS can be avoided. Younger women and rural
women are generally less likely than other women to know of the various ways to prevent transmission of
HIV. Women in the Mekong River Delta and North Central regions are less likely than women in other
regions to know about the programmatically important ways to prevent AIDS, especially condom use and
remaining faithful to one partner. Table 10.2 also shows differentials in knowledge of AIDS prevention
by education. For most of the major means of transmission, the higher the level of education, the larger
the proportion of women mentioning the means.
In order to collect information on respondents’ perceptions about the risk of getting AIDS, three
questions were included in the VNDHS 2002, namely: “Is it possible for a healthy-looking person to have
the AIDS virus?” “Do you think that persons with AIDS almost never die from the disease, sometimes die
or almost always die from the disease?” and “Do you think your chances of getting AIDS are small, mod-
erate, great or no risk at all?” The results are presented in Table 10.3.
It is encouraging to note that more than three-fourths of women (78 percent) know that a healthy-
looking person can be infected with the AIDS virus, an increase of nine percentage points since 1997 (69
percent). Urban women are more likely to know this fact than rural women (85 vs. 76 percent). The pro-
portion of women who believe that a healthy-looking person can be infected with the AIDS virus is high-
est in Red River Delta (94 percent), and lowest in Mekong River Delta region (56 percent). However, in
both regions, there has been considerable improvement in knowledge since 1997. The proportion of
women who know that a healthy-looking person can be infected with the AIDS virus increases dramati-
cally with level of education, from 36 percent of women with no education to 94 percent of those who
completed higher secondary school.
Almost nine in ten women (88 percent) know that AIDS is almost always fatal. This represents an
increase from the 76 percent who knew this in 1997. In 2002, only 2 percent of women said that AIDS
rarely results in death and only 4 percent said that it sometimes is fatal.
With regard to perceptions of personal risk of getting AIDS, Table 10.3 shows that three-quarters
of women (75 percent) believe that they have no risk at all of getting AIDS, while 23 percent think their
chances are small. Only 2 percent of women think their chances of getting AIDS is moderate or great.
Currently married women and urban women are somewhat more likely than other women to feel they
have some chance of getting AIDS. Women in the Red River Delta region are the most likely to think
they have a small chance of getting AIDS, whereas women in Central Coast region are least likely to be-
lieve they are at any risk.
Percent distribution of ever-married women who know of AIDS by knowledge of HIV/AIDS-related issues and perceptions of risk of AIDS, according
to background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Can a healthy-looking
person have the Respondent’s perception
AIDS virus? Is AIDS a fatal disease? of the risk of getting AIDS
–––––––––––––––––––– ––––––––––––––––––––––––––– ––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Don’t Don’t No Don’t Number
Background know/ Almost Some- Almost know/ risk Small Moderate Great know/ of
characteristic No Yes missing never times always missing at all risk risk risk missing Total women
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Age
15-19 7.8 73.6 18.5 0.0 14.3 76.3 9.4 77.6 19.6 0.0 1.9 0.9 100.0 62
20-24 9.8 77.4 12.9 2.8 4.6 86.3 6.3 73.9 24.0 0.8 1.3 0.0 100.0 522
25-29 10.9 75.5 13.6 1.9 5.1 86.3 6.7 74.5 23.1 1.3 0.8 0.3 100.0 956
30-39 9.0 78.4 12.5 2.1 3.5 88.8 5.7 73.5 23.9 1.5 1.0 0.1 100.0 2,109
40-49 8.3 78.7 13.0 1.8 3.6 88.4 6.2 77.0 20.9 1.3 0.7 0.1 100.0 1,751
Marital status
Currently married 9.2 77.9 12.9 2.1 4.0 87.8 6.1 74.4 23.2 1.3 0.9 0.1 100.0 5,109
Formerly married 8.5 76.4 15.1 0.9 3.8 89.0 6.3 82.7 14.8 1.9 0.7 0.0 100.0 292
Residence
Urban 5.2 84.5 10.3 1.7 4.3 89.6 4.4 69.4 26.6 1.6 2.1 0.3 100.0 1,068
Rural 10.2 76.2 13.6 2.1 4.0 87.4 6.6 76.2 21.8 1.3 0.6 0.1 100.0 4,333
Project province
No 9.3 77.1 13.5 1.7 3.3 88.4 6.6 74.9 22.6 1.3 1.1 0.1 100.0 3,638
Yes 8.8 79.3 11.8 2.7 5.4 86.6 5.3 74.9 23.1 1.4 0.5 0.1 100.0 1,763
Region
Northern Uplands 10.2 80.0 9.8 2.4 5.0 87.7 4.9 68.4 29.6 1.7 0.3 0.0 100.0 1,031
Red River Delta 4.6 93.7 1.6 2.8 4.9 92.0 0.3 58.0 41.6 0.3 0.0 0.0 100.0 1,359
North Central 11.8 76.0 12.2 2.2 5.4 86.9 5.4 85.1 12.7 2.1 0.1 0.0 100.0 677
Central Coast 4.7 80.3 15.1 0.0 0.7 94.5 4.8 94.6 5.3 0.0 0.0 0.1 100.0 543
Central Highlands 5.0 80.9 14.2 2.4 2.3 83.5 11.8 83.3 16.3 0.3 0.0 0.0 100.0 157
Southeast 9.3 73.6 17.0 1.0 3.1 86.2 9.7 80.8 14.2 1.8 2.9 0.3 100.0 637
Mekong River Delta 15.5 56.1 28.4 1.9 3.5 81.0 13.5 81.7 12.8 2.4 2.7 0.4 100.0 996
Education
No education 20.6 36.1 43.3 0.8 2.2 69.5 27.6 78.1 20.4 0.4 0.6 0.5 100.0 278
Some primary 14.2 58.2 27.6 1.9 3.1 78.4 16.6 78.4 18.2 1.9 1.0 0.4 100.0 869
Completed primary 10.4 75.5 14.2 1.5 4.0 89.9 4.6 79.5 18.0 1.1 1.5 0.0 100.0 1,547
Compl. lower level 6.6 87.3 6.1 1.8 5.1 90.9 2.2 73.0 25.3 1.1 0.6 0.1 100.0 1,757
Compl. higher
secondary+ 4.1 94.4 1.5 3.5 3.6 92.7 0.2 66.8 30.6 1.8 0.7 0.0 100.0 950
Total 9.2 77.8 13.0 2.0 4.0 87.8 6.1 74.9 22.7 1.3 0.9 0.1 100.0 5,401
Table 10.4 shows the percentage of women with knowledge of condoms and, among these, the
percentage who know of a source for obtaining them. Almost all ever-married women know about con-
doms (98 percent). There are only small differences in this percentage by background characteristics.
Table 10.4 indicates that the main source for condoms is the public sector (61 percent). The pro-
portion of women who do not know a source for condoms is quite high (18 percent). Lack of knowledge
of a source for condoms among women in the Mekong River Delta, women without education, and
younger women (age 15-19) is twice as high as among all ever-married women in Vietnam. More than
three in ten women who have not completed primary school also do not know a source for condoms. In
contrast, only 5 percent of women who have at least completed higher secondary school do not know a
source.
Among ever-married women who know about AIDS, percentage who know about condoms and among these, percent distribution by
knowledge of a source for condoms, according to background characteristics, Vietnam 2002
Age
15-19 92.5 44.2 0.0 19.2 0.0 36.6 100.0 62
20-24 95.9 58.7 0.6 21.5 0.0 19.2 100.0 522
25-29 97.5 64.7 0.5 19.1 0.4 15.3 100.0 956
30-39 98.1 61.5 0.5 22.3 0.5 15.1 100.0 2,109
40-49 97.7 61.0 0.5 17.8 0.3 20.4 100.0 1,751
Marital status
Currently married 97.8 62.3 0.6 20.5 0.4 16.2 100.0 5,109
Formerly married 93.7 45.4 0.1 14.9 0.0 39.6 100.0 292
Residence
Urban 98.1 43.6 1.6 35.7 0.7 18.3 100.0 1,068
Rural 97.5 65.8 0.3 16.3 0.3 17.3 100.0 4,333
Project province
No 97.6 62.4 0.6 19.2 0.4 17.4 100.0 3,638
Yes 97.5 59.4 0.3 22.2 0.5 17.6 100.0 1,763
Region
Northern Uplands 99.3 77.7 0.2 11.6 0.2 10.3 100.0 1,031
Red River Delta 99.9 57.4 0.1 38.1 0.2 4.1 100.0 1,359
North Central 98.0 68.4 0.0 12.1 0.4 19.2 100.0 677
Central Coast 97.4 64.4 0.8 16.9 0.3 17.6 100.0 543
Central Highlands 94.4 58.0 0.0 12.6 3.3 26.2 100.0 157
Southeast 97.3 49.4 2.4 23.0 0.8 24.4 100.0 637
Mekong River Delta 93.2 51.8 0.6 11.2 0.2 36.1 100.0 996
Education
No education 90.3 58.2 0.2 5.8 0.4 35.4 100.0 278
Some primary 94.8 59.2 0.4 9.0 0.4 31.1 100.0 869
Complete primary 97.3 60.3 0.6 17.1 0.3 21.7 100.0 1,547
Completed lower secondary 99.2 67.0 0.4 21.3 0.3 11.0 100.0 1,757
Compl. higher secondary+ 99.8 55.8 0.9 37.5 0.7 5.1 100.0 950
The questionnaire consisted of four sections. The first two sections were completed in a sample
cluster by obtaining information from “knowledgeable” community informants. Section 1 contained
questions to determine the characteristics of the community and the types of health workers serving the
community (community-based distribution (CBD) workers, family planning fieldworkers, mobile family
planning clinics, etc.). Section 2 collected information on the location of the nearest health facilities
(commune health center, pharmacy, private doctor, etc.) and the services offered at those facilities.
The third and fourth sections of the questionnaire were completed when visiting a) the nearest
commune health center and b) the nearest health center or hospital, if those facilities were located within
30 kilometers of a sample cluster. For each facility visited, information was collected about the services
offered, hours of operation and the staff, equipment, and medicines available at the facility.
This chapter focuses on the information collected in the first two sections of the Commu-
nity/Health Facility Questionnaire. For analysis purposes, the information collected for each sample clus-
ter was linked to the data from the Individual Questionnaires. This linkage allows the analysis to be pre-
sented in terms of the percentage of women and children having access to various types of health ser-
vices.1
Community-based Services
Information on the kinds of family planning services provided at the community level is shown in
Table 11.1. The table indicates that family planning services are available to nearly all currently married
women in the community in which they live. In the project provinces, a high proportion of currently mar-
ried women reside in communities visited by a community-based distribution (CBD) worker (93 percent),
a family planning fieldworker (94 percent), and a mobile family planning clinic (60 percent). In the non-
project provinces, coverage of currently married women is somewhat higher—a CBD worker (97 per-
cent), a family planning fieldworker (98 percent) and a mobile family planning clinic (77 percent).
CBD workers almost always provide pills and condoms to women in the communities they visit,
so that those methods are available from CBD workers to more than 98 percent of currently married
women. Similarly, almost all family planning fieldworkers provide pills and condoms so that they are an
__________________________
1
The analysis of this chapter is presented in terms of the population-based statistics. However, the number of inde-
pendent data observations is the number of sample clusters in the various reporting domains: 50 in rural project ar-
eas, 90 in rural nonproject areas, 26 in urban project areas and 39 in urban nonproject areas. One Commu-
nity/Health Facility Questionnaire was conducted per sample cluster so that the health services data are the same for
all women and children in the sample cluster. As a result of the relatively small number of independent observa-
tions, estimates pertaining to access to health facilities have relatively large sampling variance.
Percentage of currently married women 15-49 living in communities with family planning providers, by
type of provider and method provision, residence, and project province (PP) versus nonproject province
(NPP), Vietnam 2002
Table 11.2 indicates that the vast majority of currently married women live in communities in
which there was a family planning campaign in the year preceding the survey (more than 90 percent of
women). The family planning campaigns covered a broad range of topics with the most prominent being
use of family planning and the benefits of child spacing. Health campaigns covered 85 percent of cur-
rently married women in the year before the survey. Immunization is by far the major topic covered by
health campaigns.
Percentage of currently married women 15-49 who reside in communities with a family planning and/or health
campaign and the message of the campaign in the year preceding the survey, by residence and project province
(PP) versus nonproject province (NPP), Vietnam 2002
Facility-based Services
In section two of the Community/Health Facility Questionnaire, information was collected on the
distance and travel time to the nearest private doctor, pharmacy, commune health center, and hospital or
intercommune health center from which a woman could obtain family planning supplies. Table 11.3
shows the percent distribution of currently married women by distance to the nearest of these facilities.
Overall in the project provinces, 59 percent of currently married women reside within one kilometer of a
family planning provider and another 32 percent are 1 to 4 kilometers from a provider. The situation is
slightly better in the nonproject provinces, where 67 percent of women reside within one kilometer of a
provider and another 27 percent are 1 to 4 kilometers from a provider.
As expected, urban women live closer to a facility providing family planning services than rural
women. In urban areas, for both project and nonproject provinces, at least 84 percent of currently married
women reside within one kilometer of a provider. In rural areas this statistic ranges from 53 percent in
project provinces to 62 percent in nonproject provinces.
Percent distribution of currently married women 15-49 by distance in kilometers to nearest family planning
provider, according to residence and project province (PP) versus nonproject province (NPP), Vietnam 2002
The Community/Health Facility Questionnaire also obtained information on the distance to the
nearest facility from which a woman could obtain specific modern contraceptive methods. As indicated
in Table 11.4, not all methods are equally accessible. Condoms, the pill, and the IUD are more readily
available to women than are injections and female sterilization. Overall, the median distance for currently
married women to a facility providing the pill, the IUD, or condoms is less than two kilometers, while the
median distance to a facility providing injections is 3 kilometers and the median distance to a facility pro-
viding female sterilization is seven kilometers or more. Not surprisingly, rural women have less access
to contraceptive methods than their urban counterparts. The medians and distances are much higher for
rural women wanting to use injections or female sterilization.
Percent distribution of currently married women 15-49 by distance in kilometers to nearest provider of contraceptive
methods and residence, according to specific method and project province (PP) versus nonproject province (NPP),
Vietnam 2002
Female
Distance to nearest
Pill IUD Condom Injection sterilization
provider of specific
family planning method NPP PP NPP PP NPP NP NPP NP NPP PP
Urban
<1 km 62.9 74.8 53.4 61.0 62.9 80.6 39.4 46.8 14.6 8.4
1-4 km 37.1 25.2 46.6 39.0 37.1 19.4 54.8 40.3 57.0 79.0
5-14 km 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 5.8 6.8 26.3 12.6
15-29 km 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 6.1 2.1 0.0
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Median distance <1 <1 <1 <1 <1 <1 1.3 1.7 3.2 2.5
Rural
<1 km 46.2 36.8 24.1 30.3 56.1 42.8 19.5 13.9 2.1 2.5
1-4 km 43.6 49.0 53.2 46.6 35.0 43.0 37.6 43.9 20.4 25.5
5-14 km 9.2 12.8 21.1 20.5 8.8 12.8 26.8 26.4 41.7 49.4
15-29 km 0.0 1.5 0.7 1.5 0.0 1.5 9.4 10.0 29.3 15.1
>= 30 km 1.0 0.0 1.0 1.3 0.0 0.0 6.7 5.8 6.5 7.5
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Median distance 1.3 1.5 2.6 1.8 <1 1.3 4.2 3.7 8.5 9.5
Total
<1 km 49.5 43.2 29.9 35.4 57.5 49.1 23.4 19.4 4.6 3.5
1-4 km 42.3 45.0 51.9 45.3 35.4 39.0 41.0 43.3 27.7 34.5
5-14 km 7.4 10.6 16.9 17.1 7.1 10.6 22.6 23.1 38.6 43.3
15-29 km 0.0 1.2 0.6 1.2 0.0 1.2 7.5 9.3 23.9 12.5
>= 30 km 0.8 0.0 0.8 1.0 0.0 0.0 5.4 4.9 5.2 6.3
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Median distance 1.0 1.3 2.1 1.6 <1 1.0 3.3 3.3 7.6 7.1
Community-based Services
Information on the kinds of health workers (traditional birth attendants, trained midwives and
health fieldworkers) who provide services in the sample clusters is shown in Table 11.5. Overall, the data
show that, according to community informants, the vast majority of women typically give birth in a mod-
ern health facility (around 90 percent). The proportion of women residing in communities served by a
traditional birth attendant is lowest in urban areas (about 3 percent) than in rural areas (16 for nonproject
areas and 23 percent for project areas). Similarly, the proportion of women in communities where there is
a trained midwife tends to be lower in urban areas.
Overall, 77 percent of women live in communities served by a health fieldworker. Rural areas are
better covered by health fieldworkers than urban areas. The most common health topics covered by the
health fieldworkers are oral rehydration therapy (ORT), child growth promotion, and vitamin A. Almost
all communities that are visited by health fieldworkers are visited at least quarterly (more than 83 per-
cent).
Percentage of currently married women 15-49 with community-based health care available, by residence
and project province (PP) versus nonproject province (NPP), Vietnam 2002
Traditional birth attendant in community 2.5 3.0 16.3 23.4 13.5 20.0
Trained midwife serves community 18.7 22.8 21.4 27.7 20.8 26.9
Gives iron supplements 100.0 100.0 89.2 92.3 91.1 93.4
Health fieldworker serves community 49.9 60.9 84.1 80.5 77.3 77.3
Health worker provides:
Basic medicines 78.0 52.6 68.9 74.7 70.0 71.8
ORS instruction/packets 100.0 93.7 98.1 97.2 98.4 96.7
Vitamin A 82.1 89.6 78.3 79.3 78.8 80.6
Growth promotion 85.6 85.6 81.6 88.1 82.2 87.8
Iron tablets 69.8 79.3 64.2 62.8 64.9 65.0
Iodized oil capsules/injections 24.4 43.9 10.1 14.6 12.0 18.5
Antenatal care 26.7 73.4 38.9 35.6 37.3 40.6
Immunization 50.6 73.6 62.6 47.0 61.1 50.5
family planning services 79.6 83.4 71.3 59.0 72.4 62.2
Health fieldworker visits at least quarterly 83.5 100.0 90.7 96.5 89.8 97.0
Facility-based Services
The availability of maternal and child health (MCH) services from fixed facilities is investigated
in terms of the distance women travel to reach such services. The analysis looks at both distance to facili-
ties and distance to specific types of services.
Table 11.6 shows the percentage of currently married women age 15-49 by distance to the nearest
facility providing MCH services. Overall, 40 percent of currently married women are within 1 kilometer
of a facility providing MCH services, while an additional 46 percent are 1-4 kilometers from such a facil-
ity. Thus, more than eight out of ten women (86 percent) live within five kilometers of a facility offering
MCH services. For most women, the commune health center is the closest facility providing MCH ser-
vices, with hospitals and intercommune health centers being farther away and private doctors being
mostly unavailable. Women in project provinces appear to be slightly closer to MCH services than
women in nonproject provinces.
Project province
< 1 km 5.4 37.1 11.9 46.4
1-4 km 29.9 49.7 2.9 40.4
5-9 km 26.3 11.1 2.0 12.0
10-14 km 18.8 0.8 1.4 0.0
15-29 km 11.5 1.2 3.3 1.2
30+ km 3.9 0.0 0.0 0.0
Distance unknown/no service given 4.1 0.0 78.5 0.0
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Median distance 6.3 1.5 <1 1.2
Total
< 1 km 4.7 31.5 10.7 39.7
1-4 km 31.8 52.2 9.1 46.0
5-9 km 28.8 13.9 3.0 12.2
10-14 km 12.6 2.0 0.5 1.7
15-29 km 16.9 0.4 1.1 0.4
30+ km 2.7 0.0 0.0 0.0
Distance unknown/no service given 2.4 0.0 75.7 0.0
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Table 11.7 shows the percentage of currently married women by distance to the nearest provider
of antenatal and delivery care. Overall, approximately 80-85 percent of women live within five kilome-
ters of a facility that offers antenatal care and delivery care. There is little difference in the proportion of
women within five kilometers of these facilities by whether they live in project or nonproject provinces.
The most significant difference in Table 11.7 is that a substantially greater proportion of urban women
than rural women live within 1 kilometer of antenatal and delivery services. Almost all urban women live
within 5 kilometers of such a facility, while around 20 percent of rural women live more than 5 kilome-
ters from a facility providing antenatal or delivery care. The proportion of rural women in project prov-
inces who live more than 5 kilometers from a facility providing antenatal care is slightly lower (16 per-
cent).
Rural
< 1 km 29.9 34.1 26.1 33.7
1-4 km 51.5 50.0 51.1 46.1
5-9 km 15.4 14.3 18.9 14.3
10-14 km 3.2 0.0 3.2 4.4
15-29 km 0.0 1.5 0.7 1.5
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Median distance 2.0 1.6 2.2 1.7
Total
< 1 km 35.3 42.6 27.4 37.7
1-4 km 48.7 44.2 52.3 45.0
5-9 km 13.4 12.0 17.2 12.5
10-14 km 2.6 0.0 2.6 3.7
15-29 km 0.0 1.2 0.6 1.2
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Median distance 1.7 1.3 2.2 1.5
Table 11.8 presents the distribution of children less than 36 months of age by distance to the
nearest facility providing child health care. A large proportion of children live in communities that are
within 5 kilometers of a facility offering immunization services for children (81-89 percent), ORS treat-
ment for diarrhea (81-92 percent), and treatment for children with a cough (76-91 percent). At least 75
percent of children in both project and nonproject provinces live within 5 kilometers of a facility that pro-
vides these child health services; however, children in project provinces tend to be farther from such fa-
cilities than children in nonproject provinces.
Children in urban areas generally live closer to a facility offering immunization, ORS, and treat-
ment of cough than rural children. The median distance to the nearest health facility providing these ser-
vices is less than one kilometer in urban areas. In rural areas of project provinces the median distance to a
facility providing child care is about 1.9 kilometers for immunization, 2.1 kilometers for ORS and 2.3
kilometers for treatment of cough.
The data on distance to health facilities and services available at those facilities indicate that
physical proximity to maternal and child health services is not a major problem in Vietnam. Of course,
there are other dimensions of access than physical proximity and some of those (e.g., staff, equipment,
and medicines at the health facilities) could be investigated through a more extensive analysis of the data
collected by the Community/Health Facility Questionnaire.
Percent distribution of children under 36 months by distance to nearest facility providing specific health services for
children, according to type of service and project province (PP) versus nonproject province (NPP), Vietnam 2002
Rural
< 1 km 32.8 30.7 40.6 26.9 34.5 26.4
1-4 km 54.1 46.5 49.6 51.0 55.3 45.0
5-9 km 13.1 18.2 9.7 17.4 10.2 24.0
15-29 km 0.0 4.6 0.0 4.6 0.0 4.6
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Median distance 1.8 1.9 2.0 2.1 2.0 2.3
Total
<1 38.3 37.2 45.0 32.9 39.0 29.2
1-4 km 51.0 43.4 47.2 48.3 51.7 46.4
5-9 km 10.6 15.5 7.9 14.9 9.3 20.5
15-29 km 0.0 3.9 0.0 3.9 0.0 3.9
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Median distance 1.5 1.7 1.4 1.9 1.7 1.9
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124 | References
SAMPLE IMPLEMENTATION APPENDIX A
Table A.1 Sample implementation
Percent distribution of households and eligible women by results of the household and individual interviews, and household, eligible women
and overall response rates, according to region and urban-rural residence, Vietnam 2002
Region Residence
Northern Red River North Central Coastal Mekong
Result Uplands Delta Central Coast Highlands Southeast River Delta Urban Rural Total
Selected households
Completed (C) 99.6 99.3 98.6 99.6 98.8 98.4 96.6 98.2 98.7 98.6
HH present but no competent
respondent at home (HP) 0.0 0.1 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.0 0.1
Refused (R) 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.0
Dwelling not found (DNF) 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Household absent (HA) 0.2 0.2 0.4 0.1 1.2 0.1 0.6 0.3 0.4 0.3
Dwelling vacant/ address not a
dwelling (DV) 0.2 0.1 0.7 0.1 0.0 0.3 1.1 0.7 0.4 0.4
Dwelling destroy (DD) 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.0 0.1 0.0
Other (O) 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.0 1.0 1.5 0.6 0.4 0.5
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Number of sampled households 1,248 1,469 1,014 728 260 858 1,573 1,690 5,460 7,150
Household response rate (HRR) 100.0 99.7 99.7 100.0 100.0 99.9 100.0 99.8 99.9 99.9
Eligible women
Completed (EWC) 99.6 99.8 99.2 99.8 100.0 98.0 98.9 98.8 99.4 99.3
Not at home (EWNH) 0.4 0.1 0.5 0.0 0.0 1.2 0.9 0.6 0.5 0.5
Refused (EWR) 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.7 0.0 0.4 0.0 0.1
Partly completed (EWPC) 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Incapacitated (EWI) 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.0 0.1
Other (EWO) 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.1
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Number of women 1,085 1,121 773 581 218 691 1,237 1,316 4,390 5,706
Eligible woman response
rate (EWRR) 99.6 99.8 99.2 99.8 100.0 98.0 98.9 98.8 99.4 99.3
Overall response rate (ORR) 99.6 99.5 98.9 99.8 100.0 97.9 98.9 98.5 99.4 99.2
1
Using the number of households falling into specific response categories, the household response rate (HRR) is calculated as:
100 x EWC
––––––––––––––––––
C + HP + R + DNF
2
Using the number of eligible women falling into specific response categories, the eligible woman response rate (EWRR) is calculated as:
100 x EWC
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
EWC + EWNH + EWR + EWPC + EWI + EWO
Appendix A | 125
SAMPLING ERRORS APPENDIX B
The estimates from a sample survey are affected by two types of errors: (1) nonsampling errors,
and (2) sampling errors. Nonsampling errors are the results of mistakes made in implementing data
collection and data processing, such as failure to locate and interview the correct household,
misunderstanding of the questions on the part of either the interviewer or the respondent, and data entry
errors. Although numerous efforts were made during the implementation of the VNDHS 2002 to
minimize this type of error, nonsampling errors are impossible to avoid and difficult to evaluate
statistically.
Sampling errors, on the other hand, can be evaluated statistically. The sample of respondents
selected in the VNDHS 2002 is only one of many samples that could have been selected from the same
population, using the same design and expected size. Each of these samples would yield results that
differ somewhat from the results of the actual sample selected. Sampling errors are a measure of the
variability between all possible samples. Although the degree of variability is not known exactly, it can
be estimated from the survey results.
A sampling error is usually measured in terms of the standard error for a particular statistic
(mean, percentage, etc.), which is the square root of the variance. The standard error can be used to
calculate confidence intervals within which the true value for the population can reasonably be assumed
to fall. For example, for any given statistic calculated from a sample survey, the value of that statistic will
fall within a range of plus or minus two times the standard error of that statistic in 95 percent of all
possible samples of identical size and design.
If the sample of respondents had been selected as a simple random sample, it would have been
possible to use straightforward formulas for calculating sampling errors. However, the VNDHS 2002
sample is the result of a multistage stratified design, and, consequently, it was necessary to use more
complex formulae. The computer software used to calculate sampling errors for the VNDHS 2002 is the
ISSA Sampling Error Module (ISSAS). This module used the Taylor linearization method of variance
estimation for survey estimates that are means or proportions. The Jackknife repeated replication method
is used for variance estimation of more complex statistics such as fertility and mortality rates.
The Taylor linearization method treats any percentage or average as a ratio estimate, r = y/x,
where y represents the total sample value for variable y, and x represents the total number of cases in the
group or subgroup under consideration. The variance of r is computed using the formula given below,
with the standard error being the square root of the variance:
1− f H mh mh 2 zh2
var( r ) =
x2
∑ m − 1 ∑ zhi − m
h=1 h i =1 h
in which
Appendix B | 127
where h represents the stratum which varies from 1 to H,
mh is the total number of enumeration areas selected in the h th stratum,
yhi is the sum of the values of variable y in ith cluster in the h th stratum,
xhi is the sum of the number of cases in ith cluster in the hth stratum, and
f is the overall sampling fraction, which is so small that it is ignored.
The Jackknife repeated replication method derives estimates of complex rates from each of
several replications of the parent sample, and calculates standard errors for these estimates using simple
formulae. Each replication considers all but one clusters in the calculation of the estimates. Pseudo-
independent replications are thus created. In the VNDHS 2002, there were 205 non-empty clusters
(PSUs). Hence, 205 replications were created. The variance of a rate r is calculated as follows:
k
1
SE 2 ( r ) = var( r ) = ∑
k ( k − 1) i=1
(ri − r ) 2
in which
ri = kr − (k − 1 ) r(i)
where r is the estimate computed from the full sample of 205 clusters,
r(i) is the estimate computed from the reduced sample of 204 clusters (ith cluster excluded),
and
k is the total number of clusters.
In addition to the standard error, ISSAS computes the design effect (DEFT) for each estimate,
which is defined as the ratio between the standard error using the given sample design and the standard
error that would result if a simple random sample had been used. A DEFT value of 1.0 indicates that the
sample design is as efficient as a simple random sample, while a value greater than 1.0 indicates the
increase in the sampling error due to the use of a more complex and less statistically efficient design.
ISSAS also computes the relative error and confidence limits for the estimates.
Sampling errors for the VNDHS 2002 are calculated for selected variables considered to be of
primary interest. The results are presented in this appendix for the country as a whole, for urban and rural
areas, for the two program types and for each of 7 regions in the country. For each variable, the type of
statistic (mean, proportion, or rate) and the base population are given in Table B.1. Tables B.2 to B.13
present the value of the statistic (R), its standard error (SE), the number of unweighted (N) and weighted
(WN) cases, the design effect (DEFT), the relative standard error (SE/R), and the 95 percent confidence
limits (R±2SE), for each variable. The DEFT is considered undefined when the standard error
considering simple random sample is zero (when the estimate is close to 0 or 1).
In general, the relative standard error for most estimates for the country as a whole is small,
except for estimates of very small proportions. There are some differentials in the relative standard error
for the estimates of sub-populations. For example, for the variable contraceptive use for currently
married women age 15-49, the relative standard errors as a percent of the estimated mean for the whole
country, for urban areas, and for rural areas are 0.9 percent, 1.4 percent, and 1.1 percent, respectively.
128 | Appendix B
The confidence interval (e.g., as calculated for contraceptive use for currently married women
age 15-49) can be interpreted as follows: the overall national sample proportion is 0.785 and its standard
error is 0.007. Therefore, to obtain the 95 percent confidence limits, one adds and subtracts twice the
standard error to the sample estimate, i.e. 0.785±2(0.007). There is a high probability (95 percent) that
the true average proportion of contraceptive use for currently married women age 15 to 49 is between
0.771 and 0.800.
Appendix B | 129
Table B.1 List of selected variables for sampling errors, Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Variable Estimate Base population
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
No education Proportion Ever-married women 15-49
With secondary education or higher Proportion Ever-married women 15-49
Currently married (in union) Proportion Ever-married women 15-4
Children ever born Mean All women 15-49
Children ever born to women 40-49 Mean All women 15-49
Chlidren ever born to women 35-39 Mean All women 15-49
Children ever born to women 40-44 Mean All women 15-49
Children ever born to women 45-49 Mean All women 15-49
Children surviving Mean All women 15-49
Knowing any contraceptive method Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Knowing any modern contraceptive method Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Ever used any contraceptive method Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using any method Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using any modern contraceptive
method Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using pill Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using IUD Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using condom Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently female sterilization Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using periodic abstinence Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using withdrawal Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Using public sector source Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Want no more children Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Want to delay at least 2 years Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Ideal number of children Mean Ever-married women 15-49
Mother received tetanus injection Proportion Births in last 3 years
Mother received medical care at birth Proportion Births in last 3 years
Child has diarrhea in the last 2 weeks Proportion Children under 3 with diarrhea in last 2 weeks
Child treated with ORS packets Proportion Children under 3 with diarrhea in last 2 weeks
Consulted medical personnel Proportion Children 12-23 months
Child having health card, seen Proportion Children 12-23 months
Child received BCG vaccination Proportion Children 12-23 months
Child received DPT vaccination (3 doses) Proportion Children 12-23 months
Child received polio vaccination (3 doses) Proportion Children 12-23 months
Child received measles vaccination Proportion Children 12-23 months
Child fully inmunized Proportion Children 12-23 months
Total fertility rate (last 5 years) Rate All women
Neonatal mortality rate Rate Number of births in last 5 (10 years)
Infant mortality rate Rate Number of births in last 5 (10 years)
Child mortality rate Rate Number of births in last 5 (10 years)
Under-five mortality rate Rate Number of births in last 5 (10 years)
Postneonatal mortality rate Rate Number of births in last 5 (10 years)
130 | Appendix B
Table B.2 Sampling errors for selected variables, total sample, Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of cases Confidence intervals
Stand- –––––––––––––––– Rela- ––––––––––––––––
ard Un- Weight- Design tive Value- Value+
Value error weighted ed effect error 2SE 2SE
Variable (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
No education 0.064 0.012 5665 5665 3.724 0.189 0.040 0.089
With secondary education or higher 0.483 0.014 5665 5665 2.129 0.029 0.455 0.511
Currently married (in union) 0.942 0.004 5665 5665 1.348 0.004 0.934 0.951
Children ever born 1.728 0.128 8264 8330 1.436 0.074 1.472 1.984
Children ever born to women 40-49 3.362 0.059 2003 1965 1.502 0.018 3.244 3.481
Chlidren ever born to women 35-39 2.595 0.049 1191 1162 1.355 0.019 2.496 2.693
Children ever born to women 40-44 3.084 0.054 1138 1128 1.200 0.017 2.977 3.191
Children ever born to women 45-49 3.736 0.101 865 838 1.488 0.027 3.534 3.939
Children surviving 1.631 0.120 8264 8330 1.427 0.073 1.391 1.870
Knowing any contraceptive method 0.996 0.001 5341 5338 1.234 0.001 0.994 0.998
Knowing any modern contraceptive method 0.995 0.001 5341 5338 1.182 0.001 0.993 0.998
Ever used any contraceptive method 0.905 0.006 5341 5338 1.547 0.007 0.893 0.918
Currently using any method 0.785 0.007 5341 5338 1.290 0.009 0.771 0.800
Currently using any modern contraceptive
method 0.567 0.012 5341 5338 1.765 0.021 0.543 0.591
Currently using pill 0.063 0.006 5341 5338 1.678 0.088 0.052 0.074
Currently using IUD 0.377 0.012 5341 5338 1.812 0.032 0.353 0.401
Currently using condom 0.058 0.004 5341 5338 1.173 0.065 0.051 0.066
Currently female sterilization 0.059 0.004 5341 5338 1.371 0.075 0.050 0.068
Currently using periodic abstinence 0.075 0.005 5341 5338 1.474 0.071 0.064 0.085
Currently using withdrawal 0.143 0.007 5341 5338 1.486 0.050 0.129 0.157
Using public sector source 0.857 0.009 3041 3026 1.340 0.010 0.840 0.874
Want no more children 0.690 0.009 5341 5338 1.471 0.013 0.671 0.709
Want to delay at least 2 years 0.149 0.006 5341 5338 1.188 0.039 0.138 0.161
Ideal number of children 2.377 0.023 5652 5650 2.051 0.010 2.330 2.424
Mother received tetanus injection 0.847 0.016 1317 1321 1.552 0.019 0.815 0.880
Mother received medical care at birth 0.851 0.018 1317 1321 1.640 0.021 0.816 0.886
Child has diarrhea in the last 2 weeks 0.113 0.013 1302 1304 1.495 0.116 0.087 0.140
Child treated with ORS packets 0.404 0.042 138 148 1.025 0.104 0.320 0.488
Consulted medical personnel 0.596 0.055 138 148 1.354 0.093 0.486 0.707
Child having health card, seen 0.399 0.032 467 457 1.401 0.081 0.335 0.463
Child received BCG vaccination 0.934 0.017 467 457 1.444 0.018 0.900 0.968
Child received DPT vaccination (3 doses) 0.724 0.024 467 457 1.143 0.033 0.675 0.772
Child received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.758 0.020 467 457 1.004 0.027 0.717 0.798
Child received measles vaccination 0.832 0.021 467 457 1.215 0.026 0.789 0.875
Child fully immunized 0.667 0.026 467 457 1.191 0.040 0.614 0.720
Total fertility rate (last 5 years) 1.866 0.056 na 37350 1.334 0.030 1.753 1.978
Neonatal mortality rate (last 5 years) 12.187 4.464 5384 5432 1.663 0.366 3.259 21.115
Infant mortality rate (last 5 years) 18.170 4.603 5385 5432 1.518 0.253 8.965 27.375
Child mortality rate (last 5 years) 5.563 1.532 5406 5453 1.127 0.275 2.499 8.626
Under-five mortality rate (last 5 years) 23.632 4.792 5407 5454 1.457 0.203 14.047 33.217
Postneonatal mortality rate (last 5 years) 5.983 1.538 5385 5432 1.113 0.257 2.907 9.059
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
na = Not applicable
Appendix B | 131
Table B.3 Sampling errors for selected variables, Urban area, Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of cases Confidence intervals
Stand- –––––––––––––––– Rela- ––––––––––––––––
ard Un- Weight- Design tive Value- Value+
Value error weighted ed effect error 2SE 2SE
Variable (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Urban residence 1.000 0.000 1300 1081 na 0.000 1.000 1.000
No education 0.016 0.004 1300 1081 1.227 0.265 0.008 0.025
With secondary education or higher 0.675 0.038 1300 1081 2.911 0.056 0.599 0.750
Currently married (in union) 0.930 0.008 1300 1081 1.080 0.008 0.914 0.945
Children ever born 1.246 0.075 2149 1716 0.774 0.060 1.097 1.396
Children ever born to women 40-49 2.431 0.078 566 449 1.454 0.032 2.275 2.587
Chlidren ever born to women 35-39 1.875 0.060 301 246 1.224 0.032 1.756 1.994
Children ever born to women 40-44 2.228 0.079 308 250 1.250 0.036 2.069 2.386
Children ever born to women 45-49 2.687 0.102 258 199 1.152 0.038 2.484 2.891
Children surviving 1.208 0.072 2149 1716 0.766 0.059 1.064 1.351
Knowing any contraceptive method 0.999 0.001 1208 1005 0.901 0.001 0.997 1.000
Knowing any modern contraceptive method 0.999 0.001 1208 1005 0.901 0.001 0.997 1.000
Ever used any contraceptive method 0.916 0.010 1208 1005 1.203 0.010 0.897 0.935
Currently using any method 0.791 0.011 1208 1005 0.969 0.014 0.768 0.814
Currently using any modern contraceptive
method 0.549 0.015 1208 1005 1.014 0.026 0.520 0.578
Currently using pill 0.069 0.009 1208 1005 1.261 0.134 0.050 0.087
Currently using IUD 0.303 0.017 1208 1005 1.251 0.055 0.270 0.336
Currently using condom 0.126 0.011 1208 1005 1.119 0.085 0.105 0.148
Currently female sterilization 0.048 0.006 1208 1005 1.043 0.134 0.035 0.060
Currently using periodic abstinence 0.118 0.017 1208 1005 1.805 0.142 0.084 0.151
Currently using withdrawal 0.123 0.011 1208 1005 1.169 0.090 0.101 0.145
Using public sector source 0.682 0.018 655 552 0.983 0.026 0.646 0.718
Want no more children 0.656 0.022 1208 1005 1.575 0.033 0.613 0.699
Want to delay at least 2 years 0.169 0.015 1208 1005 1.393 0.089 0.139 0.199
Ideal number of children 2.202 0.039 1296 1076 1.924 0.018 2.123 2.281
Mother received tetanus injection 0.926 0.018 267 229 1.077 0.019 0.891 0.961
Mother received medical care at birth 0.990 0.006 267 229 1.006 0.006 0.978 1.000
Child has diarrhea in the last 2 weeks 0.035 0.011 266 228 0.980 0.311 0.013 0.056
Child treated with ORS packets 0.451 0.150 12 8 0.929 0.332 0.151 0.750
Consulted medical personnel 0.448 0.150 12 8 0.929 0.334 0.149 0.748
Child having health card, seen 0.589 0.054 99 85 1.105 0.092 0.481 0.697
Child received BCG vaccination 0.991 0.001 99 85 0.145 0.001 0.988 0.994
Child received DPT vaccination (3 doses) 0.897 0.034 99 85 1.117 0.038 0.829 0.964
Child received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.948 0.017 99 85 0.758 0.018 0.915 0.982
Child received measles vaccination 0.943 0.021 99 85 0.909 0.022 0.901 0.984
Child fully immunized 0.871 0.040 99 85 1.196 0.046 0.791 0.950
Total fertility rate (last 5 years) 1.401 0.059 na 25714 1.089 0.042 1.283 1.519
Neonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 8.992 3.378 935 773 0.998 0.376 2.236 15.747
Infant mortality rate (last 10 years) 12.116 3.984 935 773 1.042 0.329 4.149 20.084
Child mortality rate (last 10 years) 4.092 2.121 938 775 1.128 0.518 0.000 8.334
Under-five mortality rate (last 10 years) 16.159 4.355 938 775 1.046 0.270 7.448 24.869
Postneonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 3.125 1.775 935 773 0.969 0.568 0.000 6.674
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
na = Not applicable
132 | Appendix B
Table B.4 Sampling errors for selected variables, Rural area, Vietnam 2002
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of cases Confidence intervals
Stand- –––––––––––––––– Rela- ––––––––––––––––
ard Un- Weight- Design tive Value- Value+
Value error weighted ed effect error 2SE 2SE
Variable (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Urban residence 0.000 0.000 4365 4584 na na 0.000 0.000
No education 0.076 0.015 4365 4584 3.726 0.197 0.046 0.105
With secondary education or higher 0.438 0.015 4365 4584 1.954 0.034 0.408 0.467
Currently married (in union) 0.945 0.005 4365 4584 1.406 0.005 0.936 0.955
Children ever born 1.857 0.146 6284 6599 1.422 0.079 1.564 2.150
Children ever born to women 40-49 3.643 0.073 1440 1514 1.523 0.020 3.497 3.789
Chlidren ever born to women 35-39 2.788 0.060 891 916 1.399 0.022 2.669 2.908
Children ever born to women 40-44 3.345 0.063 829 873 1.178 0.019 3.219 3.471
Children ever born to women 45-49 4.049 0.126 611 641 1.510 0.031 3.796 4.301
Children surviving 1.745 0.137 6284 6599 1.414 0.078 1.472 2.018
Knowing any contraceptive method 0.996 0.001 4133 4333 1.227 0.001 0.993 0.998
Knowing any modern contraceptive method 0.995 0.001 4133 4333 1.170 0.001 0.992 0.997
Ever used any contraceptive method 0.903 0.007 4133 4333 1.585 0.008 0.888 0.918
Currently using any method 0.784 0.009 4133 4333 1.332 0.011 0.767 0.801
Currently using any modern contraceptive
method 0.571 0.014 4133 4333 1.861 0.025 0.542 0.600
Currently using pill 0.062 0.007 4133 4333 1.743 0.106 0.049 0.075
Currently using IUD 0.395 0.014 4133 4333 1.858 0.036 0.366 0.423
Currently using condom 0.042 0.004 4133 4333 1.191 0.088 0.035 0.050
Currently female sterilization 0.062 0.005 4133 4333 1.397 0.084 0.052 0.073
Currently using periodic abstinence 0.065 0.005 4133 4333 1.329 0.079 0.054 0.075
Currently using withdrawal 0.148 0.008 4133 4333 1.526 0.057 0.131 0.165
Using public sector source 0.896 0.009 2386 2474 1.501 0.010 0.877 0.915
Want no more children 0.698 0.010 4133 4333 1.430 0.015 0.677 0.718
Want to delay at least 2 years 0.145 0.006 4133 4333 1.122 0.042 0.133 0.157
Ideal number of children 2.418 0.027 4356 4574 2.024 0.011 2.364 2.472
Mother received tetanus injection 0.831 0.019 1050 1092 1.529 0.023 0.793 0.869
Mother received medical care at birth 0.822 0.020 1050 1092 1.571 0.025 0.781 0.862
Child has diarrhea in the last 2 weeks 0.130 0.015 1036 1076 1.449 0.118 0.099 0.160
Child treated with ORS packets 0.401 0.043 126 140 1.010 0.108 0.314 0.488
Consulted medical personnel 0.605 0.058 126 140 1.349 0.096 0.489 0.720
Child having health card, seen 0.356 0.037 368 372 1.432 0.103 0.283 0.429
Child received BCG vaccination 0.921 0.021 368 372 1.422 0.023 0.879 0.962
Child received DPT vaccination (3 doses) 0.684 0.026 368 372 1.060 0.038 0.632 0.737
Child received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.714 0.023 368 372 0.945 0.032 0.669 0.760
Child received measles vaccination 0.807 0.025 368 372 1.201 0.031 0.756 0.858
Child fully inmunized 0.621 0.028 368 372 1.098 0.046 0.564 0.678
Total fertility rate (last 5 years) 1.995 0.069 na 29477 1.366 0.035 1.856 2.133
Neonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 18.867 3.826 4449 4658 1.652 0.203 11.214 26.519
Infant mortality rate (last 10 years) 26.934 3.968 4450 4659 1.497 0.147 18.998 34.870
Child mortality rate (last 10 years) 8.879 1.622 4468 4678 1.098 0.183 5.634 12.123
Under-five mortality rate (last 10 years) 35.574 4.309 4469 4679 1.424 0.121 26.955 44.193
Postneonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 8.067 1.461 4450 4659 1.105 0.181 5.145 10.990
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
na = Not applicable
Appendix B | 133
Table B.5 Sampling errors for selected variables, no special project, Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of cases Confidence intervals
Stand- –––––––––––––––– Rela- ––––––––––––––––
ard Un- Weight- Design tive Value- Value+
Value error weighted ed effect error 2SE 2SE
Variable (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Urban residence 0.203 0.015 3591 3814 2.239 0.074 0.173 0.233
No education 0.062 0.014 3591 3814 3.481 0.225 0.034 0.091
With secondary education or higher 0.461 0.017 3591 3814 2.025 0.037 0.427 0.495
Currently married (in union) 0.940 0.005 3591 3814 1.380 0.006 0.929 0.951
Children ever born 1.715 0.150 5424 5641 1.103 0.087 1.415 2.015
Children ever born to women 40-49 3.344 0.075 1276 1308 1.506 0.022 3.193 3.494
Chlidren ever born to women 35-39 2.613 0.061 763 791 1.314 0.023 2.492 2.735
Children ever born to women 40-44 3.056 0.069 719 750 1.204 0.023 2.918 3.194
Children ever born to women 45-49 3.729 0.125 557 558 1.476 0.034 3.479 3.980
Children surviving 1.612 0.140 5424 5641 1.095 0.087 1.332 1.891
Knowing any contraceptive method 0.997 0.001 3378 3586 0.973 0.001 0.996 0.999
Knowing any modern contraceptive method 0.997 0.001 3378 3586 0.926 0.001 0.995 0.998
Ever used any contraceptive method 0.907 0.008 3378 3586 1.558 0.009 0.891 0.922
Currently using any method 0.790 0.008 3378 3586 1.108 0.010 0.775 0.806
Currently using any modern contraceptive
method 0.569 0.016 3378 3586 1.823 0.027 0.538 0.600
Currently using pill 0.070 0.007 3378 3586 1.707 0.107 0.055 0.085
Currently using IUD 0.375 0.015 3378 3586 1.768 0.039 0.345 0.404
Currently using condom 0.063 0.005 3378 3586 1.198 0.080 0.053 0.073
Currently female sterilization 0.055 0.005 3378 3586 1.215 0.087 0.046 0.065
Currently using periodic abstinence 0.071 0.006 3378 3586 1.341 0.083 0.059 0.083
Currently using withdrawal 0.149 0.010 3378 3586 1.566 0.064 0.130 0.169
Using public sector source 0.845 0.012 1943 2041 1.428 0.014 0.821 0.868
Want no more children 0.684 0.012 3378 3586 1.487 0.017 0.660 0.707
Want to delay at least 2 years 0.152 0.007 3378 3586 1.180 0.048 0.137 0.166
Ideal number of children 2.390 0.024 3585 3808 1.732 0.010 2.342 2.439
Mother received tetanus injection 0.861 0.016 822 888 1.260 0.019 0.829 0.893
Mother received medical care at birth 0.867 0.019 822 888 1.528 0.022 0.828 0.906
Child has diarrhea in the last 2 weeks 0.117 0.018 812 875 1.598 0.154 0.081 0.153
Child treated with ORS packets 0.398 0.048 89 103 0.943 0.120 0.302 0.493
Consulted medical personnel 0.587 0.069 89 103 1.357 0.117 0.450 0.724
Child having health card, seen 0.373 0.036 294 303 1.252 0.096 0.302 0.445
Child received BCG vaccination 0.945 0.021 294 303 1.536 0.022 0.903 0.986
Child received DPT vaccination (3 doses) 0.729 0.032 294 303 1.216 0.044 0.665 0.793
Child received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.759 0.027 294 303 1.057 0.035 0.705 0.812
Child received measles vaccination 0.843 0.028 294 303 1.321 0.034 0.786 0.900
Child fully inmunized 0.681 0.033 294 303 1.193 0.048 0.615 0.747
Total fertility rate (last 5 years) 1.830 0.066 na 25714 1.207 0.036 1.698 1.962
Neonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 18.669 4.711 3425 3705 1.758 0.252 9.248 28.091
Infant mortality rate (last 10 years) 26.212 4.863 3425 3705 1.617 0.186 16.486 35.938
Child mortality rate (last 10 years) 8.095 1.908 3440 3721 1.221 0.236 4.278 11.912
Under-five mortality rate (last 10 years) 34.094 5.281 3440 3721 1.553 0.155 23.533 44.655
Postneonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 7.542 1.623 3425 3705 1.123 0.215 4.296 10.788
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
na = Not applicable
134 | Appendix B
Table B.6 Sampling errors for selected variables, special project, Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of cases Confidence intervals
Stand- –––––––––––––––– Rela- ––––––––––––––––
ard Un- Weight- Design tive Value- Value+
Value error weighted ed effect error 2SE 2SE
Variable (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Urban residence 0.165 0.019 2074 1851 2.354 0.116 0.127 0.203
No education 0.068 0.023 2074 1851 4.212 0.342 0.022 0.115
With secondary education or higher 0.528 0.026 2074 1851 2.369 0.049 0.476 0.580
Currently married (in union) 0.947 0.006 2074 1851 1.197 0.006 0.935 0.959
Children ever born 1.756 0.150 3064 2687 1.058 0.085 1.456 2.055
Children ever born to women 40-49 3.404 0.095 724 657 1.478 0.028 3.214 3.595
Chlidren ever born to women 35-39 2.553 0.079 428 371 1.368 0.031 2.394 2.711
Children ever born to women 40-44 3.157 0.085 416 376 1.188 0.027 2.987 3.327
Children ever born to women 45-49 3.736 0.170 308 281 1.495 0.046 3.395 4.076
Children surviving 1.673 0.143 3064 2687 1.061 0.085 1.387 1.959
Knowing any contraceptive method 0.993 0.003 1963 1752 1.462 0.003 0.988 0.999
Knowing any modern contraceptive method 0.993 0.003 1963 1752 1.462 0.003 0.988 0.999
Ever used any contraceptive method 0.903 0.010 1963 1752 1.506 0.011 0.883 0.923
Currently using any method 0.775 0.015 1963 1752 1.632 0.020 0.745 0.806
Currently using any modern contraceptive
method 0.562 0.018 1963 1752 1.587 0.032 0.527 0.598
Currently using pill 0.050 0.008 1963 1752 1.534 0.152 0.035 0.065
Currently using IUD 0.383 0.021 1963 1752 1.897 0.054 0.341 0.424
Currently using condom 0.048 0.005 1963 1752 1.001 0.100 0.039 0.058
Currently female sterilization 0.068 0.009 1963 1752 1.641 0.137 0.049 0.087
Currently using periodic abstinence 0.082 0.011 1963 1752 1.708 0.129 0.061 0.103
Currently using withdrawal 0.130 0.009 1963 1752 1.220 0.071 0.112 0.149
Using public sector source 0.882 0.010 1098 985 0.983 0.011 0.863 0.901
Want no more children 0.703 0.015 1963 1752 1.418 0.021 0.673 0.732
Want to delay at least 2 years 0.144 0.009 1963 1752 1.196 0.066 0.125 0.163
Ideal number of children 2.349 0.052 2067 1842 2.579 0.022 2.245 2.452
Mother received tetanus injection 0.819 0.037 495 433 2.000 0.046 0.745 0.894
Mother received medical care at birth 0.817 0.036 495 433 1.865 0.044 0.746 0.889
Child has diarrhea in the last 2 weeks 0.105 0.016 490 429 1.122 0.149 0.074 0.136
Child treated with ORS packets 0.418 0.085 49 45 1.208 0.203 0.249 0.588
Consulted medical personnel 0.618 0.091 49 45 1.302 0.147 0.436 0.800
Child having health card, seen 0.450 0.061 173 154 1.609 0.137 0.327 0.572
Child received BCG vaccination 0.912 0.031 173 154 1.373 0.034 0.850 0.974
Child received DPT vaccination (3 doses) 0.713 0.034 173 154 0.974 0.048 0.646 0.781
Child received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.755 0.029 173 154 0.872 0.038 0.697 0.813
Child received measles vaccination 0.811 0.030 173 154 0.998 0.037 0.750 0.871
Child fully inmunized 0.639 0.045 173 154 1.215 0.070 0.549 0.729
Total fertility rate (last 5 years) 1.934 0.117 na 12357 1.431 0.060 1.701 2.168
Neonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 14.845 2.996 1959 1727 1.076 0.202 8.852 20.837
Infant mortality rate (last 10 years) 21.846 3.481 1960 1727 1.023 0.159 14.883 28.808
Child mortality rate (last 10 years) 8.480 2.090 1966 1733 0.957 0.246 4.301 12.660
Under-five mortality rate (last 10 years) 30.141 4.130 1967 1733 1.052 0.137 21.881 38.401
Postneonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 7.001 2.055 1960 1727 1.098 0.294 2.891 11.111
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
na = Not applicable
Appendix B | 135
Table B.7 Sampling errors for selected variables, Northern Uplands, Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of cases Confidence intervals
Stand- –––––––––––––––– Rela- ––––––––––––––––
ard Un- Weight- Design tive Value- Value+
Value error weighted ed effect error 2SE 2SE
Variable (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Urban residence 0.098 0.018 1081 1099 1.941 0.180 0.063 0.133
No education 0.125 0.049 1081 1099 4.893 0.393 0.027 0.224
With secondary education or higher 0.409 0.024 1081 1099 1.614 0.059 0.360 0.457
Currently married (in union) 0.954 0.010 1081 1099 1.626 0.011 0.934 0.975
Children ever born 2.036 0.282 1518 1525 1.195 0.139 1.471 2.600
Children ever born to women 40-49 3.886 0.169 356 354 1.654 0.044 3.548 4.225
Chlidren ever born to women 35-39 3.018 0.129 229 212 1.480 0.043 2.760 3.277
Children ever born to women 40-44 3.541 0.142 209 212 1.346 0.040 3.257 3.825
Children ever born to women 45-49 4.399 0.312 148 143 1.628 0.071 3.774 5.024
Children surviving 1.893 0.259 1518 1525 1.181 0.137 1.375 2.411
Knowing any contraceptive method 1.000 0.000 1032 1049 na 0.000 1.000 1.000
Knowing any modern contraceptive method 1.000 0.000 1032 1049 na 0.000 1.000 1.000
Ever used any contraceptive method 0.910 0.022 1032 1049 2.482 0.024 0.866 0.954
Currently using any method 0.784 0.017 1032 1049 1.324 0.022 0.750 0.818
Currently using any modern contraceptive
method 0.566 0.043 1032 1049 2.797 0.076 0.479 0.652
Currently using pill 0.047 0.015 1032 1049 2.277 0.319 0.017 0.077
Currently using IUD 0.444 0.039 1032 1049 2.537 0.088 0.366 0.523
Currently using condom 0.037 0.006 1032 1049 1.069 0.169 0.025 0.050
Currently female sterilization 0.032 0.009 1032 1049 1.624 0.279 0.014 0.050
Currently using periodic abstinence 0.053 0.013 1032 1049 1.825 0.240 0.028 0.078
Currently using withdrawal 0.164 0.029 1032 1049 2.536 0.178 0.106 0.223
Using public sector source 0.936 0.013 589 593 1.273 0.014 0.910 0.961
Want no more children 0.769 0.026 1032 1049 2.009 0.034 0.716 0.822
Want to delay at least 2 years 0.121 0.013 1032 1049 1.292 0.108 0.095 0.148
Ideal number of children 2.342 0.070 1081 1099 2.931 0.030 2.202 2.482
Mother received tetanus injection 0.729 0.065 248 254 2.042 0.089 0.600 0.858
Mother received medical care at birth 0.559 0.045 248 254 1.311 0.080 0.469 0.649
Child has diarrhea in the last 2 weeks 0.162 0.041 244 247 1.769 0.255 0.079 0.244
Child treated with ORS packets 0.334 0.109 31 40 1.441 0.325 0.117 0.551
Consulted medical personnel 0.510 0.146 31 40 1.824 0.286 0.219 0.801
Child having health card, seen 0.141 0.069 94 95 1.913 0.489 0.003 0.279
Child received BCG vaccination 0.905 0.032 94 95 0.994 0.035 0.841 0.969
Child received DPT vaccination (3 doses) 0.498 0.053 94 95 1.021 0.107 0.392 0.604
Child received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.562 0.054 94 95 1.051 0.097 0.453 0.670
Child received measles vaccination 0.795 0.060 94 95 1.411 0.076 0.674 0.916
Child fully inmunized 0.451 0.056 94 95 1.086 0.125 0.338 0.563
Total fertility rate (last 5 years) 2.007 0.191 na 6719 1.358 0.095 1.625 2.388
Neonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 31.612 13.040 1053 1139 2.010 0.412 5.532 57.691
Infant mortality rate (last 10 years) 40.860 12.154 1053 1139 1.744 0.297 16.551 65.169
Child mortality rate (last 10 years) 11.380 4.934 1059 1149 1.485 0.434 1.512 21.249
Under-five mortality rate (last 10 years) 51.775 11.208 1059 1149 1.477 0.216 29.360 74.191
Postneonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 9.248 3.954 1053 1139 1.401 0.428 1.340 17.157
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
na = Not applicable
136 | Appendix B
Table B.8 Sampling errors for selected variables, Red River Delta, Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of cases Confidence intervals
Stand- –––––––––––––––– Rela- ––––––––––––––––
ard Un- Weight- Design tive Value- Value+
Value error weighted ed effect error 2SE 2SE
Variable (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Urban residence 0.210 0.036 1119 1363 2.997 0.174 0.137 0.282
No education 0.001 0.001 1119 1363 0.904 0.998 0.000 0.002
With secondary education or higher 0.817 0.023 1119 1363 2.027 0.029 0.771 0.864
Currently married (in union) 0.959 0.005 1119 1363 0.835 0.005 0.949 0.969
Children ever born 1.547 0.142 1528 1891 1.253 0.092 1.262 1.831
Children ever born to women 40-49 2.608 0.081 421 502 1.493 0.031 2.446 2.770
Chlidren ever born to women 35-39 2.243 0.073 244 289 1.404 0.033 2.097 2.390
Children ever born to women 40-44 2.450 0.078 239 290 1.263 0.032 2.293 2.607
Children ever born to women 45-49 2.824 0.108 182 212 1.156 0.038 2.609 3.039
Children surviving 1.487 0.137 1528 1891 1.254 0.092 1.214 1.760
Knowing any contraceptive method 1.000 0.000 1070 1307 na 0.000 1.000 1.000
Knowing any modern contraceptive method 0.999 0.001 1070 1307 0.952 0.001 0.997 1.000
Ever used any contraceptive method 0.939 0.008 1070 1307 1.133 0.009 0.922 0.955
Currently using any method 0.828 0.014 1070 1307 1.253 0.017 0.799 0.857
Currently using any modern contraceptive
method 0.594 0.024 1070 1307 1.627 0.041 0.545 0.643
Currently using pill 0.045 0.011 1070 1307 1.709 0.241 0.023 0.067
Currently using IUD 0.422 0.027 1070 1307 1.801 0.064 0.368 0.477
Currently using condom 0.070 0.009 1070 1307 1.197 0.133 0.052 0.089
Currently female sterilization 0.050 0.008 1070 1307 1.239 0.166 0.033 0.066
Currently using periodic abstinence 0.108 0.014 1070 1307 1.503 0.132 0.080 0.137
Currently using withdrawal 0.126 0.009 1070 1307 0.933 0.075 0.107 0.145
Using public sector source 0.889 0.013 635 776 1.003 0.014 0.864 0.914
Want no more children 0.738 0.021 1070 1307 1.586 0.029 0.696 0.781
Want to delay at least 2 years 0.134 0.014 1070 1307 1.313 0.102 0.106 0.161
Ideal number of children 2.096 0.022 1118 1361 1.434 0.010 2.053 2.140
Mother received tetanus injection 0.971 0.009 221 277 0.786 0.009 0.953 0.990
Mother received medical care at birth 1.000 0.000 221 277 na 0.000 1.000 1.000
Child has diarrhea in the last 2 weeks 0.078 0.020 220 275 1.112 0.252 0.038 0.117
Child treated with ORS packets 0.464 0.121 18 21 1.016 0.261 0.222 0.706
Consulted medical personnel 0.616 0.113 18 21 0.973 0.184 0.390 0.842
Child having health card, seen 0.653 0.053 71 88 0.948 0.081 0.546 0.759
Child received BCG vaccination 1.000 0.000 71 88 na 0.000 1.000 1.000
Child received DPT vaccination (3 doses) 0.904 0.044 71 88 1.267 0.048 0.817 0.992
Child received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.960 0.021 71 88 0.912 0.022 0.917 1.000
Child received measles vaccination 0.980 0.016 71 88 0.984 0.017 0.947 1.000
Child fully inmunized 0.884 0.052 71 88 1.380 0.059 0.780 0.988
Total fertility rate (last 5 years) 1.645 0.095 na 9006 1.371 0.058 1.454 1.836
Neonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 15.853 5.612 855 1044 1.325 0.354 4.629 27.078
Infant mortality rate (last 10 years) 20.537 6.262 855 1044 1.304 0.305 8.014 33.061
Child mortality rate (last 10 years) 5.926 2.287 856 1045 0.946 0.386 1.352 10.499
Under-five mortality rate (last 10 years) 26.341 6.863 856 1045 1.252 0.261 12.615 40.067
Postneonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 4.684 2.245 855 1044 0.973 0.479 0.195 9.173
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
na = Not applicable
Appendix B | 137
Table B.9 Sampling errors for selected variables, North Central, Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of cases Confidence intervals
Stand- –––––––––––––––– Rela- ––––––––––––––––
ard Un- Weight- Design tive Value- Value+
Value error weighted ed effect error 2SE 2SE
Variable (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Urban residence 0.091 0.011 767 722 1.100 0.125 0.069 0.114
No education 0.024 0.011 767 722 1.980 0.460 0.002 0.045
With secondary education or higher 0.555 0.043 767 722 2.371 0.077 0.470 0.641
Currently married (in union) 0.938 0.021 767 722 2.378 0.022 0.896 0.979
Children ever born 1.933 0.327 1156 1074 1.195 0.169 1.280 2.587
Children ever born to women 40-49 3.816 0.156 276 248 1.601 0.041 3.503 4.128
Chlidren ever born to women 35-39 2.898 0.139 158 150 1.453 0.048 2.619 3.176
Children ever born to women 40-44 3.551 0.169 154 143 1.519 0.048 3.213 3.888
Children ever born to women 45-49 4.173 0.200 122 106 1.197 0.048 3.772 4.574
Children surviving 1.836 0.312 1156 1074 1.200 0.170 1.213 2.459
Knowing any contraceptive method 0.995 0.002 729 677 0.900 0.002 0.990 1.000
Knowing any modern contraceptive method 0.994 0.003 729 677 0.894 0.003 0.989 0.999
Ever used any contraceptive method 0.925 0.015 729 677 1.525 0.016 0.895 0.954
Currently using any method 0.798 0.016 729 677 1.085 0.020 0.766 0.830
Currently using any modern contraceptive
method 0.573 0.022 729 677 1.209 0.039 0.529 0.617
Currently using pill 0.031 0.010 729 677 1.506 0.311 0.012 0.051
Currently using IUD 0.424 0.022 729 677 1.188 0.051 0.381 0.468
Currently using condom 0.039 0.004 729 677 0.616 0.113 0.031 0.048
Currently female sterilization 0.062 0.014 729 677 1.588 0.229 0.034 0.090
Currently using periodic abstinence 0.084 0.010 729 677 0.940 0.115 0.065 0.104
Currently using withdrawal 0.139 0.010 729 677 0.798 0.074 0.118 0.159
Using public sector source 0.969 0.009 439 388 1.094 0.009 0.951 0.987
Want no more children 0.732 0.023 729 677 1.424 0.032 0.686 0.779
Want to delay at least 2 years 0.126 0.014 729 677 1.103 0.108 0.099 0.153
Ideal number of children 2.407 0.034 766 721 1.172 0.014 2.338 2.476
Mother received tetanus injection 0.893 0.028 171 161 1.185 0.031 0.837 0.949
Mother received medical care at birth 0.817 0.057 171 161 1.820 0.070 0.702 0.932
Child has diarrhea in the last 2 weeks 0.089 0.035 168 159 1.616 0.390 0.019 0.158
Child treated with ORS packets 0.467 0.094 13 14 0.730 0.202 0.278 0.655
Consulted medical personnel 0.565 0.109 13 14 0.847 0.192 0.348 0.783
Child having health card, seen 0.288 0.093 74 63 1.684 0.325 0.101 0.474
Child received BCG vaccination 0.934 0.021 74 63 0.684 0.022 0.892 0.975
Child received DPT vaccination (3 doses) 0.591 0.056 74 63 0.928 0.095 0.480 0.703
Child received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.637 0.048 74 63 0.807 0.075 0.541 0.732
Child received measles vaccination 0.819 0.035 74 63 0.740 0.043 0.749 0.889
Child fully inmunized 0.559 0.050 74 63 0.815 0.089 0.460 0.658
Total fertility rate (last 5 years) 1.922 0.096 na 4886 0.979 0.050 1.731 2.114
Neonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 17.818 5.160 872 820 1.043 0.290 7.498 28.139
Infant mortality rate (last 10 years) 30.889 8.302 872 820 1.303 0.269 14.285 47.494
Child mortality rate (last 10 years) 5.547 2.757 875 822 1.110 0.497 0.033 11.061
Under-five mortality rate (last 10 years) 36.265 9.613 875 822 1.430 0.265 17.039 55.490
Postneonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 13.071 4.660 872 820 1.249 0.357 3.751 22.391
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
na = Not applicable
138 | Appendix B
Table B.10 Sampling errors for selected variables, Central Coast, Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of cases Confidence intervals
Stand- –––––––––––––––– Rela- ––––––––––––––––
ard Un- Weight- Design tive Value- Value+
Value error weighted ed effect error 2SE 2SE
Variable (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Urban residence 0.221 0.019 580 594 1.088 0.085 0.183 0.258
No education 0.054 0.020 580 594 2.116 0.366 0.015 0.094
With secondary education or higher 0.429 0.040 580 594 1.943 0.093 0.349 0.509
Currently married (in union) 0.921 0.012 580 594 1.066 0.013 0.897 0.945
Children ever born 1.865 0.231 813 855 1.293 0.124 1.404 2.326
Children ever born to women 40-49 3.572 0.217 181 174 1.481 0.061 3.138 4.005
Chlidren ever born to women 35-39 3.007 0.157 118 116 1.104 0.052 2.694 3.321
Children ever born to women 40-44 3.181 0.187 102 94 1.107 0.059 2.808 3.555
Children ever born to women 45-49 4.031 0.397 79 80 1.650 0.098 3.237 4.825
Children surviving 1.753 0.212 813 855 1.274 0.121 1.328 2.177
Knowing any contraceptive method 0.993 0.004 537 547 1.225 0.004 0.985 1.000
Knowing any modern contraceptive method 0.991 0.005 537 547 1.185 0.005 0.982 1.000
Ever used any contraceptive method 0.891 0.016 537 547 1.220 0.018 0.858 0.924
Currently using any method 0.772 0.024 537 547 1.327 0.031 0.724 0.820
Currently using any modern contraceptive
method 0.587 0.027 537 547 1.280 0.046 0.533 0.642
Currently using pill 0.035 0.011 537 547 1.440 0.326 0.012 0.058
Currently using IUD 0.362 0.033 537 547 1.582 0.091 0.297 0.428
Currently using condom 0.108 0.017 537 547 1.302 0.162 0.073 0.143
Currently female sterilization 0.070 0.013 537 547 1.154 0.182 0.044 0.095
Currently using periodic abstinence 0.035 0.006 537 547 0.738 0.168 0.023 0.046
Currently using withdrawal 0.150 0.017 537 547 1.097 0.113 0.116 0.184
Using public sector source 0.823 0.036 315 321 1.690 0.044 0.750 0.895
Want no more children 0.652 0.035 537 547 1.689 0.053 0.582 0.721
Want to delay at least 2 years 0.192 0.023 537 547 1.340 0.119 0.146 0.237
Ideal number of children 2.513 0.061 579 594 1.614 0.024 2.392 2.635
Mother received tetanus injection 0.872 0.018 186 196 0.749 0.021 0.836 0.908
Mother received medical care at birth 0.896 0.045 186 196 1.956 0.050 0.807 0.985
Child has diarrhea in the last 2 weeks 0.186 0.040 184 195 1.402 0.218 0.105 0.267
Child treated with ORS packets 0.430 0.059 34 36 0.694 0.137 0.312 0.549
Consulted medical personnel 0.678 0.087 34 36 1.099 0.129 0.503 0.852
Child having health card, seen 0.347 0.071 63 64 1.183 0.206 0.205 0.490
Child received BCG vaccination 0.959 0.031 63 64 1.237 0.033 0.896 1.000
Child received DPT vaccination (3 doses) 0.788 0.048 63 64 0.918 0.060 0.692 0.883
Child received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.810 0.046 63 64 0.927 0.057 0.718 0.902
Child received measles vaccination 0.895 0.064 63 64 1.656 0.072 0.766 1.024
Child fully inmunized 0.760 0.069 63 64 1.265 0.090 0.622 0.897
Total fertility rate (last 5 years) 2.365 0.107 na 4024 0.726 0.045 2.151 2.579
Neonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 6.054 2.652 699 735 0.856 0.438 0.751 11.357
Infant mortality rate (last 10 years) 13.122 4.608 699 735 1.044 0.351 3.906 22.339
Child mortality rate (last 10 years) 2.824 2.049 700 735 1.014 0.726 0.000 6.922
Under-five mortality rate (last 10 years) 15.909 5.791 700 735 1.174 0.364 4.326 27.492
Postneonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 7.069 3.367 699 735 1.089 0.476 0.334 13.804
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
na = Not applicable
Appendix B | 139
Table B.11 Sampling errors for selected variables, Central Highlands, Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of cases Confidence intervals
Stand- –––––––––––––––– Rela- ––––––––––––––––
ard Un- Weight- Design tive Value- Value+
Value error weighted ed effect error 2SE 2SE
Variable (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Urban residence 0.223 0.025 218 183 0.873 0.111 0.174 0.273
No education 0.246 0.173 218 183 5.933 0.706 0.000 0.592
With secondary education or higher 0.367 0.120 218 183 3.665 0.326 0.128 0.607
Currently married (in union) 0.939 0.025 218 183 1.512 0.026 0.890 0.988
Children ever born 2.018 0.642 316 274 1.647 0.318 0.734 3.302
Children ever born to women 40-49 4.639 0.364 67 58 1.153 0.078 3.911 5.367
Chlidren ever born to women 35-39 2.407 0.323 47 36 1.442 0.134 1.760 3.054
Children ever born to women 40-44 3.980 0.359 39 32 1.154 0.090 3.263 4.697
Children ever born to women 45-49 5.435 0.894 28 26 1.560 0.164 3.647 7.224
Children surviving 1.908 0.602 316 274 1.637 0.316 0.704 3.111
Knowing any contraceptive method 0.975 0.022 206 172 2.031 0.023 0.931 1.000
Knowing any modern contraceptive method 0.975 0.022 206 172 2.031 0.023 0.931 1.000
Ever used any contraceptive method 0.806 0.033 206 172 1.196 0.041 0.740 0.872
Currently using any method 0.663 0.055 206 172 1.664 0.083 0.553 0.773
Currently using any modern contraceptive
method 0.416 0.022 206 172 0.646 0.053 0.372 0.461
Currently using pill 0.020 0.009 206 172 0.949 0.460 0.002 0.039
Currently using IUD 0.212 0.029 206 172 1.013 0.137 0.154 0.269
Currently using condom 0.055 0.012 206 172 0.744 0.216 0.031 0.079
Currently female sterilization 0.123 0.032 206 172 1.399 0.260 0.059 0.188
Currently using periodic abstinence 0.081 0.035 206 172 1.842 0.432 0.011 0.152
Currently using withdrawal 0.166 0.058 206 172 2.227 0.349 0.050 0.281
Using public sector source 0.851 0.048 87 72 1.251 0.057 0.754 0.947
Want no more children 0.548 0.019 206 172 0.541 0.034 0.511 0.586
Want to delay at least 2 years 0.202 0.040 206 172 1.440 0.200 0.121 0.283
Ideal number of children 2.890 0.365 215 179 3.793 0.126 2.160 3.620
Mother received tetanus injection 0.769 0.031 68 65 0.610 0.040 0.707 0.830
Mother received medical care at birth 0.839 0.071 68 65 1.510 0.085 0.696 0.981
Child has diarrhea in the last 2 weeks 0.153 0.028 67 64 0.687 0.184 0.097 0.209
Child treated with ORS packets 0.147 0.115 9 10 1.105 0.785 0.000 0.377
Consulted medical personnel 0.545 0.284 9 10 1.939 0.521 0.000 1.114
Child having health card, seen 0.216 0.137 23 21 1.670 0.633 0.000 0.489
Child received BCG vaccination 0.800 0.185 23 21 2.324 0.231 0.430 1.169
Child received DPT vaccination (3 doses) 0.905 0.069 23 21 1.180 0.076 0.767 1.043
Child received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.933 0.062 23 21 1.242 0.066 0.810 1.056
Child received measles vaccination 0.850 0.123 23 21 1.732 0.145 0.603 1.096
Child fully inmunized 0.755 0.187 23 21 2.188 0.248 0.380 1.129
Total fertility rate (last 5 years) 2.904 0.589 na 1285 2.227 0.203 1.727 4.081
Neonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 15.348 3.629 284 260 0.532 0.236 8.091 22.605
Infant mortality rate (last 10 years) 22.687 4.538 284 260 0.548 0.200 13.610 31.763
Child mortality rate (last 10 years) 18.625 8.416 285 262 0.857 0.452 1.793 35.456
Under-five mortality rate (last 10 years) 40.889 8.201 285 262 0.642 0.201 24.487 57.290
Postneonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 7.338 5.207 284 260 1.066 0.710 0.000 17.753
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
na = Not applicable
140 | Appendix B
Table B.12 Sampling errors for selected variables, Southeast, Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of cases Confidence intervals
Stand- –––––––––––––––– Rela- ––––––––––––––––
ard Un- Weight- Design tive Value- Value+
Value error weighted ed effect error 2SE 2SE
Variable (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Urban residence 0.417 0.023 677 648 1.202 0.055 0.371 0.462
No education 0.038 0.017 677 648 2.248 0.433 0.005 0.072
With secondary education or higher 0.413 0.050 677 648 2.617 0.120 0.314 0.512
Currently married (in union) 0.922 0.008 677 648 0.750 0.008 0.906 0.937
Children ever born 1.415 0.148 1077 1070 1.254 0.104 1.119 1.710
Children ever born to women 40-49 2.815 0.142 301 280 1.471 0.050 2.531 3.099
Chlidren ever born to women 35-39 2.298 0.134 147 144 1.402 0.058 2.029 2.567
Children ever born to women 40-44 2.686 0.160 158 152 1.256 0.060 2.365 3.007
Children ever born to women 45-49 2.968 0.180 143 128 1.228 0.061 2.609 3.328
Children surviving 1.344 0.143 1077 1070 1.286 0.107 1.057 1.630
Knowing any contraceptive method 1.000 0.000 623 598 na 0.000 1.000 1.000
Knowing any modern contraceptive method 1.000 0.000 623 598 na 0.000 1.000 1.000
Ever used any contraceptive method 0.883 0.016 623 598 1.260 0.018 0.851 0.916
Currently using any method 0.757 0.018 623 598 1.052 0.024 0.721 0.793
Currently using any modern contraceptive
method 0.529 0.026 623 598 1.288 0.049 0.477 0.580
Currently using pill 0.101 0.016 623 598 1.340 0.161 0.068 0.133
Currently using IUD 0.257 0.020 623 598 1.146 0.078 0.217 0.297
Currently using condom 0.076 0.012 623 598 1.111 0.155 0.052 0.099
Currently female sterilization 0.092 0.014 623 598 1.221 0.154 0.064 0.120
Currently using periodic abstinence 0.101 0.017 623 598 1.384 0.166 0.068 0.134
Currently using withdrawal 0.127 0.013 623 598 0.954 0.100 0.102 0.153
Using public sector source 0.705 0.030 335 316 1.197 0.042 0.645 0.764
Want no more children 0.605 0.019 623 598 0.974 0.032 0.567 0.644
Want to delay at least 2 years 0.166 0.012 623 598 0.795 0.071 0.142 0.190
Ideal number of children 2.441 0.054 675 646 1.530 0.022 2.333 2.549
Mother received tetanus injection 0.857 0.032 141 133 1.096 0.038 0.792 0.922
Mother received medical care at birth 0.993 0.008 141 133 1.036 0.008 0.977 1.000
Child has diarrhea in the last 2 weeks 0.052 0.024 141 133 1.166 0.467 0.003 0.100
Child treated with ORS packets 0.385 0.148 8 7 0.761 0.384 0.090 0.681
Consulted medical personnel 0.611 0.149 8 7 0.763 0.243 0.313 0.908
Child having health card, seen 0.589 0.065 53 52 0.973 0.110 0.459 0.719
Child received BCG vaccination 0.911 0.091 53 52 2.353 0.100 0.730 1.000
Child received DPT vaccination (3 doses) 0.834 0.058 53 52 1.158 0.070 0.717 0.951
Child received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.790 0.031 53 52 0.563 0.039 0.728 0.853
Child received measles vaccination 0.829 0.060 53 52 1.173 0.072 0.709 0.949
Child fully inmunized 0.760 0.045 53 52 0.773 0.059 0.670 0.850
Total fertility rate (last 5 years) 1.508 0.089 na 5218 1.266 0.059 1.330 1.685
Neonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 9.238 3.624 559 550 0.914 0.392 1.990 16.485
Infant mortality rate (last 10 years) 11.345 4.801 559 550 1.101 0.423 1.744 20.947
Child mortality rate (last 10 years) 11.629 4.915 562 552 1.161 0.423 1.800 21.458
Under-five mortality rate (last 10 years) 22.842 8.322 562 552 1.320 0.364 6.198 39.487
Postneonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 2.108 2.131 559 550 1.116 1.011 0.000 6.370
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
na = Not applicable
Appendix B | 141
Table B.13 Sampling errors for selected variables, Mekong River Delta, Vietnam 2002
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Number of cases Confidence intervals
Stand- –––––––––––––––– Rela- ––––––––––––––––
ard Un- Weight- Design tive Value- Value+
Value error weighted ed effect error 2SE 2SE
Variable (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Urban residence 0.170 0.024 1223 1056 2.265 0.143 0.122 0.219
No education 0.101 0.011 1223 1056 1.279 0.109 0.079 0.123
With secondary education or higher 0.172 0.023 1223 1056 2.150 0.135 0.126 0.219
Currently married (in union) 0.936 0.008 1223 1056 1.076 0.008 0.921 0.951
Children ever born 1.604 0.133 1990 1638 0.899 0.083 1.338 1.870
Children ever born to women 40-49 3.727 0.129 404 348 1.403 0.034 3.470 3.984
Chlidren ever born to women 35-39 2.441 0.092 250 216 1.101 0.038 2.257 2.625
Children ever born to women 40-44 3.341 0.103 237 203 0.945 0.031 3.134 3.547
Children ever born to women 45-49 4.270 0.203 167 145 1.386 0.048 3.864 4.677
Children surviving 1.500 0.126 1990 1638 0.911 0.084 1.249 1.752
Knowing any contraceptive method 0.991 0.002 1144 989 0.833 0.002 0.986 0.995
Knowing any modern contraceptive method 0.990 0.002 1144 989 0.777 0.002 0.985 0.995
Ever used any contraceptive method 0.882 0.011 1144 989 1.129 0.012 0.861 0.904
Currently using any method 0.767 0.017 1144 989 1.366 0.022 0.732 0.801
Currently using any modern contraceptive
method 0.566 0.018 1144 989 1.242 0.032 0.529 0.602
Currently using pill 0.127 0.015 1144 989 1.521 0.118 0.097 0.157
Currently using IUD 0.325 0.018 1144 989 1.303 0.056 0.289 0.361
Currently using condom 0.039 0.005 1144 989 0.937 0.137 0.029 0.050
Currently female sterilization 0.063 0.010 1144 989 1.451 0.165 0.042 0.084
Currently using periodic abstinence 0.052 0.008 1144 989 1.214 0.154 0.036 0.067
Currently using withdrawal 0.149 0.009 1144 989 0.896 0.063 0.130 0.168
Using public sector source 0.757 0.024 641 559 1.426 0.032 0.709 0.806
Want no more children 0.610 0.013 1144 989 0.867 0.020 0.585 0.635
Want to delay at least 2 years 0.174 0.012 1144 989 1.044 0.067 0.150 0.197
Ideal number of children 2.552 0.034 1218 1050 1.155 0.013 2.485 2.619
Mother received tetanus injection 0.794 0.032 282 235 1.284 0.040 0.730 0.858
Mother received medical care at birth 0.900 0.028 282 235 1.497 0.031 0.844 0.955
Child has diarrhea in the last 2 weeks 0.084 0.018 278 232 1.046 0.216 0.048 0.120
Child treated with ORS packets 0.522 0.130 25 20 1.198 0.249 0.262 0.782
Consulted medical personnel 0.643 0.083 25 20 0.784 0.129 0.477 0.810
Child having health card, seen 0.487 0.055 89 74 1.007 0.113 0.377 0.597
Child received BCG vaccination 0.925 0.029 89 74 1.034 0.032 0.866 0.984
Child received DPT vaccination (3 doses) 0.724 0.046 89 74 0.952 0.064 0.632 0.817
Child received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.753 0.042 89 74 0.886 0.055 0.669 0.836
Child received measles vaccination 0.658 0.051 89 74 0.985 0.077 0.556 0.760
Child fully inmunized 0.608 0.051 89 74 0.948 0.083 0.507 0.709
Total fertility rate (last 5 years) 1.693 0.087 na 7508 1.043 0.051 1.519 1.866
Neonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 16.025 4.858 1062 884 1.251 0.303 6.309 25.741
Infant mortality rate (last 10 years) 22.296 5.232 1063 885 1.155 0.235 11.832 32.761
Child mortality rate (last 10 years) 8.833 2.457 1069 889 0.912 0.278 3.919 13.747
Under-five mortality rate (last 10 years) 30.932 5.654 1070 890 1.060 0.183 19.625 42.240
Postneonatal mortality rate (last 10 years) 6.272 2.260 1063 885 0.926 0.360 1.751 10.792
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
na = Not applicable
142 | Appendix B
DATA QUALITY TABLES APPENDIX C
Table C.1 Household age distribution
Single-year age distribution of the de facto household population by sex (weighted), Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Male Female Male Female
–––––––––––––––––– ––––––––––––––––– ––––––––––––––––– ––––––––––––––––––
Age Number Percentage Number Percentage Age Number Percentage Number Percentage
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
0 198 1.4 199 1.3 37 203 1.4 247 1.6
1 251 1.7 222 1.4 38 249 1.7 258 1.6
2 254 1.7 220 1.4 39 210 1.4 230 1.5
3 212 1.4 211 1.3 40 237 1.6 242 1.5
4 230 1.6 254 1.6 41 194 1.3 186 1.2
5 284 1.9 266 1.7 42 278 1.9 267 1.7
6 302 2.1 257 1.6 43 199 1.4 216 1.4
7 335 2.3 316 2.0 44 153 1.0 218 1.4
8 361 2.5 339 2.2 45 205 1.4 194 1.2
9 350 2.4 375 2.4 46 157 1.1 160 1.0
10 410 2.8 383 2.4 47 153 1.0 173 1.1
11 398 2.7 393 2.5 48 163 1.1 184 1.2
12 407 2.8 437 2.8 49 112 0.8 136 0.9
13 380 2.6 348 2.2 50 136 0.9 171 1.1
14 348 2.4 365 2.3 51 88 0.6 87 0.6
15 351 2.4 398 2.5 52 119 0.8 134 0.9
16 361 2.5 332 2.1 53 92 0.6 104 0.7
17 378 2.6 314 2.0 54 97 0.7 98 0.6
18 364 2.5 321 2.1 55 80 0.5 102 0.7
19 248 1.7 270 1.7 56 58 0.4 77 0.5
20 253 1.7 279 1.8 57 70 0.5 85 0.5
21 213 1.5 235 1.5 58 48 0.3 71 0.5
22 198 1.4 217 1.4 59 45 0.3 67 0.4
23 203 1.4 218 1.4 60 49 0.3 97 0.6
24 208 1.4 227 1.5 61 51 0.3 82 0.5
25 201 1.4 234 1.5 62 86 0.6 90 0.6
26 217 1.5 256 1.6 63 56 0.4 72 0.5
27 222 1.5 259 1.7 64 41 0.3 74 0.5
28 202 1.4 237 1.5 65 83 0.6 108 0.7
29 187 1.3 241 1.5 66 71 0.5 86 0.5
30 246 1.7 248 1.6 67 48 0.3 66 0.4
31 208 1.4 234 1.5 68 49 0.3 63 0.4
32 225 1.5 232 1.5 69 53 0.4 86 0.5
33 217 1.5 253 1.6 70+ 600 4.1 871 5.6
34 244 1.7 229 1.5
35 191 1.3 202 1.3 Total 14,604 100.0 15,654 100.0
36 214 1.5 231 1.5
Appendix C | 143
Table C.2 Completeness of reporting
Percentage of observations with missing information for selected demographic and health questions,
Vietnam 2002
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Percentage Number
missing of
Subject Reference group information cases
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Birth Date Births in the past 15 years
Month only 0.60 8,929
Month and year 0.00 8,929
Child’s size at birth Living children age 0-59 months 0.12 1,062
Diarrhea in past 2 weeks Living children age 0-59 months 0.27 1,304
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
1
Both year and age missing
Distribution of births by calendar yeas since birth for living, dead, and all children, according to completeness of birth dates, sex ratio at birth,
and ratio of births by calendar year (weighted), Vietnam 2002
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
Percentage with
Number of births complete birth date 1 Sex ratio at birth2 Calendar year ratio3
–––––––––––––––––––––– –––––––––––––––––––––– –––––––––––––––––––––– ––––––––––––––––––––––
Year Living Dead Total Living Dead Total Living Dead Total Living Dead Total
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
2002 333 1.0 334 100.0 100.0 100.0 110.4 0.0 109.4 na na na
2001 461 3.0 464 100.0 100.0 100.0 103.4 29.9 102.8 117.5 37.6 116.1
2000 453 13.0 465 100.0 100.0 100.0 114.6 34.7 111.2 103.0 227.6 104.5
1999 418 8.0 426 100.0 100.0 100.0 107.8 61.7 106.6 93.7 57.5 92.6
1998 439 17.0 456 99.9 100.0 99.9 98.2 127.3 99.2 94.1 156.3 95.5
1997 515 13.0 528 100.0 100.0 100.0 96.9 212.3 98.7 106.4 67.5 104.9
1996 530 22.0 552 99.4 96.7 99.3 106.4 141.5 107.6 94.8 118.7 95.5
1995 603 24.0 627 99.0 96.5 98.9 113.3 86.5 112.2 102.2 97.0 102.0
1994 650 27.0 677 99.1 94.7 98.9 99.8 120.3 100.6 103.7 103.5 103.7
1993 650 29.0 679 99.5 100.0 99.5 94.7 110.8 95.3 na na na
1998-2002 2,103 42.0 2,145 100.0 100.0 100.0 106.5 64.9 105.5 na na na
1993-1997 2,948 114.0 3,062 99.4 97.4 99.3 101.9 120.6 102.5 na na na
1988-1992 3,473 181.0 3,654 99.2 98.6 99.1 100.4 194.6 103.6 na na na
1983-1987 2,870 256.0 3,126 99.2 94.4 98.8 107.1 128.6 108.7 na na na
< 1983 2,191 215.0 2,407 98.7 94.5 98.3 104.2 115.8 105.1 na na na
All 13,586 808.0 14,393 99.3 96.1 99.1 103.7 130.7 105.0 na na na
–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––
na = Not applicable
1
Both year and month of birth given
2
(Bm/B f)*100, where Bm and B f are the numbers of male and female births, respectively
3
[2Bx/(B x-1+B x+1)]*100, where Bx is the number births in calendar year x
144 | Appendix C
Table C.4 Reporting of age at death in days
Appendix C | 145
Table C.5 Reporting of age at death in months
146 | Appendix C
SURVEY STAFF APPENDIX D
Team 1: Responsible for fieldwork in five provinces: Bac Ninh, Bac Giang, Lang Son, Nam Dinh and
Thai Binh:
Team 2: Responsible for fieldwork in six provinces: Tuyen Quang, Lao Cai, Thai Nguyen, Phu Tho, Vinh
Phuc and Hai Phong:
Team 3: Responsible for fieldwork in six provinces: Lai Chau, Son La, Ha Tay, Ha Noi, Hai Duong and
Hung Yen:
Appendix D | 147
Team 4: Responsible for fieldwork in three provinces: Ha Nam, Thanh Hoa and Nghe An:
Team 5: Responsible for fieldwork in six provinces: Quang Tri, Thua Thien - Hue, Da Nang, Quang
Nam, Binh Dinh and Dak Lak:
Team 6: Responsible for fieldwork in five provinces: Tien Giang, Tay Ninh, Ninh Thuan, Lam Dong and
Dong Nai:
Team 7: Responsible for fieldwork in provinces: Ho Chi Minh City (1/2), Can Tho, Soc Trang, Tra Vinh,
Bac Lieu and Ca Mau:
148 | Appendix C
Team 8: Responsible for fieldwork in provinces: Ho Chi Minh City (1/2), Vinh Long, Dong Thap, An
Giang and Kien Giang:
Appendix D | 149
QUESTIONNAIRES APPENDIX E
Appendix E | 151
General Statistical Office
Vietnam Demographic and Health Survey - III
household schedule
identification
interviewer visits
1 2 3 final visit
date date
month
year
interviewer’s name
name
result (*)
result (*)
next visit
- date total number
of visits
- time
(*) result codes:
total in
1. completed
2. no household member at home or no competent respondent at home at time of
household
visit
3. entire household absent for extended period of time total
4. postponed eligible
5. refused women
6. dwelling vacant or address not a dwelling
7. dwelling destroyed line number of respondent to
8. dwelling not found household
9. other schedule
(specify)
supervisor field editor office editor keyed by
name name
date date
lin Usual residents and relation- residence sex month and year of age education (if age 5 years marital status (if age eligi-
ship to
e visitors head of birth or older) 13 years or older) bility
no. household
How old If attended school
What is Does Did Is In what month and is Has What is If age What is the current Circle
Please give me the < 25 line
the [NAME] [NAME] [NAME] year was [NAME] [name]? [NAME] the marital status of
names of the persons relatio usual stay male born? ever highest years [NAME]? number
of
who usually live in n-ship ly here or If age been grade of ever-
live last education Is
your household and of female 95 or to married
here? night [NAME]
[NAME] ? above, school [NAME] women
guests of the ? still age 15-
to the write ? completed?
household who stayed in 49
head of ‘95’
school
here last night, the use
?
househo equivalency
starting with the table
ld?
head of the
household.
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (6A) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (15)
y Grade
Y Y Mal. month y CM W D
01 n 01
N N 1 n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
y Grade
02 Y Y Mal. month y CM W D 02
N N 1 n n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
y Grade
Y Y Mal. month y CM W D
03 n 03
N N 1 n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
y Grade
04 Y Y Mal. month y CM W D 04
N N 1 n n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
y Grade
Y Y Mal. month y CM W D
05 n 05
N N 1 n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
y Grade
06 Y Y Mal. month y CM W D 06
N N 1 n n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
y Grade
07 Y Y Mal. month y CM W D 07
N N 1 n n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
y Grade
Y Y Mal. month y CM W D
08 n 08
N N 1 n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
y Grade
09 Y Y Mal. month y CM W D 09
N N 1 n n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
y Grade
10 Y Y Mal. month y CM W D 10
N N 1 n n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
lin Usual residents and relation- residence sex month and year of age education (if age 5 years marital status (if age eligi-
ship to
e visitors head of birth or older) 13 years or older) bility
no. household
How old If attended school
What is Does Did Is In what month and is Has What is If age What is the current Circle
Please give me the < 25 line
the [NAME] [NAME] [NAME] year was [NAME] [name]? [NAME] the marital status of
names of the persons relatio usual stay male born? ever highest years [NAME]?
number of
ever-
who usually live in n-ship ly here or If age been grade of married
live last education Is
your household and of female 95 or to women age
here? night [NAME]
[NAME] ? above, school [NAME] 15-49
guests of the ? completed? still
to the write ?
household who stayed in
head of ‘95’
school
here last night, the use
equivale ncy ?
starting with the househo
table
ld?
head of the
household.
(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (6A) (7) (8) (9) (10) (11) (15)
y Grade
Y Y Mal. month y CM W D
11 n 11
N N 1 n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
y Grade
12 Y Y Mal. month y CM W D 12
N N 1 n n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
y Grade
Y Y Mal. month y CM W D
13 n 13
N N 1 n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
y Grade
14 Y Y Mal. month y CM W D 14
N N 1 n n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
y Grade
Y Y Mal. month y CM W D
15 n 15
N N 1 n S NM
yr. 1
1 1 Fem. 1 1 2
2 3 4 5
2 2 2 11 2
(Specify)
(Specify)
(Specify)
No. questions and filters Coding categories Skip
(Specify)
General Statistical Office
Vietnam Demographic and Health Survey - III
Women’s questionnaire
Identification
Province/municipality: _________________________________________
District: _____________________________________________________
Commune: __________________________________________________
Cluster name:________________________________________________
Cluster number: ...............................................................................................
Name of household head: ______________________________________
Household number: .........................................................................................
Address: ____________________________________________________
Urban/rural (Urban = 1, Rural = 2): .................................................................
Large city/ small city/ town/ countryside (Large city = 1, Small city = 2,
Town = 3, Countryside = 4): ...........................................................................
Interviewer visits
1 2 3 Final visit
Date Date
Month
Year
Interviewer’s name
Name
Result (*)
Result (*)
Next visit
- Date Total number
of visits
- Time
112 What was the main reason you Got pregnant ................................................... 01
stopped attending school? Got married ..................................................... 02
To care for younger children............................ 03
Family needed help on farm
or in business.......................................... 04
Could not pay school fees ............................... 05
Needed to earn money .................................... 06
Graduated/had enough schooling ................... 07
Did not pass entrance exams .......................... 08
Did not like school ........................................... 09
School not accessible/too far........................... 10
Other ............................................................... 96
(Specify)
Don’t know....................................................... 98
(Specify)
No. Questions and filters Coding categories Skip
Vietnamese ..................................................... 01
119 What ethnic group do you belong tay ................................................................... 02
to? thai .................................................................. 03
Chinese ........................................................... 04
Khmer.............................................................. 05
muong ............................................................. 06
nung ................................................................ 07
hre ................................................................... 08
Phu la .............................................................. 10
E de ................................................................. 11
Dao.................................................................. 12
Co tu................................................................ 13
Cham............................................................... 14
Other ............................................................... 96
(Specify)
120 Check Q.4 in the household Questionnaire:
The woman interviewed The woman interviewed
is not a usual is a usual resident 201
resident
(Name of province/municipality)
123 Now I would like to ask about the Piped into residence/Plot................................. 11 125
household in which you usually Piped to public tap........................................... 12
Well in residence/plot ...................................... 21
live. What is the main source of Public well ....................................................... 22
125
drinking water for members of Spring .............................................................. 31
your household? River/stream .................................................... 32
Pond/lake ........................................................ 33
Dam................................................................. 34
Rain water ....................................................... 41
Tanker truck .................................................... 51
Bottled water ................................................... 61
125
Other ............................................................... 96
125
(Specify)
No. Questions and filters Coding categories Skip
(Specify)
(Specify)
(Specify)
226 Check 214 and 216, and enter the number of live births since january 1999..........................................
If none, record '0'
For each live birth since january 1997 enter "B" in the month of birth in column 1 of the calendar
227 and "P" in each of the 8 preceding months. Write the name to the left of the "b" code.
For each non-live birth since 1997, enter "T" in the month of pregnancy termination in column 1
228
of the calendar and "P" in each preceding month of pregnancy.
229 Check 106A: Widowed
Divorced 233
currently married
Separated
Yes ..................................................... 1
230 Are you pregnant? No....................................................... 2
Unsure ................................................ 8 233
231 How many months pregnant are you?
Record number of completed months.
Enter "P" in column 1 of calendar, beginning with Months............................................
the month of interview and for total number of
completed months
232 At the time you became pregnant, did Then ........................................................ 1
you want to become pregnant then, did Later ........................................................ 2
you want to wait until later, or did you Not at all .................................................. 3
not want to become pregnant at all?
233 When did your last menstrual period Days ago ...................................... 1
start? Weeks ago.................................... 2
Months ago................................... 3
Years ago ..................................... 4
(Date, if given) In menopause....................................... 994
Before last birth .................................... 995
Never menstruated ............................... 996
234 Between the first day of a woman's
period and the first day of her next Yes ..................................................... 1
No....................................................... 2
period, are there certain times when she Don't know.......................................... 8
301
has a greater chance of becoming
pregnant than other times?
During her period..................................... 01
235 During which times of the monthly cycle
Right after her period has ended ................... 02
does a woman have the greatest In the middle of the cycle ......................... 03
chance of becoming pregnant? Just before her period begins .................. 04
Other ....................................................... 96
(Specify)
Don't know............................................... 98
Line If born alive and still living If born alive but now
no. dead
214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221 221A 222 223 224
Think back to the Was that a Did that How What Is Is How old Is [Name] How old was From the year of Probe:
termination of the
time of your (last/ single or pregnancy end many was the [name] a [name] was living with [Name] when pregnancy listed Were there
next to last/etc.) multiple in a live birth, months name boy or still [Name] at you? he/she died? above subtract any other
pregnancy the year of pregnancie
pregnancy. In what an induced did the given to girl? alive? his/her If '1 year' probe: termination of this
? How many pregnancy. s between
month and year abortion, preg. that last Is the difference 3 this
did that pregnancy menstrual last? child? birthday? months old was or more years? pregnancy
end? regulation, a Record in [Name]? and the
completed Record age in Record days if under 1
Probe: In what miscarriage or a months. completed month; months if under 2 previous
season did the stillbirth? Record '00' if years years; or years. pregnancy
less than one
pregnancy end? full month. you told me
about?
01 Live birth............. 1 (Name) Y N
Single..... 1 218 Age in years Yes ......... 1 Days ...... 1
Month ........... 1 2
Mult. ...... 2 Ind. abor. ........... 2 Boy .... 1 No ........... 2 Months... 2
Mens. regu. ....... 3
Year Girl ..... 2 (Next
Miscarriage......... 4 (next preg.) Years ..... 3
222 pregnancy)
Stillbirth .............. 5
Now I would like to talk about family planning - the various ways or methods that a couple can use to
delay or avoid a pregnancy.
Circle code 1 in 301 for each method mentioned spontaneously.
Then proceed down column 302, reading the name and description of each method not mentioned spontaneously. Circle
code 2 if method is recognized, and code 3 if not recognized.
Then, for each method with code 1 or 2 circled in 301 or 302, ask 303.
301 Which ways or methods have you 302 Have you ever 303 Have you ever used
heard about? heard of [method]? [Method]?
Spontan-
eous yes Probed yes No
01 Pill.Women can take a pill Yes .......................................... 1
every day. 1 2 3 No............................................ 2
02 IUD. Women can have a Yes .......................................... 1
loop or coil placed inside 1 2 3 No............................................ 2
them by a doctor or a nurse.
03 Injections. Women can have Yes .......................................... 1
an injection by a doctor or 1 2 3 No............................................ 2
nurse which stops them from
becoming pregnant for
several months.
04 Implants. Women can have Yes .......................................... 1
several small rods placed in 1 2 3 No............................................ 2
their upper arm by a doctor
or nurse which can prevent
pregnancy for several years.
05 Diaphragm, foam, jelly. Women Yes .......................................... 1
can place a sponge, 1 2 3 No............................................ 2
suppository, diaphragm,
jelly, or cream inside
themselves before
intercourse.
06 Condom. men can put a Yes .......................................... 1
rubber sheath on their penis 1 2 3 No............................................ 2
during sexual intercourse.
07 Female sterilization. Have you ever had an operation
Women can have an 1 2 3 to avoid having any more
operation to avoid having children?
any more children. Yes .......................................... 1
No............................................ 2
08 Male sterilization. Men
can Have you ever had a partner
have an operation to avoid 1 2 3 who had an operation to
having any more children. avoid having children?
Yes .......................................... 1
No............................................ 2
09 Rhythm, periodic abstinence. Every
month that a woman is sexually Yes .......................................... 1
1 2 3 No............................................ 2
active she can avoid having
sexual intercourse on the days of
the month she is most likely to get
pregnant.
10 Withdrawal. Men can be Yes .......................................... 1
careful and pull out before 1 2 3 No............................................ 2
climax.
11 Have you heard of any other
ways or methods that 1 3
Yes .......................................... 1
women or men can use to
No............................................ 2
avoid pregnancy?
avoid pregnancy? (Specify)
Yes .......................................... 1
No............................................ 2
(Specify)
305 Have you ever used anything or tried in Yes .......................................................... 1 307
No............................................................ 2
any way to delay or avoid getting
pregnant?
306 Enter '0' in column 1 of calendar in each blank month 330
307 What have you used or done?
Correct 303 and 304 (and 302 if necessary)
(Specify)
309 How many living children did you have Number of children .........................
at that time, if any?
If none, record '00'
310 Check 106A: Widowed
Divorced 337
Currently married
Separated
Yes .......................................................... 1
313 Are you currently doing something or No............................................................ 2
using any method to delay or avoid 325
getting pregnant?
(Specify) 319
Don't know............................................. 98
319
318A How long does it take to travel from Minutes .................................. 1
your house to this place? Hours ..................................... 2 0
If less than 2 hours, record minutes. Otherwise,
record hours. Don't know........................................ 9998
Easy ...................................................... 1
318B Is it easy or difficult to get there?
Difficult................................................... 2
(Specify)
Enter code for sterilization in month of interview Enter code for sterilization in month of
in column 1 of the calendar and each month interview in column 1 of the calendar and
back to January 1997. in each month back to the date of the
operation.
Then skip to 334
Then skip to 325
No. Questions and filters Coding categories Skip
Based on calendar................................. 01
323 How do you determine which days of
Based on body temperature .................. 02
your monthly cycle not to have sexual based on cervical mucus ....................... 03
relations? Based on body temperature
And cervical mucus....................... 04
No specific system................................. 05
Other ..................................................... 96
(Specify)
324 Enter method code from 314 in current month in column 1 of calendar. Then determine when she
started using method this time. Enter method code in each month of use.
Illustrative questions:
+ When did you start using continuously?
+ How long have you been using this method continuously?
325 I would like to ask you some questions about the times you or your partner may
have used a method to avoid getting pregnant during the last few years.
Use calendar to probe for earlier periods of use and nonuse, starting with most recent use, back
to January 1997.
Use name of children, dates of birth, and periods of pregnancy as reference points .
In column 1, enter code in each month of method use or '0' for nonuse.
Illustrative questions:
Column 1:
+ When was the last time you use a method? Which method was that?
+ When did you start using that method? How long after the birth of
[NAME]?
+ How long did you use the method then?
In column 2, enter codes for discontinuation next to last month of use. Number of codes in
column 2 must be same as number of interruptions of method use in column 1.
Ask why she stopped using the method. If a pregnancy followed, ask whether she became
pregnant uniitentionally while using the method or deliberately stopped using to get pregnant.
Illustrative questions:
Column 2:
+ Why did you stop using the [Method]?
+ Did you become pregnant while using [Method], or did you stop to get
pregnant, or did you stop for some other reason?
If deliberately stopped to become pregnant, ask:
How many months did it take you to get pregnant after you stopped using
[METHOD]?
And enter '0' in each such month in column 1.
(Specify)
Other source
Friends/relatives........................... 33
Other ............................................ 36
(Specify)
334
(Specify)
Don't know............................................... 98
No. Questions and filters Coding categories Skip
(Name of place)
(Specify)
Private medical sector
Private hospital/clinic...................... 21
Pharmacy....................................... 22
Private doctor ................................. 23
Other private medical ..................... 26
(Specify)
Other source
Friends/relatives............................. 33
Other .............................................. 36
(Specify)
Easy ........................................................ 1
333B Is it easy or difficult to get there?
Difficult..................................................... 2
335 Have you visited a health facility for any Yes .......................................................... 1
reason in the last 12 months? No............................................................ 2 337
336 Did any staff member at the health facility Yes .......................................................... 1
speak to you about family planning NO ........................................................... 2 337
methods?
336A Do you feel that the family planning staff Yes .......................................................... 1
treated you with respect? No............................................................ 2
344 In Q.345, enter the line number of each pregnancy since January 1999 which ended in an
induced abortion or menstrual regulation.
Ask the questions about all of these pregnancy outcomes beginning with the last one. (If there
are more than 2 pregnancy outcomes since 1999, use additional questionnaires).
Now I would like to ask you some questions about pregnancies which ended in
an induced abortion or menstrual regulation in the last three years. (We will talk
about your most recent [induced abortion/menstrual regulation] first).
Last induced abortion or menstrual Next-to-last induced abortion or menstrual
Enter line number from Q.214 regulation regulation
345
Line number ........................ Line number ........................
(Specify) (Specify)
Dilation and curatage...................... 1 Dilation and curatage ..................... 1
350 Can you tell me what Menstrual regulation ....................... 2 Menstrual regulation....................... 2
procedure was used to Caesarian section........................... 3 Caesarian section .......................... 3
terminate the pregnancy? Traditional method.......................... 4 Traditional method ......................... 4
(Specify) (Specify)
Other .............................................. 6 Other .............................................. 6
(Specify) (Specify)
Don't know...................................... 8 Don't know ..................................... 8
351 Sometimes a women has Yes ............................................... 1 Yes............................................... 1
a health problem after [an No................................................. 2 No ................................................ 2
i.a/m.r.]. Did you have any Don't know.................................... 8 Don't know ................................... 8
health problems 357 357
afterwards?
352 What health problems did Sterility............................................ a Sterility ........................................... a
you have: sterility, Infection.......................................... b Infection ......................................... b
Lack of menstruation ...................... c Lack of menstruation...................... c
infection, lack of Bleeding ......................................... d Bleeding ......................................... d
menstruation, excessive Pelvic pain ...................................... e Pelvic pain...................................... e
bleeding or another Other .............................................. x Other .............................................. x
problem?
(Specify) (Specify)
Record all reported problems Don't know...................................... z Don't know ..................................... z
353 Did you seek advice or Yes ................................................. 1 Yes................................................. 1
treatment because of No................................................... 2 NO.................................................. 2
these problems? 357 357
Public sector Public sector
354 Where did you seek Government hospital ................ a Government hospital................ a
advice or treatment? Delivery house ......................... b Delivery house......................... b
Anywhere else? Comm. health center................ c Comm. health center ............... c
Comm. health worker ............... d Comm. health worker............... d
Other public.............................. e Other public ............................. e
Record all mentioned
(Specify) (Specify)
Private medical sector Private medical sector
Pvt. hospital/clinic .................... f Pvt. hospital/clinic .................... f
Private doctor........................... g Private doctor .......................... g
PVT. doctor's assistant ............ h PVT. doctor's assistant ............ h
Pharmacy................................. i Pharmacy ................................ i
Other public.............................. j Other public ............................. j
(Specify) (Specify)
Other source Other source
Shop......................................... k Shop ........................................ k
Trad. practitioner ...................... l Trad. practitioner ..................... l
Other .............................................. x Other .............................................. x
(Specify) (Specify)
355 Because of these Yes ................................................. 1 Yes................................................. 1
problems, did you become No................................................... 2 No .................................................. 2
an in-patient (stay over 357 357
night) at any health
facility?
Nights .................................. Nights..................................
356 For how many nights?
Don't know.................................... 98 Don't know ................................... 98
Go back to 346 in next column; or, if Go back to 346 in next column; or, if
357 no more events, go to 401 no more events, go to 401
Section 4a. Pregnancy and breastfeeding
402 Enter the name, line number, and survival status of each birth since 1/1999 in the table. Ask the
questions about all of these births. begin with the last birth. (If there are more than 2 births, use
additional questionnaires).
- Now I would like to ask you some questions about the health of all your
children born in the last three years (We will talk about one child at a time).
Last birth Next-to-last birth
403 Line number from Q.214 Line number .......................... Line number ..........................
(Specify) (Specify)
Private medical Private medical
Pvt. hospital/clinic ................... 31 Pvt. hospital/clinic ................... 31
Other private medical .............. 36 Other private medical.............. 36
(Specify) (Specify)
Other ............................................. 96 Other ............................................. 96
(Specify) (Specify)
Health professional Health professional
413 Who assisted with the Doctor ...................................... a Doctor ...................................... a
delivery of [Name]? Doctor's assistant..................... b Doctor's assistant .................... b
Anyone else? Midwife..................................... c Midwife .................................... c
Nurse ....................................... d Nurse ....................................... d
Probe for the type of person and Other person Other person
record all persons assisting. Trad. birth attendant................. e Trad. birth attendant ................ e
Relative/friend .......................... f Relative/friend.......................... f
Other .............................................. x Other .............................................. x
(Specify) (Specify)
No one............................................ y No one ........................................... y
Around the time of the
414
birth of [Name], did you
have any of the following y n y n
problems: Labor more than 12 Labor more than 12
hours............................. 1 2 hours ............................. 1 2
Long labor, that is, did your
regular contractions last Excessive bleeding.................. 1 2 Excessive bleeding .................. 1 2
more than 12 hours?
Excessive bleeding that was fever/bad smelling fever/bad smelling
so much that you feared it Vag. discharge .................. 1 2 Vag. discharge................... 1 2
was life threatening? Convulsions ............................. 1 2 Convulsions.............................. 1 2
A high fever with bad
smelling vaginal discharge?
Convulsions not caused by a
fever?
Was [Name] delivered by Yes ................................................. 1 Yes................................................. 1
415 No................................................... 2 No .................................................. 2
caesarian section?
416 When [Name] was born, Very large ....................................... 1 Very large....................................... 1
was he/she: very large, Larger than average ....................... 2 Larger than average....................... 2
larger than average, Average .......................................... 3 Average.......................................... 3
Smaller than average ..................... 4 Smaller than average ..................... 4
average, smaller than Very small....................................... 5 Very small ...................................... 5
average, or very small? Don't know...................................... 8 Don't know ..................................... 8
417 Was [Name] weighed at Yes ................................................. 1 Yes................................................. 1
birth? No................................................... 2 No .................................................. 2
419 419
Last Next-to-last birth
No. Questions Name Name
How much did [Name] Grams from Gram from
418
weigh? card................. 1 Card.................1
Record weight from birth notification Gf recall ................... 2 GF recall ..................2
card, if available. Don't know............................... Don't know ...............................
99998 99998
Yes ................................................. 1
419 Has your period returned
421
since the birth of [Name]? No................................................... 2
422
430 Why did you stop Mother ill/weak............................... 01 Mother ill/weak .............................. 01
breastfeeding [Name]? Child ill/weak.................................. 02 Child ill/weak ................................. 02
Child dead ..................................... 03 Child dead ..................................... 03
Nipple/breast problem ................... 04 Nipple/breast problem ................... 04
Not enough milk............................. 05 Not enough milk ............................ 05
Mother working .............................. 06 Mother working.............................. 06
Child refused ................................. 07 Child refused ................................. 07
Weaning age/age to stop............... 08 Weaning age/age to stop .............. 08
Became pregnant .......................... 09 Became pregnant.......................... 09
Started using contraception ................ 10 Started using contraception ............... 10
Other ............................................. 96 Other ............................................. 96
(Specify) (Specify)
Last Next-to-last birth
No. Questions Name Name
439 Go back to 405 in next column; or, if Go back to 405 in next column; or, if
no more births, go to 440 no more births, go to 440
Section 4B. Immunization and health
440 Enter the name, line number, and survival status of each birth since 1/1999 in the table.
Ask the questions about all of these births. begin with the last birth. (If there are more than 2 births, use additional
questionnaires).
443 Do you have a card where Yes, seen ....................................... 1 Yes, seen ....................................... 1
[Name's] vaccinations are 445 445
written down? Yes, not seen.................................. 2 Yes, not seen ................................. 2
447 447
If yes: May I see it please? No card........................................... 3 No card .......................................... 3
BCG
Polio 1 (P1) Day month year Day month year
BCG BCG
Polio 2 (P2)
P1 P1
Polio 3 (P3) P2 P2
DPT 1 (D1) P3 P3
DPT 2 (D2) D1 D1
DPT 3 (D3) D2 D2
Measles D3 D3
meas. Meas.
Last birth Next-to-last birth
No. Questions Name Name
(Specify) (Specify)
Private medical sector Private medical sector
PVT. hospital/clinic................... f PVT. hospital/clinic .................. f
Private doctor........................... g Private doctor .......................... g
PVT. doctor's assistant ............ h PVT. doctor's assistant ............ h
Pharmacy................................. i Pharmacy ................................ i
Other private medical ............... j Other private medical............... j
(Specify) (Specify)
Other source Other source
Shop......................................... k Shop ........................................ k
Trad. practitioner ...................... l Trad. practitioner ..................... l
Other .............................................. x Other .............................................. x
(Specify) (Specify)
Yes ............................................... 1 Yes............................................... 1
454 Has [Name] had diarrhea in NO ................................................ 2 NO................................................ 2
the last 2 weeks? Don't know.................................... 8 Don't know ................................... 8
464 464
461 What was given to treat Pill or syrup..................................... b Pill or syrup .................................... b
the diarrhea? Injection .......................................... c Injection.......................................... c
(I.v.) intravenous............................. d (I.v.) intravenous ............................ d
Anything else? Home remedies/ Home remedies/
Herbal medicines ................. e Herbal medicines................. e
Record all mentioned Other .............................................. x Other .............................................. x
(Specify) (Specify)
(Specify) (Specify)
Private medical sector Private medical sector
Pvt. hospital/clinic .................... f Pvt. hospital/clinic .................... f
Private doctor........................... g Private doctor .......................... g
PVT. doctor's assistant ............ h PVT. doctor's assistant ............ h
Pharmacy................................. i Pharmacy ................................ i
Other private medical ............... j Other private medical............... j
(Specify) (Specify)
Other source Other source
Shop......................................... k Shop ........................................ k
trad. practitioner ....................... l trad. practitioner....................... l
Other .............................................. x Other .............................................. x
(Specify) (Specify)
464 Go back to 442 in next column; or, if Go back to 442 in next column; or, if
no more births, go to 465 no more births, go to 465
No. Questions and filters Coding categories Skip
467 When a child is sick with diarrhea, what Repeated watery stools ............................. a
signs of illness would tell you that he or Any watery stools ...................................... b
Repeated vomiting..................................... c
she should be taken to a health facility Any vomiting .............................................. d
or health worker? Blood in stools ........................................... e
Fever ......................................................... f
Record all mentioned
Marked thirst.............................................. g
Not eating/not drinking well........................ h
Getting sicker/very sick.............................. i
Not getting better ....................................... j
other .......................................................... x
(Specify)
Don't know................................................. z
(Specify)
Don't know................................................. z
507 Is your husband living with you now or Living with her............................................ 1
Staying elsewhere ..................................... 2
is he staying elsewhere?
511 Have you been married only once, or Once.......................................................... 1
more than once? More than once.......................................... 2
512 Check 511:
Married Married more
Only once than once Month ...............................................
Don't know month .................................... 98
In what month Now we will talk Year.....................................
about your first 514
and year did you Don't know year .................................. 9998
start living with husband.
your husband? In what month and
year did you start
living with him?
513 How old were you when you started Age ...................................................
living with him?
514 Determine months married since 1/1997. Enter 'X' in column 3 of calendar for each month
married, and enter '0' for each month not married, since 1/1997.
For women with more than one marriage: probe for date when current married started and, if
appropriate, for starting and termination dates of any previous marriages.
For women not currently married: probe for date when last marriage started and for termination
date and, if appropriate, for the starting and termination dates of any previous marriages.
Yes .......................................................... 1
517 Do you know of a place where you can No............................................................ 2
get condoms? 600
(Specify)
Other source
Friends/relatives.............................. 33
Other ............................................... 36
(Specify)
Section 6. fertility preference
Happy............................................................... 1
605 If you became pregnant in the next few Unhappy.......................................................... 2
weeks, would you be happy, unhappy, Would not matter............................................ 3
or would it not matter very much?
Yes ................................................................. 1
607 Do you think you will use a method to 609
No ................................................................... 2
delay or avoid pregnancy within the next Don't know..................................................... 8
12 months?
608 Do you think you will use a method to Yes ................................................................. 1
No ................................................................... 2
delay or avoid pregnancy at any time in Don't know..................................................... 8 610
the future?
No. Questions and filters Coding categories Skip
(Specify)
Unsure ........................................................ 98
Fertility-related reasons
610 What is the main reason that you think Infrequent sex........................................ 22
you will never use a method? Menopausal/hysterectomy.................. 23
Sub-fecund/infecund............................ 24
Wants more children............................ 26
Opposition to use
Respondent opposed........................... 31
Husband opposed................................. 32
Others opposed..................................... 33
religious prohibition............................... 34
Lack of knowledge
Knows no method................................. 41
Knows no source .................................. 42
Method-related reasons
Health concerns .................................... 51
Fear of side effects............................... 52
Lack of access/too far.......................... 53
Cost too much ....................................... 54
Inconvenient to use.............................. 55
Interferes with body's
normal processes........................ 56
Other .............................................................. 96
(Specify)
Don't know..................................................... 98
(Specify)
(Specify)
Age .........................................................
702 How old was your husband on his last
birthday?
710 As you know, some women take up jobs Yes ................................................................. 1 712
for which they are paid in cash or kind. No ................................................................... 2
Others sell things, have a small
business or work on the family farm or
in the family business?
Are you currently doing any of these
things or any other work?
711 Have you done any work in the last 12 Yes ................................................................. 1
No ................................................................... 2
months? 726
717 During the last 12 months, how many Number of months ...............................
months did you work?
Respondent................................................... 01
725 Who usually takes care of [Name of Husband........................................................ 02
youngest child at home] while you are Older female child........................................ 03
working? Older male child........................................... 04
Other relative ................................................ 05
Neighbor........................................................ 06
Friend............................................................. 07
Servant/hired help........................................ 08
Child is in school.......................................... 09
Institutional child care.................................. 10
Has not worked
Since last birth.................................. 95
Other .............................................................. 96
(Specify)
(Specify)
(Specify)
Other ................................................................ x
(Specify)
Don't know....................................................... z
806 What does "safe sex" mean to you? Abstain from sex............................................. b
Use condoms.................................................. c
Have only one sex partner............................ d
Record all mentioned Avoid sex with prostitutes ............................. e
Avoid sex with
homosexuals....................................... f
Other ................................................................ x
(Specify)
Don't know....................................................... z
Number
Month
month
Year
year
Instructions: 1 2 3 4
+ Only one code should appear in any
box.
12 01 12
+ For column 3 and 4, all months should
11 02 11
be filled in.
10 03 10
+ For column 1, all months should be
9 04 9
filled in for currently married women. 2 8 05 8 2
0 7 06 7 0
Information to be codes for each column: 0 6 07 6 0
2 5 08 5 2
Births, Pregnancies,
Col. 1: 4 09 4
Contraceptive Use 3 10 3
b = Births 2 11 2
p = Pregnancies 1 12 1
t = Terminations 12 13 12
11 14 11
0 = No method
10 15 10
1 = Pill
9 16 9
2 = IUD 2 8 17 8 2
3 = Injections 0 7 18 7 0
4 = Implants 0 6 19 6 0
5 = Diaphragm/foam/jelly 5 5
1 20 1
6 = Condom 4 21 4
7 = Female sterilization 3 22 3
8 = Male sterilization 2 23 2
9 = Periodic abstinence 1 24 1
a = Withdrawal 12 25 12
x = Other 11 26 11
10 27 10
9 28 9
(Specify) 2 2
8 29 8
0 7 30 7 0
Discontinuation of
Col. 2: 0 6 31 6 0
Contraceptive Use 0 5 32 5 0
0 = Infrequent sex/husband away 4 33 4
1 = became pregnant while using 3 34 3
2 = Wanted to become pregnant 2 35 2
3 = Husband disapproved 1 36 1
4 = Wanted more effective method 12 37 12
5 = Health concerns 11 38 11
6 = Side effects 10 39 10
9 40 9
7 = Lack of access/too far 1 1
8 41 8
8 = Cost too much 9 9
7 42 7
9 = Inconvenient to use
f = Fatalistic
9 6 43 6 9
9 5 44 5 9
a = Difficult to get pregnant/menopause 4 45 4
d = Marital dissolution/separation 3 46 3
x = Other 2 47 2
1 48 1
12 49 12
(Specify)
11 50 11
z = Don't know
10 51 10
9 52 9
Col. 3: Marriage 1 8 53 8 1
x = married 9 7 54 7 9
0 = Single, widowed, divorced, 9 6 55 6 9
separated 8 5 56 5 8
4 57 4
Moves and Types of
Col. 4: 3 58 3
2 59 2
Communities 1 60 1
x = Change of community 12 61 12
1 = City 11 62 11
2 = Town 10 63 10
3 = Countryside 9 64 9
1 8 65 8 1
9 7 66 7 9
9 6 67 6 9
7 5 68 5 7
4 69 4
3 70 3
2 71 2
1 72 1
Interviewer's observations
(To be filled in after completing interview)
Comments about
Respondent:
Comment on
Specific Questions:
Supervisor's observations
Editor's observations
Identification
Province/municipality: ____________________________________________
District: ________________________________________________________
Commune: _____________________________________________________
Cluster name: __________________________________________________
Cluster number: ......................................................................................
Large city/ small city/ town/ countryside (Large city = 1, Small city = 2,
Town = 3, Countryside = 4): ....................................................................
Result codes:
1 = Completed
2 = Unable to complete (Specify reason below)
_____________________________________________________
Name Name
Date Date
Section 1a. Locality characteristics
No. Questions Coding categories Skip
(Specify)
KM. To nearest
106 How far is it in kilometers to this place? Urban center...............................
(Specify)
108 What is the main access route to this All weather road......................................... 1
village? seasonal road ............................................ 2
Other (river/railway) ................................... 3
Path ........................................................... 4
119 How many family planning field workers Total no. of FP workers ....................
visit this community?
121 How often does the mobile family Number Per month ............... 1
planning team visit? of times Year ........................ 2
(Specify)
133 How often does the health worker visit? Number Per month ............... 1
of times Year ........................ 2
(Specify)
Section 2. Facility identification section
What is the name of the nearest doctor with a private practice to this community?
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
Aside from the commune health center, what is the name of the nearest health center, inter-commune
health center, or hospital to this community?
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________________________
Section 3. Commune health center visit
If the commune health center is within 30 kilometers, it is to be visited. Complete questions 300, 301 and 302 upon arrival at the
facility based on your own observations. Then find a knowledgeable staff person at the facility to answer the remaining
questions.
If this facility has already been visited for a different cluster, record
DHS cluster number here:
If the facility has already been visited, a second visit is not needed. End your visit.
300 If this is the first facility visited after the cluster Distance from cluster ........................
visit, record distance from cluster from the
odometer Not first facility visited .............................. 95
Chc in cluster........................................... 96
301 Do you think that the estimate of distance to the Reasonable ............................................. 1
facility given in the cluster is reasonable? Overestimated ......................................... 2
Underestimated ....................................... 3
302 Do you think that the estimate of the time to the Reasonable ............................................. 1
facility given in the cluster is reasonable? Overestimated ......................................... 2
Underestimated ....................................... 3
303 In what year did this commune health Year opened ........................
center open?
306 How many beds does this commune Number of beds ..........................
health center have?
310 Is this facility out now or has it run out of Yes .......................................................... 1
its supply of disposable needles at any No............................................................ 2
time in the last 6 months?
No. Questions Coding categories Skip to
(Specify)
315 Has the facility NOT been able to
sterilize medical instruments for any Has not been able ................................... 1
reason (e.g. equipment broken, no Has been able ......................................... 2
electricity, no fuel) at any time in the last
six months?
316 Does the facility have the following Y N
items in working order/in stock: Running water .................................. 1 2
Running water? Electricity .......................................... 1 2
Electricity? Refrigerator....................................... 1 2
Refrigerator? Kerosene .......................................... 1 2
Kerosene? Telephone......................................... 1 2
Vehicle.............................................. 1 2
Telephone or radio transmitter?
Motorbike.......................................... 1 2
Vehicle? Bicycle .............................................. 1 2
Motorbike? Delivery bed...................................... 1 2
Bicycle? Delivery kit ........................................ 1 2
Delivery bed? Waiting area ..................................... 1 2
Delivery kit? Blood bank........................................ 1 2
Exam couch...................................... 1 2
Waiting area for women in labor?
Light-gyn exams ............................... 1 2
Blood bank? IUCD kit ............................................ 1 2
Examination couch? Vacuum aspiration kit ....................... 1 2
Light for gynecological examination? Weighing scale-child......................... 1 2
IUCD (loop insertion) kit? Adult scale ........................................ 1 2
Vacuum aspiration kit for menstrual Growth cards .................................... 1 2
regulation? Linens ............................................... 1 2
Weighing scales for children? Gauze ............................................... 1 2
Adult weighing scale? Cotton wool....................................... 1 2
Antiseptics ........................................ 1 2
Growth cards? Blood pressure machine ................... 1 2
Linens? Talquist method ................................ 1 2
Gauze? Microscope ....................................... 1 2
Cotton wool? AIDS test .......................................... 1 2
Antiseptics?
Blood pressure machine?
Talquist method for diagnosis of
anemia?
Microscope?
AIDS test (Elisa or Serodia test)?
317 Do you have an outreach program? Yes .......................................................... 1
No............................................................ 2
319
318 How many villages/communities do you Number of sites ..............................
regularly visit?
Services available at the commune health center:
Now I would like to ask you about maternal and child health services available at this commune health
center.
Ask Q.320 for the first service. If the service is available, continue across the table, if not, ask about the next service.
Service 320. Is [Service] 321. How many days 322. In what year was
available? per week is [Service] [Service] first offered here?
available?
Yes ............................... 1
1 Antenatal care No ................................. 2
Yes ............................... 1
2 Delivery care No ................................. 2
Yes ............................... 1
3 Postnatal care
No ................................. 2
Yes ............................... 1
4 Child No ................................. 2
immunization
Yes ............................... 1
5 Child growth No ................................. 2
monitoring 323
Medication available at the facility:
Now I would like to ask you about medications and other supplies available at this facility. When I have
finished, I will need to see the medications you have in stock.
Ask Q.323 for each medication. If the medication is available, ask Q.324, if not available, ask Q.325. If the medication has at some time been
available, ask Q.326. If Q.323 is yes, record whether you saw the medication.
331 I need to see your supply of vaccines Vaccines seen in refrigerator ................... 1
now. Vaccines seen not in
Refrigerator ..................................... 2
vaccines not seen.................................... 3
Now I would like to ask you about which family planning methods are available
at this facility. I must also see the methods when we are finished.
Ask about the first method. If this method is available at this facility, move across the table. If the
method is not available now, ask Q.350.
No. Questions Coding categories Skip to
(Specify)
Section 4. Visit to nearest health center
If the nearest health center other than the commune health center is within 30 kilometers, it is to be visited. Complete questions
400, 401 and 402 upon arrival at the facility based on your own observations. Then find a knowledgeable staff person at the
facility to answer the remaining questions.
If this facility has already been visited for a different cluster, record
DHS cluster number here:
If the facility has already been visited, a second visit is not needed. End your visit.
400 If this is the first facility visited after the cluster visit, Distance from cluster ........................
record distance from cluster from the odometer
Not first facility visited .............................. 95
Health center in ea .................................. 96
401 Do you think that the estimate of distance to the Reasonable ............................................. 1
facility given in the cluster is reasonable? Overestimated ......................................... 2
Underestimated ....................................... 3
402 Do you think that the estimate of the time to the Reasonable ............................................. 1
facility given in the cluster is reasonable? Overestimated ......................................... 2
Underestimated ....................................... 3
403 In what year did this facility open? Year opened ........................
406 How many beds does this facility have? Number of beds ..........................
410 Is this facility out now or has it run out of Yes .......................................................... 1
its supply of disposable needles at any No............................................................ 2
time in the last 6 months?
No. Questions Coding categories Skip to
(Specify)
415 Has the facility NOT been able to
sterilize medical instruments for any Has not been able ................................... 1
reason (e.g. equipment broken, no Has been able ......................................... 2
electricity, no fuel) at any time in the last
six months?
416 Does the facility have the following Y N
items in working order/in stock: Running water .................................. 1 2
Running water? Electricity .......................................... 1 2
Electricity? Refrigerator....................................... 1 2
Refrigerator? Kerosene .......................................... 1 2
Kerosene? Telephone......................................... 1 2
Vehicle.............................................. 1 2
Telephone or radio transmitter?
Motorbike.......................................... 1 2
Vehicle? Bicycle .............................................. 1 2
Motorbike? Delivery bed...................................... 1 2
Bicycle? Delivery kit ........................................ 1 2
Delivery bed? Waiting area ..................................... 1 2
Delivery kit? Blood bank........................................ 1 2
Exam couch...................................... 1 2
Waiting area for women in labor?
Light-gyn exams ............................... 1 2
Blood bank? IUCD kit ............................................ 1 2
Examination couch? Vacuum aspiration kit ....................... 1 2
Light for gynecological examination? Weighing scale-child......................... 1 2
IUCD (loop insertion) kit? Adult scale ........................................ 1 2
Vacuum aspiration kit for menstrual Growth cards .................................... 1 2
regulation? Linens ............................................... 1 2
Weighing scales for children? Gauze ............................................... 1 2
Adult weighing scale? Cotton wool....................................... 1 2
Antiseptics ........................................ 1 2
Growth cards? Blood pressure machine ................... 1 2
Linens? Talquist method ................................ 1 2
Gauze? Microscope ....................................... 1 2
Cotton wool? AIDS test .......................................... 1 2
Antiseptics?
Blood pressure machine?
Talquist method for diagnosis of
anemia?
Microscope?
AIDS test (Elisa or Serodia test)?
417 Do you have an outreach program? Yes .......................................................... 1
No............................................................ 2
419
418 How many villages/communities do you Number of sites ..............................
regularly visit?
Services available at the facility:
Now I would like to ask you about maternal and child health services available at this facility.
Ask Q.420 for the first service. If the service is available, continue across the table, if not, ask about the next service.
Service 420. Is [Service] 421. How many days 422. In what year was
available? per week is [Service] [Service] first offered here?
available?
Yes ............................... 1
1 Antenatal care No ................................. 2
Yes ............................... 1
2 Delivery care No ................................. 2
Yes ............................... 1
3 Postnatal care
No ................................. 2
Yes ............................... 1
4 Child No ................................. 2
immunization
Yes ............................... 1
5 Child growth No ................................. 2
monitoring 423
Medication available at the facility:
Now I would like to ask you about medications and other supplies available at this facility. When I have
finished, I will need to see the medications you have in stock.
Ask Q.423 for each medication. If the medication is available, ask Q.424, if not available, ask Q.425. If the medication has at some time been
available, ask Q.426. If Q.423 is yes, record whether you saw the medication.
431 I need to see your supply of vaccines Vaccines seen in refrigerator ................... 1
now. Vaccines seen not in
Refrigerator ..................................... 2
vaccines not seen.................................... 3
Now I would like to ask you about which family planning methods are available
at this facility. I must also see the methods when we are finished.
Ask about the first method. If this method is available at this facility, move across the table. If the
method is not available now, ask Q.450.
No. Questions Coding categories Skip to
(Specify)