2022 NDHS Key Indicators Report
2022 NDHS Key Indicators Report
2022 NDHS Key Indicators Report
National Demographic
and Health Survey
(NDHS)
Philippines
February 2023
The 2022 Philippine National Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS) was implemented by the Philippine
Statistics Authority (PSA). Funding for the 2022 NDHS was provided by the Government of the Philippines,
while the provision of handheld tablets for data collection was partially supported by the Commission on
Population and Development (POPCOM). ICF provided technical assistance through The DHS Program, which
is funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and provides support and technical
assistance in the implementation of population and health surveys in countries worldwide.
Additional information about the 2022 NDHS may be obtained from the Philippine Statistics Authority, PSA
Complex, East Ave., Diliman, Quezon City; telephone: (+632)-8938-5267; fax: (+632)-8376-1995; email:
[email protected]; internet: www.psa.gov.ph.
Information about The DHS Program may be obtained from ICF, 530 Gaither Road, Suite 500, Rockville, MD
20850, USA; telephone: +1-301-407-6500; fax: +1-301-407-6501; email: [email protected]; internet:
www.DHSprogram.com.
The contents of this report are the sole responsibility of the PSA and ICF and do not necessarily reflect the views
of USAID, the United States Government, or other donor agencies.
Recommended citation:
Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA) and ICF. 2022. 2022 Philippine National Demographic and Health Survey
(NDHS): Key Indicators Report. Quezon City, Philippines, and Rockville, Maryland, USA: PSA and ICF.
CONTENTS
1 INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................................................... 1
1.1 Survey Objectives ................................................................................................................ 1
3 KEY FINDINGS.............................................................................................................................. 7
3.1 Response Rates .................................................................................................................... 7
3.2 Drinking Water Sources ...................................................................................................... 7
Drinking Water Service Ladder ........................................................................................... 8
3.3 Sanitation ............................................................................................................................. 9
Sanitation Service Ladder .................................................................................................. 10
3.4 PhilHealth Coverage .......................................................................................................... 11
3.5 COVID-19 ......................................................................................................................... 12
3.5.1 COVID-19 Transmission ..................................................................................... 12
3.5.2 COVID-19 Symptoms and Care Seeking ............................................................ 14
3.5.3 COVID-19 Prevention and Stigma ...................................................................... 16
3.6 Child Discipline ................................................................................................................. 18
3.7 Characteristics of Respondents .......................................................................................... 21
3.8 Fertility .............................................................................................................................. 23
3.9 Teenage Fertility ................................................................................................................ 24
3.10 Fertility Preferences........................................................................................................... 25
3.11 Family Planning................................................................................................................. 26
3.11.1 Contraceptive Use ................................................................................................ 26
3.11.2 Need and Demand for Family Planning ............................................................... 30
3.12 Early Childhood Mortality................................................................................................. 32
3.13 Maternal Care .................................................................................................................... 32
3.13.1 Antenatal Care ..................................................................................................... 33
3.13.2 Tetanus Toxoid .................................................................................................... 33
3.13.3 Delivery Care ....................................................................................................... 36
3.13.4 Postnatal Care for the Mother .............................................................................. 36
3.14 Vaccination Coverage........................................................................................................ 36
3.14.1 Basic Antigen Coverage ...................................................................................... 37
3.14.2 Vaccination Coverage according to National Schedule ....................................... 37
3.15 Care Seeking and Treatment of Child Illness .................................................................... 41
3.16 Infant and Young Child Feeding ....................................................................................... 43
3.17 Early Childhood Development .......................................................................................... 44
3.18 HIV .................................................................................................................................... 46
3.18.1 Prevention Knowledge among Young People ..................................................... 46
3.18.2 Sexual Behavior ................................................................................................... 48
3.18.3 Prior HIV Testing ................................................................................................ 49
3.19 Violence Against Women .................................................................................................. 51
Intimate Partner Violence by Background Characteristics ................................................ 51
REFERENCES ........................................................................................................................................... 55
iii
TABLES AND FIGURES
v
ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS
HepB hepatitis B
Hib Haemophilus influenzae type b
HIV human immunodeficiency virus
HUCs highly urbanized cities
JMP Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene
vii
RSSOs Regional Statistical Services Offices
viii
FOREWORD
The 2022 Philippine National Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS) was implemented by the
Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA). The survey and this Key Indicators Report provide information on
fertility, fertility preferences, family planning practices, childhood mortality, maternal and child health,
nutrition, knowledge and attitudes regarding HIV/AIDS, violence against women, child discipline, early
childhood development, and other health issues. These indicators are crucial in policymaking, program
planning, and monitoring and evaluation of population and health programs, including those related to
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The 2022 NDHS is the seventh Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) conducted in the Philippines in
collaboration with The DHS Program and the 12th in a series of national DHS surveys conducted every 5
years since 1968. Fieldwork for the survey was carried out from May 2 to June 22, 2022, covering a
national sample of over 30,000 households and nearly 28,000 women age 15 to 49.
Funding for the 2022 NDHS was provided by the Government of the Philippines, while the provision of
tablet computers for data collection was supported by the Commission on Population and Development
(POPCOM). The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) provided technical
assistance through ICF under The DHS Program.
The PSA would like to express its deepest gratitude to the Department of Health (DOH), the Philippine
Commission on Women (PCW), the University of the Philippines Population Institute (UPPI), and the
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) for their invaluable contributions during the preparatory and
training phases of the survey.
Great appreciation is also extended to the PSA survey team for their hard work and dedication: the staff of
the Demographic and Health Statistics Division of the Social Sector Statistics Service who worked
tirelessly throughout all stages of the survey; selected staff of the National Censuses Service and the
Information Technology and Dissemination Service for their support during the training; the staff of the
Finance and Administrative Service for their administrative assistance; the staff of the Regional Statistical
Services Offices (RSSOs) and Provincial Statistical Offices (PSOs) for overseeing the data collection
activities; and the 110interviewing teams composed of team supervisors and field interviewers. Finally, the
PSA is grateful to the survey respondents who patiently shared their time and information.
ix
1 INTRODUCTION
The 2022 Philippine National Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS) is the seventh Demographic and
Health Survey (DHS) conducted in the Philippines in collaboration with the worldwide Demographic and
Health Surveys Program and the 12th in a series of national DHS surveys conducted every 5 years since
1968. The 2022 NDHS was implemented by the Philippine Statistics Authority (PSA). Data collection
took place from May 2 to June 22, 2022. ICF provided technical assistance through The DHS Program,
which is funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) and offers financial
support and technical assistance for population and health surveys in countries worldwide.
Funding for the 2022 NDHS was provided by the Government of the Philippines, while the provision of
tablet computers for data collection was supported by the Commission on Population and Development
(POPCOM). Other agencies and organizations that facilitated the successful implementation of the survey
through technical support were the Department of Health (DOH), the Philippine Commission on Women
(PCW), the University of the Philippines Population Institute (UPPI), and the United Nations Children’s
Fund (UNICEF).
This Key Indicators Report presents a first look at selected findings from the 2022 NDHS. A
comprehensive analysis of the data will be presented in a final report in 2023.
The primary objective of the 2022 NDHS is to provide up-to-date estimates of basic demographic and
health indicators. Specifically, the NDHS collected information on fertility, fertility preferences, family
planning practices, childhood mortality, maternal and child health, nutrition, knowledge and attitudes
regarding HIV/AIDS, violence against women, child discipline, early childhood development, and other
health issues.
The information collected through the NDHS is intended to assist policymakers and program managers in
designing and evaluating programs and strategies for improving the health of the Philippine’s population.
The 2022 NDHS also provides indicators anchored to the attainment of the Sustainable Development
Goals (SDGs) and the new Philippine Development Plan for 2023 to 2028.
1
2 SURVEY IMPLEMENTATION
The Philippines has 17 administrative regions, namely the National Capital Region (NCR), the Cordillera
Administrative Region (CAR), Region I (Ilocos), Region II (Cagayan Valley), Region III (Central Luzon),
Region IV-A (CALABARZON), Region IV-B (MIMAROPA), Region V (Bicol Region), Region VI
(Western Visayas), Region VII (Central Visayas), Region VIII (Eastern Visayas), Region IX (Zamboanga
Peninsula), Region X (Northern Mindanao), Region XI (Davao Region), Region XII (SOCCSKSARGEN),
the Caraga Region, and the Bangsamoro Autonomous Region in Muslim Mindanao (BARMM). Each
region is composed of provinces, highly urbanized cities (HUCs), which are subdivided into
cities/municipalities and barangays. The barangays are the smallest local government unit. National
government offices are usually (but not always) concentrated in the regional centers, and the seat of the
provincial government is situated in each of the respective provinces. The country has 81 provinces, 33
HUCs, and 42,036 barangays.
The sampling scheme provides data representative of the country as a whole, for urban and rural areas
separately, and for each of the country’s administrative regions. The sample selection methodology for the
2022 NDHS was based on a two-stage stratified sample design using the Master Sample Frame (MSF)
designed and compiled by the PSA. The MSF was constructed based on the listing of households from the
2010 Census of Population and Housing and updated based on the listing of households from the 2015
Census of Population. The first stage involved a systematic selection of 1,247 primary sampling units
(PSUs) distributed by province or HUC. A PSU can be a barangay, a portion of a large barangay, or two or
more adjacent small barangays.
In the second stage, an equal take of either 22 or 29 sample housing units were selected from each sampled
PSU using systematic random sampling. In situations where a housing unit contained one to three
households, all households were interviewed. In the rare situation where a housing unit contained more
than three households, no more than three households were interviewed. The survey interviewers were
instructed to interview only the pre-selected housing units. No replacements and no changes of the pre-
selected housing units were allowed in the implementing stage in order to prevent bias. Survey weights
were calculated, added to the data file, and applied so that weighted results are representative estimates of
indicators at the regional and national levels.
All women age 15–49 who were either usual residents of the selected households or visitors who stayed in
the households the night before the survey were eligible to be interviewed. Among women eligible for an
individual interview, one woman per household was selected for a module on women’s safety.
2.2 QUESTIONNAIRES
Two questionnaires were used for the 2022 NDHS: the Household Questionnaire and the Woman’s
Questionnaire. The questionnaires, based on The DHS Program’s model questionnaires, were adapted to
reflect the population and health issues relevant to the Philippines. Input was solicited from various
stakeholders representing government agencies, academe, and international agencies. The survey protocol
was reviewed by the ICF Institutional Review Board.
After all questionnaires were finalized in English, they were translated into six major languages: Tagalog,
Cebuano, Ilocano, Bikol, Hiligaynon, and Waray. The Household and Woman’s Questionnaires were
programmed into tablet computers to allow for computer-assisted personal interviewing (CAPI) for data
collection purposes, with the capability to choose any of the languages for each questionnaire.
The Household Questionnaire was used to list all usual residents of and visitors to the selected households.
Basic demographic information was collected for each person listed, including sex, age, marital status,
3
education, and relationship to the head of the household. The data on age and sex were used to identify
women who were eligible for individual interviews. The Household Questionnaire also collected
information on health insurance coverage for each household member and characteristics of the
household’s housing unit, such as source of drinking water, type of toilet facility, materials used for the
flooring of the housing unit, and ownership of various durable goods. In addition, survey-specific sections
were included that collected information on health facility utilization by household members and
knowledge of local health programs, noncommunicable diseases, infectious diseases, and COVID-19.
Lastly, the Household Questionnaire included the UNICEF Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS)
child discipline module.
The Woman’s Questionnaire was used to collect information on the following topics:
Sociodemographic characteristics
Reproduction
Family planning
Maternal and newborn health care
Vaccination and health of children
Children’s nutrition
Woman’s dietary diversity
Marriage and sexual activity
Fertility preferences
Husbands’ background characteristics and women’s employment activity
HIV/AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections
Women’s safety (including measures of physical, sexual, and emotional violence)
Early Childhood Development Index
Other health issues such as alcohol consumption and use of tobacco
As was done in the 2017 NDHS, tablet computers were used for data collection by the enumerators. The
tablet computers were equipped with Bluetooth® technology to enable remote electronic transfer of files,
such as assignments from the team supervisor to the interviewers, individual questionnaires to survey team
members, and completed questionnaires from interviewers to team supervisors. The CAPI data collection
system employed in the 2022 NDHS was developed by The DHS Program with the mobile version of
CSPro. The CSPro software was developed jointly by the U.S. Census Bureau, Serpro S.A., and The DHS
Program.
Prior to finalizing the design of survey materials, a pretest briefing was held from September 29 to October
1, 2021, at which the concepts used in the survey, field enumeration, and supervision procedures were
discussed and specific instructions for completing the questionnaires were provided.
The pretest exercise using paper and pencil personal interviewing (PAPI) was conducted by the PSA from
October 6 to 9, 2021, in the municipality of Sagada, Mt. Province, Cordillera Administrative Region. It
aimed to test the flow and clarity of the questions, the output rate per day, the sustainability of the
respondent’s attitude and motivation in answering the questions, and other issues that may arise during
data collection. A pretest debriefing was held on October 11, 2021, to discuss experiences in the
administration of the questionnaires, including problems encountered and recommendations for their
resolution.
4
In preparation for the series of trainings of field staff, the PSA also led a training of trainers from March 7
to 10, 2022, in Quezon City, Metro Manila. The training focused on discussions of the questionnaires, the
interviewer’s manual, and field operations guidelines.
Training of the field staff was conducted on two levels. The first was the training of the Task Force, and
the second was the training of the interviewing teams in the Task Force trainers’ respective regions. The
Task Force training was conducted from March 14 to April 1, 2022, in Quezon City, Metro Manila. The
training focused on how to properly carry out the interviews and fill out the questionnaires, on
understanding concepts and definitions, and on the CAPI system training. This training included 2 days of
field practice in two clusters in Quezon City. Trainees were PSA staff from Regional Statistical Services
Offices (RSSOs) who served as regional focal persons and information technology (IT) specialists.
Selected PSA staff from the Demographic and Health Statistics Division (DHSD) of the Social Sector
Statistics Service and representatives from ICF acted as trainers. There were also resource speakers from
the DOH, PCW, and UPPI for certain topics.
The second level of training took place from April 4 to 26, 2022, in 17 training centers selected by the
RSSOs. Trainers in the second-level training were participants in the Task Force training. The instructors
for the second-level training were the 17 regional supervisors and 17 regional IT specialists from each of
the 17 regions who were trained during the Task Force training. A total of 305 field interviewers and 110
team supervisors were recruited from each of the respective regions to take part in the second-level
training, and trainers from the PSA Central Office and ICF representatives provided additional supervision
and assistance during these trainings.
2.5 FIELDWORK
Survey data collection was carried out from May 2 to June 22, 2022, by the 110 field teams. Each team
consisted of a team supervisor and two to three field interviewers, all of whom were female. Fieldwork
monitoring was an integral part of the 2022 NDHS. Regional and team supervisors were engaged to
supervise their teams on a full-time basis. Just after data collection was launched, staff from the PSA
Central Office conducted a 3-day field supervision from May 4 to 6, 2022, to closely observe the teams
and ensure that any errors or issues were immediately corrected. Field check tables based on data from
completed questionnaires were also generated regularly by the PSA Central Office and used to monitor
progress and provide regular feedback to the field teams. GPS points were also collected during the survey.
Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, guidelines were developed to mitigate potential risk of infection of field
teams and survey respondents. These guidelines were followed throughout field data collection,
monitoring, and supervision.
Processing the 2022 NDHS data began almost as soon as fieldwork started. As data collection was
completed in each PSU or cluster, all electronic data files were transferred via SyncCloud to the PSA
Central Office in Quezon City. These data files were registered and checked for inconsistencies,
incompleteness, and outliers. The field teams were alerted to any inconsistencies and errors while still in
the area of assignment. A team of secondary editors in the PSA Central Office carried out secondary
editing, which involved resolving inconsistencies and the recoding of “other” responses; the former was
conducted during data collection, and the latter was conducted following the completion of the fieldwork.
Data editing was performed using the CSPro software package. Timely generation of field check tables
allowed for more effective monitoring. The secondary editing of the data was completed in August 2022.
The final cleaning of the data set was carried out by data processing specialists from The DHS Program in
September 2022.
5
Throughout this report, the numbers in the tables reflect weighted numbers. Percentages based on fewer
than 25 unweighted cases are suppressed and replaced with an asterisk; percentages based on 25 to 49
unweighted cases are shown in parentheses to caution readers when interpreting data that a percentage
based on fewer than 50 cases may not be statistically reliable.
6
3 KEY FINDINGS
Table 1 shows the results of the household and individual interviews, and response rates, according to
residence, for the 2022 NDHS. A total of 35,470 households were selected for the 2022 NDHS sample, of
which 30,621 were found to be occupied. Of the occupied households, 30,372 were successfully
interviewed, yielding a response rate of 99%. In the interviewed households, 28,379 women age 15–49
were identified as eligible for individual interviews. Interviews were completed with 27,821 women,
yielding a response rate of 98%.
1
Households interviewed/households occupied
2
Respondents interviewed/eligible respondents
Table 2.1 shows the percent distribution of households and de jure population by source of drinking water
and by time to obtain drinking water, according to residence. Improved sources of water protect against
outside contamination so that the water is more likely to be safe to drink.
Fifty-nine percent of households drink bottled water or water from a refilling station. Nineteen percent
of households drink water that is piped into their dwelling, yard, or plot.
Overall, 87% of Filipino households have water on the premises. Twelve percent of households travel
30 minutes or less to fetch water, and 1% travel more than 30 minutes.
7
Table 2.1 Household drinking water
Percent distribution of households and de jure population by source of drinking water and by time to obtain drinking water, according to residence,
Philippines NDHS 2022
Households Population
Characteristic Urban Rural Total Urban Rural Total
Source of drinking water
Improved source 99.5 96.2 98.0 99.5 96.1 97.9
Piped into dwelling/yard/plot 21.2 16.0 18.8 21.2 16.4 19.0
Piped to neighbor 2.5 2.9 2.7 2.7 2.8 2.7
Public tap/standpipe 1.0 3.4 2.2 1.0 3.7 2.3
Tube well or borehole 2.6 12.4 7.2 2.8 12.5 7.4
Protected dug well 1.1 6.1 3.4 1.2 6.0 3.5
Protected spring 0.8 8.4 4.3 0.9 8.5 4.5
Rainwater 0.1 0.5 0.3 0.1 0.5 0.3
Tanker truck/cart with small tank 0.1 0.8 0.4 0.1 1.0 0.5
Bottled water/refilling station 70.0 45.6 58.7 69.4 44.7 57.7
Unimproved source 0.5 3.5 1.9 0.5 3.6 2.0
Unprotected dug well 0.1 2.0 1.0 0.1 2.1 1.1
Unprotected spring 0.1 1.5 0.8 0.1 1.5 0.8
Other 0.3 0.0 0.2 0.2 0.0 0.1
Surface water 0.0 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.2 0.1
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Time to obtain drinking water
(round trip)
Water on premises1 95.8 77.5 87.3 95.7 76.9 86.8
30 minutes or less 4.0 20.6 11.7 4.1 21.0 12.1
More than 30 minutes 0.2 1.9 1.0 0.2 2.0 1.0
Don’t know 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.1
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Number of households/population 16,265 14,107 30,372 67,072 60,063 127,135
1
Includes water piped to a neighbor and those reporting a round-trip collection time of zero minutes
Building off the classification of drinking water sources as improved or unimproved, the Joint Monitoring
Programme for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene (JMP) has devised a five-rung drinking water
service ladder to benchmark and compare progress towards achieving SDG targets (WHO and UNICEF
2018). The NDHS captured information on four out of the five rungs; because the survey did not include
testing drinking water for fecal or chemical contamination, safely managed and basic drinking water
services cannot be distinguished and are grouped together in Table 2.2 as “at least basic service.”
8
Overall, 97% of the household population has at least basic drinking water service.
By region, the percentage of the household population with at least basic drinking water service ranges
from a low of 80% in BARMM to a high of nearly 100% in Ilocos.
Use of at least basic service drinking water increases with increasing household wealth; 89% of the
household population in the lowest wealth quintile has at least basic service, as compared with over
99% in the highest wealth quintile.
Percent distribution of de jure population by drinking water service ladder, according to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Background At least basic Limited Surface Number of
characteristic service1 service2 Unimproved3 water Total persons
Residence
Urban 99.3 0.2 0.5 0.0 100.0 67,072
Rural 94.4 1.8 3.6 0.2 100.0 60,063
Region
National Capital Region 99.1 0.1 0.8 0.0 100.0 17,073
Cordillera Admin. Region 94.1 0.6 5.3 0.0 100.0 2,192
I - Ilocos 99.8 0.1 0.1 0.0 100.0 7,008
II - Cagayan Valley 98.9 0.4 0.8 0.0 100.0 4,172
III - Central Luzon 99.6 0.3 0.1 0.0 100.0 13,931
IVA - CALABARZON 99.3 0.1 0.5 0.0 100.0 18,069
MIMAROPA 95.8 2.1 2.1 0.0 100.0 3,345
V - Bicol 92.6 2.0 5.4 0.0 100.0 6,871
VI - Western Visayas 98.4 0.3 1.3 0.0 100.0 9,160
VII - Central Visayas 97.9 0.9 1.1 0.0 100.0 9,493
VIII - Eastern Visayas 95.9 1.0 3.1 0.0 100.0 4,970
IX - Zamboanga Peninsula 89.0 2.3 8.7 0.0 100.0 4,563
X - Northern Mindanao 98.9 0.2 0.9 0.0 100.0 5,028
XI - Davao 97.3 0.5 2.1 0.1 100.0 6,965
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 96.1 1.5 2.2 0.2 100.0 5,777
XIII - CARAGA 97.1 0.4 2.5 0.0 100.0 3,066
BARMM 80.2 8.7 9.0 2.1 100.0 5,450
Wealth quintile
Lowest 88.9 3.2 7.3 0.5 100.0 25,413
Second 97.5 1.1 1.4 0.0 100.0 25,441
Middle 99.2 0.3 0.5 0.0 100.0 25,435
Fourth 99.5 0.1 0.4 0.0 100.0 25,421
Highest 99.7 0.0 0.3 0.0 100.0 25,424
Total 97.0 0.9 2.0 0.1 100.0 127,135
Note: Service ladder concept/definitions are based on the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene
(JMP).
1
Defined as drinking water from an improved source, provided either water is on the premises or round-trip collection time is 30 minutes or less.
Includes safely managed drinking water, which is not shown separately.
2
Drinking water from an improved source, and round-trip collection time is more than 30 minutes or is unknown.
3
Drinking water from an unprotected dug well or unprotected spring
3.3 SANITATION
Table 3.1 shows the percent distribution of households and de jure population by type of toilet/latrine
facilities and the percent distribution of households and de jure population with a toilet/latrine facility by
location of the facility, according to residence.
Two percent of households use unimproved toilet facilities, while 3% of households do not use any
toilet facilities.
9
Table 3.1 Household sanitation facilities
Percent distribution of households and de jure population by type of toilet/latrine facilities, and percent distribution of households and de jure
population with a toilet/latrine facility by location of the facility, according to residence, Philippines NDHS 2022
The JMP has also devised a five-rung sanitation service ladder to benchmark and compare progress
towards achieving SDG targets related to sanitation. The NDHS captured information about all five rungs.
However, for those households whose excreta were taken offsite, it is not possible to know if they were
treated appropriately, and therefore safely managed and basic sanitation services are grouped together in
Table 3.2 as “at least basic service.”
10
Overall, 83% of the household population has at least basic sanitation service.
By region, only 55% of the household population in BARMM has at least basic sanitation service, as
compared with 92% of the household population in CALABARZON.
The percentage of the household population with at least basic sanitation service ranges from 58% in
the lowest wealth quintile to 98% in the highest quintile; 14% of the household population in the
lowest wealth quintile engages in open defecation.
Percent distribution of de jure population by type of sanitation service, according to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Background At least basic Limited Open Number of
characteristic service1 service2 Unimproved3 defecation Total persons
Residence
Urban 84.0 13.0 1.7 1.2 100.0 67,072
Rural 80.7 12.5 1.8 5.0 100.0 60,063
Region
National Capital Region 81.6 15.8 2.5 0.1 100.0 17,073
Cordillera Admin. Region 81.6 16.2 1.6 0.6 100.0 2,192
I - Ilocos 81.7 17.8 0.1 0.3 100.0 7,008
II - Cagayan Valley 81.1 18.2 0.5 0.3 100.0 4,172
III - Central Luzon 88.9 10.0 0.7 0.5 100.0 13,931
IVA - CALABARZON 91.9 6.7 0.6 0.7 100.0 18,069
MIMAROPA 79.3 12.3 2.3 6.0 100.0 3,345
V - Bicol 78.7 13.7 0.2 7.3 100.0 6,871
VI - Western Visayas 84.7 8.4 2.2 4.7 100.0 9,160
VII - Central Visayas 80.3 16.0 0.3 3.4 100.0 9,493
VIII - Eastern Visayas 82.3 9.1 1.2 7.4 100.0 4,970
IX - Zamboanga Peninsula 76.5 11.4 5.6 6.5 100.0 4,563
X - Northern Mindanao 85.5 11.9 0.7 1.8 100.0 5,028
XI - Davao 81.3 17.3 0.3 1.0 100.0 6,965
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 75.1 19.0 1.2 4.7 100.0 5,777
XIII - CARAGA 89.0 8.4 1.8 0.9 100.0 3,066
BARMM 55.3 14.1 12.8 17.8 100.0 5,450
Wealth quintile
Lowest 57.8 23.3 5.2 13.6 100.0 25,413
Second 77.5 19.7 1.6 1.2 100.0 25,441
Middle 85.5 13.0 1.3 0.2 100.0 25,435
Fourth 94.2 5.2 0.5 0.0 100.0 25,421
Highest 97.5 2.5 0.0 0.0 100.0 25,424
Total 82.5 12.8 1.7 3.0 100.0 127,135
Note: Service ladder concept/definitions are based on the WHO/UNICEF Joint Monitoring Programme for Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene
(JMP).
1
Defined as use of improved facilities that are not shared with other households. Includes safely managed sanitation service, which is not shown
separately.
2
Defined as use of improved facilities shared by two or more households
3
Use of flush/pour flush toilet not to a sewer, septic tank, or pit latrine; pit latrine without a slab/open pit; hanging toilet/latrine; or bucket
As part of the household interview, respondents were asked whether each member of the household was
covered by any form of health insurance and, if so, by what type. Table 4 shows the percentage of the de
jure population with specific types of PhilHealth insurance coverage, the percentage with any PhilHealth
insurance, and the percentage with any other health insurance, according to residence, region, and wealth
quintile.
Seventy percent of the household population is covered by any PhilHealth insurance and 39% by other
types of health insurance.
Only 41% of the household population in BARMM is covered by any PhilHealth insurance, as
compared with 63%–79% of the household population in other regions.
PhilHealth coverage increases with increasing wealth, from 58% in the lowest wealth quintile to 84%
in the highest quintile.
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Table 4 PhilHealth coverage
Percentage of de jure population with specific types of PhilHealth insurance coverage, percentage with any PhilHealth insurance, and percentage
with any other health insurance, according to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
PhilHealth insurance by type of coverage
Dependent Not a
Dependent of member/ Any Any other
Background Paying Nonpaying of paying nonpaying not PhilHealth health Number of
characteristic Member member member member applicable Don’t know insurance insurance persons
Residence
Urban 27.4 13.4 22.3 7.9 28.3 0.7 71.0 50.5 67,072
Rural 14.0 19.5 13.8 20.9 31.3 0.6 68.1 26.7 60,063
Region
National Capital Region 32.0 15.2 23.3 5.6 23.1 0.9 76.1 63.1 17,073
Cordillera Admin. Region 19.3 20.7 20.4 17.4 21.5 0.8 77.7 33.9 2,192
I - Ilocos 19.6 17.1 18.7 11.7 30.7 2.2 67.1 37.8 7,008
II - Cagayan Valley 15.6 18.9 20.3 18.1 26.4 0.7 72.9 26.6 4,172
III - Central Luzon 30.8 12.1 26.0 6.4 24.1 0.7 75.3 54.4 13,931
IVA - CALABARZON 25.6 11.9 23.3 6.0 32.8 0.4 66.8 43.9 18,069
MIMAROPA 11.2 21.1 12.1 24.9 29.5 1.1 69.4 29.1 3,345
V - Bicol 13.9 20.7 12.5 26.7 25.7 0.5 73.7 33.6 6,871
VI - Western Visayas 20.6 16.6 14.9 14.5 32.9 0.6 66.5 34.5 9,160
VII - Central Visayas 20.5 17.4 13.1 11.9 36.7 0.4 62.9 35.5 9,493
VIII - Eastern Visayas 13.2 23.6 12.5 15.8 34.9 0.1 65.0 20.7 4,970
IX - Zamboanga Peninsula 9.1 23.5 7.3 27.7 31.5 1.0 67.5 18.8 4,563
X - Northern Mindanao 14.3 16.2 16.4 21.0 31.6 0.5 67.9 29.9 5,028
XI - Davao 22.7 18.5 19.8 17.7 20.9 0.3 78.8 38.4 6,965
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 13.8 17.0 18.2 24.4 26.1 0.5 73.5 30.8 5,777
XIII - CARAGA 15.9 22.5 16.7 23.4 20.7 0.8 78.4 31.7 3,066
BARMM 2.7 8.6 5.1 25.0 58.5 0.1 41.4 8.2 5,450
Wealth quintile
Lowest 4.5 19.9 6.1 27.6 41.5 0.4 58.1 11.0 25,413
Second 11.4 19.6 12.2 20.4 35.8 0.6 63.6 24.5 25,441
Middle 20.5 16.1 19.2 12.3 31.3 0.7 68.0 39.3 25,435
Fourth 30.1 13.7 24.7 6.5 24.2 0.9 74.9 53.8 25,421
Highest 38.8 12.0 29.4 3.4 15.6 0.8 83.6 67.5 25,424
Total 21.1 16.2 18.3 14.0 29.7 0.7 69.7 39.2 127,135
3.5 COVID-19
The Household Questionnaire included several questions assessing the household respondent’s knowledge
of and experience with COVID-19.
Table 5.1 shows the percentage of household respondents reporting how COVID-19 is spread from one
person to another.
The most commonly cited means of person-to-person transmission of COVID-19 was through talking
(72%), followed by coughing (66%) and sneezing (53%).
Only 2% of respondents did not know how the virus spreads from one person to another.
12
Table 5.1 COVID-19 transmission
Percentage of household respondents who state that COVID-19 is spread from one person to another by various means, according to background
characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Various means by which COVID-19 spreads from one person to another Number of
Background Sharing household
characteristic Talking Sneezing Coughing utensils Touching Airborne Other Don’t know respondents
Residence
Urban 70.8 56.3 68.7 25.2 34.1 1.6 1.0 1.6 16,265
Rural 72.3 48.4 62.3 24.1 38.3 1.3 1.4 2.3 14,107
Region
National Capital Region 69.8 68.8 77.2 25.7 23.1 1.2 0.8 0.6 4,334
Cordillera Admin.
Region 73.1 63.9 79.5 18.8 32.2 0.3 1.7 1.2 571
I - Ilocos 55.4 40.0 57.2 24.5 28.9 7.0 2.6 4.4 1,646
II - Cagayan Valley 82.5 59.6 73.6 26.4 47.1 0.6 1.6 0.5 1,024
III - Central Luzon 80.3 63.7 72.6 28.2 33.2 0.8 0.6 1.7 3,248
IVA - CALABARZON 64.2 39.8 59.3 19.2 36.7 2.8 0.8 1.4 4,394
MIMAROPA 69.7 55.9 59.1 21.6 40.3 2.3 0.9 3.3 833
V - Bicol 68.8 39.8 54.4 14.1 43.9 0.9 1.2 1.8 1,553
VI - Western Visayas 72.7 42.6 61.7 22.3 33.9 1.0 2.7 1.7 2,193
VII - Central Visayas 79.5 49.7 60.6 16.1 42.5 0.3 0.7 1.1 2,291
VIII - Eastern Visayas 67.1 59.4 69.3 32.1 37.4 0.5 0.7 0.3 1,149
IX - Zamboanga
Peninsula 71.0 46.3 59.0 27.0 48.2 1.5 2.1 5.8 990
X - Northern Mindanao 77.1 54.7 72.7 47.4 52.0 0.9 1.4 0.8 1,182
XI - Davao 76.2 45.6 57.8 22.7 46.0 0.3 1.9 2.0 1,842
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 69.4 45.8 64.6 19.0 33.2 0.8 0.7 5.4 1,368
XIII - CARAGA 74.4 56.7 60.5 20.6 26.3 1.4 1.9 2.8 687
BARMM 72.6 70.8 77.3 53.7 34.7 0.2 0.2 3.7 1,066
Wealth quintile
Lowest 68.8 46.4 61.9 25.0 34.8 0.8 1.2 4.6 6,151
Second 70.8 48.8 63.0 22.9 37.3 1.8 1.1 1.9 6,022
Middle 71.3 52.6 66.4 23.7 34.7 1.8 1.3 1.4 6,209
Fourth 70.8 57.1 67.3 24.8 35.9 1.4 0.8 0.8 6,098
Highest 76.0 58.6 70.1 27.2 37.5 1.6 1.6 0.7 5,892
Age
<20 69.2 52.8 64.7 25.9 43.8 0.8 0.9 0.6 970
20–34 70.1 54.2 68.8 26.8 38.1 1.5 1.2 1.2 6,874
35–49 71.8 53.9 65.1 25.8 37.1 1.7 1.1 1.3 9,765
50–64 74.0 51.9 64.8 22.9 35.7 1.5 1.1 2.0 8,316
65+ 68.8 48.9 64.5 22.2 29.5 1.0 1.7 4.6 4,448
Sex
Male 72.0 50.8 63.7 23.6 35.7 1.6 1.1 2.3 7,654
Female 71.3 53.3 66.4 25.1 36.1 1.4 1.2 1.8 22,718
Total 71.5 52.6 65.7 24.7 36.0 1.5 1.2 1.9 30,372
13
3.5.2 COVID-19 Symptoms and Care Seeking
Table 5.2 shows the percent distribution of household respondents by whether they had experienced
COVID-19 symptoms since January 2020, according to background characteristics.
Sixteen percent of household respondents reported experiencing COVID-19 symptoms since January
2020.
Notably, the percentage of respondents who had experienced COVID-19 symptoms generally
increases with increasing household wealth; 14% of respondents in the lowest wealth quintile have
experienced symptoms, as compared with 23% of respondents in the highest wealth quintile.
Percent distribution of household respondents who have experienced COVID-19 symptoms since January 2020, according to
background characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Experienced COVID-19 symptoms1 Number of
Background household
characteristic Yes No Don’t know Total respondents
Residence
Urban 15.2 84.7 0.2 100.0 16,265
Rural 17.4 82.4 0.2 100.0 14,107
Region
National Capital Region 11.2 88.6 0.1 100.0 4,334
Cordillera Admin. Region 21.4 78.6 0.0 100.0 571
I - Ilocos 16.4 83.6 0.0 100.0 1,646
II - Cagayan Valley 22.6 77.4 0.0 100.0 1,024
III - Central Luzon 17.8 82.2 0.0 100.0 3,248
IVA - CALABARZON 13.4 86.5 0.1 100.0 4,394
MIMAROPA 19.8 80.2 0.0 100.0 833
V - Bicol 13.4 86.5 0.0 100.0 1,553
VI - Western Visayas 15.4 84.6 0.0 100.0 2,193
VII - Central Visayas 23.3 76.3 0.3 100.0 2,291
VIII - Eastern Visayas 18.7 81.3 0.0 100.0 1,149
IX - Zamboanga Peninsula 21.5 78.2 0.3 100.0 990
X - Northern Mindanao 18.8 81.2 0.0 100.0 1,182
XI - Davao 19.1 80.9 0.0 100.0 1,842
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 14.1 85.6 0.2 100.0 1,368
XIII - CARAGA 15.6 84.4 0.0 100.0 687
BARMM 9.0 88.7 2.3 100.0 1,066
Wealth quintile
Lowest 13.8 85.9 0.4 100.0 6,151
Second 15.4 84.5 0.1 100.0 6,022
Middle 13.1 86.9 0.0 100.0 6,209
Fourth 16.1 83.6 0.3 100.0 6,098
Highest 23.0 77.0 0.0 100.0 5,892
Age
<20 16.1 82.8 1.1 100.0 970
20–34 16.7 83.2 0.2 100.0 6,874
35–49 17.1 82.8 0.1 100.0 9,765
50–64 16.4 83.4 0.2 100.0 8,316
65+ 13.1 86.8 0.1 100.0 4,448
Sex
Male 16.9 82.9 0.2 100.0 7,654
Female 16.0 83.9 0.2 100.0 22,718
Total 16.2 83.6 0.2 100.0 30,372
1
Fever, chills, cough, shortness of breath or difficulty breathing, fatigue, muscle or body aches, headache, loss of taste or smell, sore
throat, congestion or runny nose, nausea or vomiting, or diarrhea
Table 5.3 shows the percentage of household respondents who sought consultation or treatment for their
COVID-19 symptoms and, among those who did not seek treatment, the reasons why not.
Sixty-five percent of household respondents indicated that they did not seek consultation or treatment
for their COVID-19 symptoms.
The most common reason for not seeking treatment for symptoms was the ability to self-medicate
(84%).
14
Table 5.3 Reasons for not seeking COVID-19 consultation or treatment
Percent distribution of household respondents with COVID-19 symptoms by whether they sought consultation or treatment, and among those who did not seek consultation or treatment for symptoms, and reasons specified for
not seeking treatment, according to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Sought consultation or
treatment for symptoms Reasons respondent did not seek treatment for symptoms
Number of
household
respondents
with COVID-
Number of 19 symptoms
household Fear of going who did not
respondents to health No available seek
Background with COVID- Symptoms Self- facility due to doctors/ Other/ consultation
characteristic Yes No Total 19 symptoms harmless Cost Distance Embarrassed medication COVID-19 health facility don’t know or treatment
Residence
Urban 41.2 58.8 100.0 2,468 15.2 3.9 1.3 0.8 83.5 31.3 0.5 0.0 1,452
Rural 29.4 70.6 100.0 2,452 13.1 3.6 1.2 1.1 83.9 38.4 0.2 0.2 1,731
Region
National Capital Region 53.5 46.5 100.0 486 20.6 4.8 0.0 0.0 83.1 23.1 0.0 0.3 226
Cordillera Admin. Region 54.1 45.9 100.0 122 18.8 3.6 3.2 0.1 83.9 36.7 0.2 0.1 56
I - Ilocos 33.8 66.2 100.0 270 4.5 1.7 3.2 0.4 85.1 50.2 0.0 0.0 179
II - Cagayan Valley 43.0 57.0 100.0 231 8.9 3.0 0.0 1.5 83.6 63.1 0.3 0.8 132
III - Central Luzon 41.1 58.9 100.0 579 21.5 4.3 2.2 2.0 80.7 25.2 0.4 0.0 341
IVA - CALABARZON 46.6 53.4 100.0 589 16.9 5.0 0.0 0.4 86.0 20.7 0.2 0.0 314
MIMAROPA 28.3 71.7 100.0 165 13.1 2.7 4.5 0.3 79.0 41.2 0.2 0.7 118
V - Bicol 30.3 69.7 100.0 209 11.8 1.5 0.7 2.6 83.8 30.9 0.0 0.3 146
VI - Western Visayas 31.3 68.7 100.0 338 15.3 2.9 0.0 0.1 79.9 39.3 0.0 0.4 233
VII - Central Visayas 21.5 78.5 100.0 534 9.6 3.1 2.1 1.9 85.8 31.3 0.5 0.0 420
VIII - Eastern Visayas 28.7 71.3 100.0 215 15.8 2.2 0.4 0.6 88.1 29.6 0.0 0.2 153
IX - Zamboanga
Peninsula 16.0 84.0 100.0 212 8.7 0.7 1.2 0.0 75.2 53.9 0.1 0.0 178
X - Northern Mindanao 26.4 73.6 100.0 222 5.6 16.8 1.0 1.1 90.6 40.6 0.9 0.0 163
XI - Davao 26.2 73.8 100.0 351 12.1 0.6 0.4 0.5 94.8 35.0 0.0 0.0 259
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 34.9 65.1 100.0 193 15.7 4.8 2.6 0.6 67.5 48.0 0.4 0.0 126
XIII - CARAGA 34.5 65.5 100.0 107 5.0 3.5 2.0 1.9 79.8 35.9 1.9 0.5 70
BARMM 26.9 73.1 100.0 96 47.0 2.0 0.5 1.6 81.1 31.9 1.1 0.0 70
Wealth quintile
Lowest 20.9 79.1 100.0 847 11.2 6.4 1.8 1.9 80.2 44.3 0.1 0.4 671
Second 23.3 76.7 100.0 928 12.0 3.5 2.6 0.7 83.4 36.5 0.5 0.0 711
Middle 31.7 68.3 100.0 813 16.0 3.4 0.9 0.6 85.8 35.0 0.6 0.1 556
Fourth 40.2 59.8 100.0 979 17.5 4.4 0.2 0.3 81.9 31.4 0.0 0.3 585
Highest 51.2 48.8 100.0 1,353 14.6 0.9 0.7 1.0 87.3 27.9 0.3 0.0 661
Age
<20 23.5 76.5 100.0 156 14.6 1.6 0.6 1.8 77.2 43.8 0.0 0.0 120
20–34 36.9 63.1 100.0 1,145 15.0 3.9 1.0 0.3 81.6 34.5 0.5 0.0 722
35–49 32.9 67.1 100.0 1,671 15.0 3.9 0.6 1.1 82.4 34.7 0.3 0.2 1,121
50–64 35.6 64.4 100.0 1,366 13.7 3.0 2.0 1.4 86.8 34.4 0.2 0.1 880
65+ 41.4 58.6 100.0 582 9.7 5.2 2.5 0.2 86.6 37.2 0.2 0.4 341
Sex
Male 40.2 59.8 100.0 1,295 13.8 4.6 2.2 0.4 83.9 30.7 0.1 0.2 774
Female 33.5 66.5 100.0 3,626 14.2 3.5 1.0 1.1 83.6 36.6 0.3 0.1 2,410
Total 35.3 64.7 100.0 4,920 14.1 3.7 1.3 0.9 83.7 35.2 0.3 0.2 3,183
15
3.5.3 COVID-19 Prevention and Stigma
A vast majority of respondents knew that COVID-19 infections can be prevented (93%). Table 5.4 shows
the percentage of household respondents who indicate that COVID-19 infection can be prevented through
various means.
Wearing of a face mask was the most commonly cited measure to prevent COVID-19 infection (84%),
followed by social distancing (76%) and frequent and proper handwashing (65%).
16
Table 5.4 COVID-19 infection prevention
Percent distribution of household respondents by whether they know COVID-19 can be prevented, and among those who know COVID-19 can be prevented, the various means indicated by which COVID-19 can be prevented, according
to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Number of
household
COVID-19 infection can be prevented Various means COVID-19 can be prevented
respondents
Frequent Use of Getting Eating well- Avoiding who know
Number of and proper alcohol- Proper vaccinated balanced contact with COVID-19
Background Don’t household hand- based hand cough Social Wearing of against diet/well- farm or wild Other/ can be
characteristic Yes No know Total respondents washing sanitizer etiquette distancing1 face mask COVID-19 cooked food animals2 don’t know prevented
Residence
Urban 93.8 5.2 1.0 100.0 16,265 66.6 60.3 20.2 75.1 83.8 50.6 17.1 1.4 1.2 15,258
Rural 91.7 6.7 1.6 100.0 14,107 62.3 55.9 15.5 76.5 83.4 43.7 14.2 1.7 1.5 12,929
Region
National Capital Region 96.3 3.7 0.1 100.0 4,334 77.4 69.1 24.1 73.0 89.0 66.5 17.0 1.1 0.3 4,174
Cordillera Admin.
Region 96.4 2.5 1.1 100.0 571 61.5 54.3 34.5 73.5 84.9 50.5 16.1 3.4 0.8 550
I - Ilocos 97.3 1.7 1.0 100.0 1,646 54.8 53.8 13.3 77.8 82.7 21.9 18.4 0.1 6.0 1,603
II - Cagayan Valley 98.5 1.1 0.3 100.0 1,024 71.8 78.7 14.6 75.6 94.6 59.1 18.0 6.6 1.5 1,009
III - Central Luzon 97.1 2.3 0.6 100.0 3,248 72.6 68.8 24.0 80.6 82.7 45.0 19.4 1.1 1.3 3,155
IVA - CALABARZON 97.6 1.8 0.6 100.0 4,394 61.3 51.7 15.2 71.8 76.3 36.7 15.1 0.8 0.8 4,289
MIMAROPA 97.1 1.4 1.5 100.0 833 73.5 59.1 13.6 81.0 85.5 25.3 10.8 0.4 1.3 808
V - Bicol 97.2 2.4 0.4 100.0 1,553 49.4 43.6 5.3 76.1 83.7 27.2 12.2 0.0 1.5 1,509
VI - Western Visayas 96.1 2.9 1.0 100.0 2,193 57.2 45.4 14.8 70.3 78.4 50.3 14.8 0.5 2.4 2,108
VII - Central Visayas 80.9 18.4 0.7 100.0 2,291 50.5 54.4 8.0 75.0 87.1 44.1 16.3 3.4 0.3 1,852
VIII - Eastern Visayas 93.1 6.8 0.1 100.0 1,149 69.4 59.6 14.4 81.4 91.1 63.0 10.7 2.8 0.7 1,070
IX - Zamboanga
Peninsula 75.7 18.5 5.8 100.0 990 56.8 55.5 25.8 77.3 78.7 53.6 18.8 1.6 1.5 749
X - Northern Mindanao 83.7 11.4 4.9 100.0 1,182 70.0 60.6 31.6 75.6 81.1 70.2 17.8 3.4 0.8 990
XI - Davao 84.3 13.9 1.8 100.0 1,842 56.1 46.9 6.4 81.6 80.1 43.1 12.3 0.2 1.6 1,552
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 89.9 6.6 3.4 100.0 1,368 68.6 62.7 15.8 81.1 89.1 40.4 13.8 0.9 0.8 1,230
XIII - CARAGA 87.4 10.9 1.7 100.0 687 50.5 43.1 19.0 76.5 78.7 47.7 13.2 1.9 1.0 601
BARMM 88.1 6.4 5.5 100.0 1,066 80.9 73.5 43.5 71.6 87.2 71.0 16.0 6.7 1.1 939
Wealth quintile
Lowest 86.5 9.9 3.6 100.0 6,151 57.2 52.0 16.1 72.7 83.2 45.7 10.4 1.7 1.4 5,323
Second 91.9 7.0 1.0 100.0 6,022 60.9 53.9 13.8 75.2 82.9 42.6 13.5 1.7 1.5 5,537
Middle 94.0 5.3 0.7 100.0 6,209 64.8 57.5 16.4 76.7 83.7 45.9 15.3 0.9 1.4 5,835
Fourth 95.7 3.7 0.6 100.0 6,098 67.5 61.2 18.5 75.4 83.8 49.5 18.9 1.4 1.0 5,836
Highest 96.0 3.4 0.6 100.0 5,892 72.1 66.2 25.3 78.5 84.3 53.3 20.3 2.2 1.3 5,657
Age
<20 91.4 7.9 0.7 100.0 970 62.9 67.5 19.7 79.9 83.9 41.0 16.1 1.2 1.6 887
20–34 92.9 5.9 1.3 100.0 6,874 65.1 61.0 18.7 76.9 84.3 47.9 16.0 1.8 1.1 6,384
35–49 93.3 5.6 1.1 100.0 9,765 66.4 58.0 19.0 75.5 83.5 48.6 17.2 1.7 1.1 9,112
50–64 93.0 5.7 1.3 100.0 8,316 64.6 58.3 17.2 75.2 84.3 47.7 15.3 1.5 1.5 7,736
65+ 91.5 6.5 2.0 100.0 4,448 60.3 52.5 16.2 74.6 81.4 45.0 13.0 1.3 1.6 4,069
Sex
Male 93.1 5.4 1.5 100.0 7,654 61.2 54.6 17.7 75.2 83.2 49.5 12.5 1.6 1.1 7,129
Female 92.7 6.1 1.2 100.0 22,718 65.8 59.5 18.2 76.0 83.7 46.8 16.9 1.6 1.4 21,058
Total 92.8 5.9 1.3 100.0 30,372 64.6 58.3 18.1 75.8 83.6 47.4 15.8 1.6 1.3 28,187
1
Keeping a distance of at least 1 meter from or staying away from individuals experiencing respiratory symptoms
2
This includes contact with wild or farm animals (alive or dead), animal markets, and products that come from animals.
17
Table 5.5 shows the percent distribution of household respondents who would want it to remain a secret if
a family member got infected with COVID-19, according to background characteristics.
Ninety- three percent of household respondents would not keep a family member’s positive COVID-
19 diagnosis a secret.
Differences by background characteristics were generally small except that 24% of respondents from
BARMM indicated that they would want a family member’s infection with COVID-19 kept a secret.
Percent distribution of household respondents by whether they would want it to remain a secret that a family member got infected with
COVID-19, according to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Number of
Background Remain No need to Don’t know/ household
characteristic secret remain secret not sure/depends Total respondents
Residence
Urban 5.6 93.0 1.4 100.0 16,265
Rural 5.7 93.3 0.9 100.0 14,107
Region
National Capital Region 4.3 94.9 0.8 100.0 4,334
Cordillera Admin. Region 4.2 94.8 1.0 100.0 571
I - Ilocos 4.9 94.0 1.2 100.0 1,646
II - Cagayan Valley 3.4 96.1 0.5 100.0 1,024
III - Central Luzon 7.8 91.0 1.2 100.0 3,248
IVA - CALABARZON 4.2 94.3 1.6 100.0 4,394
MIMAROPA 8.0 90.3 1.7 100.0 833
V - Bicol 5.3 93.8 0.9 100.0 1,553
VI - Western Visayas 5.9 93.5 0.6 100.0 2,193
VII - Central Visayas 5.0 94.2 0.8 100.0 2,291
VIII - Eastern Visayas 4.3 95.6 0.1 100.0 1,149
IX - Zamboanga Peninsula 4.9 93.6 1.5 100.0 990
X - Northern Mindanao 6.3 93.6 0.1 100.0 1,182
XI - Davao 2.7 96.6 0.7 100.0 1,842
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 3.9 93.8 2.2 100.0 1,368
XIII - CARAGA 4.6 94.7 0.8 100.0 687
BARMM 23.6 70.6 5.8 100.0 1,066
Wealth quintile
Lowest 7.3 90.9 1.8 100.0 6,151
Second 4.9 94.2 0.8 100.0 6,022
Middle 5.2 93.9 0.9 100.0 6,209
Fourth 5.5 93.2 1.3 100.0 6,098
Highest 5.4 93.6 1.0 100.0 5,892
Age
<20 6.7 91.7 1.7 100.0 970
20–34 6.6 92.2 1.2 100.0 6,874
35–49 5.5 93.4 1.0 100.0 9,765
50–64 5.4 93.3 1.2 100.0 8,316
65+ 4.7 94.1 1.3 100.0 4,448
Sex
Male 5.8 93.0 1.2 100.0 7,654
Female 5.6 93.2 1.2 100.0 22,718
Total 5.7 93.2 1.2 100.0 30,372
18
Psychological aggression
Includes one or both of the following:
Shouting, yelling, or screaming at the child
Calling the child dumb, lazy, or a similar term
Sample: De jure children age 1–14
Physical punishment
Includes one or more of the following:
Shaking the child
Spanking, hitting, or slapping the child on the bottom with a bare hand
Hitting the child on the bottom or other part of the body with a belt,
hairbrush, stick, or other similar hard object
Hitting or slapping the child on the face, head, or ears
Hitting the child on the hand, arm, or leg
Sample: De jure children age 1–14
The manner in which parents and caretakers discipline children can have long-term consequences for
children’s physical and psychological development and well-being. The 2022 NDHS Household
Questionnaire included questions from the UNICEF Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) module on
how children in the household are usually disciplined. The questions were asked about one randomly
selected de jure child age 1–14 per household. The respondent to the Household Questionnaire (the
household head or other household member) was asked a series of separate questions about disciplinary
practices that may have been used with the child during the month before the survey.
Table 6.1 shows the percentage of children age 1–14 who were disciplined using various discipline
methods during the past month, according to background characteristics.
Thirty-six percent of children age 1–14 experienced only nonviolent discipline; 48% experienced any
psychological aggression.
While 39% of children experienced any physical punishment, only 3% were disciplined using severe
physical punishment.
Overall, 59% of children age 1–14 experienced any violent discipline method (Table 6.1).
Twelve percent of respondents believe that a child needs physical punishment to be raised or educated
properly (Table 6.2).
19
Table 6.1 Child discipline
Percentage of children age 1–14 by child disciplining methods experienced during the past month, according to background characteristics,
Philippines NDHS 2022
Percentage of children age 1–14 who experienced:
Any violent Number of
Background Only nonviolent Psychological Any physical Severe physical discipline children age
characteristic discipline aggression punishment punishment1 method 1–14
Sex
Male 33.5 49.8 42.8 3.9 61.1 9,037
Female 38.1 46.8 35.1 2.8 56.4 8,379
Residence
Urban 34.1 49.8 40.5 3.4 60.3 8,591
Rural 37.2 47.0 37.7 3.5 57.4 8,825
Region
National Capital Region 34.4 44.4 38.4 3.7 55.1 1,962
Cordillera Admin. Region 30.4 49.4 38.6 1.9 60.5 277
I - Ilocos 32.1 52.6 46.0 0.8 66.3 911
II - Cagayan Valley 26.1 60.4 48.3 1.4 71.7 521
III - Central Luzon 26.2 61.0 46.9 3.3 68.8 1,796
IVA - CALABARZON 34.0 50.1 36.3 2.8 60.1 2,370
MIMAROPA 44.0 43.3 31.6 1.7 52.4 475
V - Bicol 35.0 53.1 40.7 2.8 63.7 1,044
VI - Western Visayas 45.2 33.4 38.1 5.4 51.0 1,183
VII - Central Visayas 39.3 51.3 36.6 2.3 59.9 1,192
VIII - Eastern Visayas 35.7 45.7 44.6 5.2 60.7 703
IX - Zamboanga Peninsula 26.5 60.0 58.1 4.3 72.3 744
X - Northern Mindanao 36.7 48.5 34.3 6.8 56.5 776
XI - Davao 28.8 56.4 43.7 6.0 69.2 972
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 44.0 42.7 31.7 2.5 50.7 899
XIII - CARAGA 35.1 50.8 32.0 2.1 59.7 471
BARMM 53.7 23.3 21.6 3.2 28.3 1,118
Age
1–2 42.7 29.7 33.8 1.6 45.1 1,700
3–4 31.7 46.7 49.5 2.8 63.3 2,047
5–9 33.0 51.5 44.6 3.3 62.3 6,390
10–14 37.5 50.5 32.6 4.1 57.8 7,279
Mother’s education
No education 41.2 34.1 39.9 4.4 46.3 236
Grades 1–6 35.8 47.2 41.2 4.9 58.6 2,655
Grades 7–10 32.2 52.4 41.9 3.5 63.1 7,081
Grades 11–12 23.3 41.5 54.2 0.6 69.7 133
Postsecondary 43.7 38.6 34.8 1.6 49.2 365
College 38.4 45.2 36.4 2.4 55.4 4,182
Mother not in household 39.6 47.0 33.8 3.7 55.2 2,764
Wealth quintile
Lowest 39.0 45.0 39.0 4.2 55.1 4,648
Second 34.4 49.3 41.5 3.3 61.5 3,909
Middle 31.7 52.8 40.7 3.8 63.5 3,419
Fourth 33.9 50.3 40.3 2.6 59.8 2,894
Highest 39.1 45.1 32.3 2.5 54.3 2,546
Total 35.7 48.4 39.1 3.4 58.8 17,416
1
Severe physical punishment includes (1) hitting or slapping on the face, head, or ears and (2) beating the child up, that is, hitting the child
over and over as hard as one can.
20
Table 6.2 Attitudes toward physical punishment
Table 7 presents the weighted and unweighted numbers and percent distributions of women interviewed in
the 2022 NDHS according to background characteristics. The results presented in this report are based on
weighted data; thus, they are representative of the country as a whole, urban and rural areas, and each of
the regions.
Three in four respondents report being in good (54%) or very good (22%) health.
Seventy-seven percent of respondents are Roman Catholics, 10% are Protestants, and 7% are Muslims.
21
The highest percentage of respondents are Tagalog (30%), followed by Cebuano (22%), Ilokano and
Hiligaynon/Ilonggo (8% each), and Bikolano (7%).
Thirty-six percent of respondents are married, 19% are living together with a partner as if married (in
subsequent tables, the 55% of women who are married or living together as if married are referred to
as married), and 42% have never been married; only a small percentage of women are divorced or
separated (2%) or widowed (1%).
The National Capital Region and CALABARZON have the highest share of respondents (15% each),
followed by Central Luzon (11%).
With respect to educational status, 1% of women report that they have never attended school, 9% have
completed at least some primary school, 43% have completed at least some junior high school, 10%
have completed at least some senior high school, and 37% have completed at least some postsecondary
school or college.
Seventeen percent of respondents are in the lowest wealth quintile and 23% are in the highest.
Percent distribution of women age 15–49 by selected background characteristics, Philippines NDHS
2022
Background Weighted Weighted Unweighted
characteristic percent number number
Age
15–19 19.9 5,531 5,850
20–24 16.8 4,677 4,538
25–29 14.0 3,904 3,789
30–34 13.4 3,729 3,646
35–39 12.3 3,418 3,388
40–44 12.2 3,389 3,407
45–49 11.4 3,173 3,203
Self-reported health status
Very good 21.7 6,048 5,920
Good 54.0 15,027 14,249
Moderate 23.1 6,422 7,315
Bad 1.1 303 311
Very bad 0.1 21 26
Religion
Roman Catholic 76.5 21,293 19,584
Protestant 9.5 2,640 2,898
Iglesia ni Cristo 2.9 812 705
Aglipay 1.4 388 512
Islam 6.6 1,823 3,068
Other Christian 2.2 610 671
Other 0.8 231 359
No religion 0.1 25 24
Ethnic group
Tagalog 30.0 8,339 5,108
Cebuano 21.7 6,024 6,067
Ilokano 7.5 2,074 2,650
Hiligaynon/Ilonggo 8.4 2,345 2,098
Bikolano 6.7 1,860 1,755
Kapampangan 3.3 927 627
Maranao 1.6 445 770
Tausog 1.5 430 915
Waray 3.6 1,007 1,409
Aeta 0.1 34 68
Badjao 0.1 28 64
Other 15.5 4,308 6,290
Marital status
Never married 41.7 11,596 11,400
Married 36.2 10,062 10,688
Living together 18.8 5,244 4,834
Divorced/separated 2.4 666 621
Widowed 0.9 252 278
Residence
Urban 56.0 15,579 11,334
Rural 44.0 12,242 16,487
Continued…
22
Table 7—Continued
Background Weighted Weighted Unweighted
characteristic percent number number
Region
National Capital Region 15.4 4,280 2,635
Cordillera Admin. Region 1.6 438 1,668
I - Ilocos 5.3 1,473 1,160
II - Cagayan Valley 3.0 833 1,164
III - Central Luzon 11.1 3,100 2,321
IVA - CALABARZON 15.2 4,215 1,613
MIMAROPA 2.6 715 1,405
V - Bicol 5.1 1,405 1,553
VI - Western Visayas 6.6 1,831 1,842
VII - Central Visayas 7.3 2,023 1,457
VIII - Eastern Visayas 3.8 1,062 1,678
IX - Zamboanga Peninsula 3.5 970 1,159
X - Northern Mindanao 3.7 1,035 1,711
XI - Davao 5.3 1,474 1,418
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 4.2 1,175 1,360
XIII - CARAGA 2.3 636 1,512
BARMM 4.2 1,156 2,165
Education
No education 0.7 197 282
Grades 1–6 9.1 2,538 3,005
Grades 7–10 43.0 11,954 11,717
Grades 11–12 9.9 2,751 2,755
Postsecondary 2.2 625 626
College 35.1 9,755 9,436
Wealth quintile
Lowest 16.5 4,595 6,715
Second 18.8 5,219 6,067
Middle 20.4 5,666 5,187
Fourth 21.7 6,048 4,907
Highest 22.6 6,292 4,945
Total 100.0 27,821 27,821
Note: Education categories refer to the highest level of education attended, whether or not that level
was completed.
3.8 FERTILITY
Table 8 shows the total fertility rate (TFR) and age-specific fertility rates (ASFRs) among women by
5-year age groups for the 3-year period preceding the survey.
If fertility were to remain constant at current levels, a woman in the Philippines would bear an average
of 1.9 children in her lifetime. Hence, the Philippines is below the replacement fertility level of 2.1
children.
Fertility is higher in rural areas than in urban areas; on average, rural women give birth to 2.2 children
in their lifetime, as compared with 1.7 children for urban women.
Fertility is low among adolescents (25 births per 1,000 women age 15–19). It peaks at 105 births per
1,000 among women age 25–29 and decreases thereafter.
23
Table 8 Current fertility
Age-specific and total fertility rates, the general fertility rate, and
the crude birth rate for the 3 years preceding the survey, according
to residence, Philippines NDHS 2022
Residence
Age group Urban Rural Total
10–14 [0] [0] [0]
15–19 22 28 25
20–24 71 102 84
25–29 95 120 105
30–34 84 108 95
35–39 55 63 58
40–44 16 27 21
45–49 [1] [2] [2]
TFR (15–49) 1.7 2.2 1.9
GFR 57 72 63
CBR 12.7 14.0 13.3
Trends: As shown in Figure 1, the TFR declined Figure 1 Trends in fertility by residence
from 4.1 children per woman in 1993 to 1.9 in 2022;
TFR for the 3 years before each survey
the pace of the decline between 2017 and 2022 was
much more rapid than the decline between 1993 and Rural
2017. The TFR among women in rural areas 4.8 4.7
4.3
decreased from 4.8 in 1993 to 2.2 in 2022. Among 4.1 Total 3.8
3.7 3.5
women in urban areas, the TFR decreased from 3.5 3.5
3.3
3.0 2.9
to 1.7 over the same period. 3.5
3.0 3.0 2.7 2.2
Urban 2.8 2.6 2.4 1.9
1.7
Teenage pregnancy
Percentage of women age 15–19 who have ever been pregnant.
Sample: Women age 15–19
Table 9 shows the percentage of women age 15–19 who have had a live birth or were pregnant with their
first child at the time of the survey, according to background characteristics.
24
Table 9 Teenage pregnancy
Percentage of women age 15–19 who have ever had a live birth, percentage who have ever had a pregnancy loss, percentage who are
currently pregnant, and percentage who have ever been pregnant, according to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Percentage of women age 15–19 who:
Background Have ever had a Have ever had a Are currently Have ever been Number
characteristic live birth pregnancy loss1 pregnant pregnant of women
Age
15 0.1 0.4 1.2 1.4 1,062
16 0.9 0.0 0.8 1.7 1,185
17 3.6 0.2 1.8 5.6 1,116
18 4.7 0.2 1.3 5.9 1,132
19 10.2 1.6 3.3 13.3 1,036
Residence
Urban 3.3 0.3 1.7 4.8 2,832
Rural 4.4 0.6 1.6 6.1 2,699
Region
National Capital Region 1.8 0.0 1.1 2.8 663
Cordillera Admin. Region 4.1 0.0 2.5 6.1 99
I - Ilocos 2.4 1.1 1.1 2.4 285
II - Cagayan Valley 4.1 0.6 1.7 5.8 196
III - Central Luzon 4.5 1.3 2.7 8.0 651
IVA - CALABARZON 4.1 0.4 0.8 4.9 805
MIMAROPA 3.8 0.5 0.7 5.0 172
V - Bicol 1.2 0.2 1.1 2.4 351
VI - Western Visayas 5.2 0.0 2.0 6.6 394
VII - Central Visayas 1.9 0.0 2.9 4.8 398
VIII - Eastern Visayas 3.9 0.4 1.5 4.9 245
IX - Zamboanga Peninsula 5.2 0.6 1.9 7.1 212
X - Northern Mindanao 7.3 0.4 4.1 10.9 196
XI - Davao 7.0 0.3 1.1 8.2 265
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 2.8 0.5 0.9 3.8 222
XIII - CARAGA 6.5 1.1 0.4 7.7 139
BARMM 4.5 0.4 2.2 6.6 239
Education
No education * * * * 14
Grades 1–6 14.9 1.8 2.8 19.1 151
Grades 7–10 3.6 0.6 1.8 5.3 3,472
Grades 11–12 3.5 0.1 1.4 4.8 1,745
Postsecondary * * * * 5
College 1.9 0.0 0.1 1.9 144
Wealth quintile
Lowest 7.7 0.8 2.8 10.3 1,005
Second 3.8 0.3 2.1 5.5 1,103
Middle 5.0 1.1 2.0 7.5 1,138
Fourth 1.9 0.1 0.8 2.7 1,151
Highest 1.1 0.0 0.7 1.8 1,133
Total 3.8 0.4 1.6 5.4 5,531
Note: An asterisk indicates that a figure is based on fewer than 25 unweighted cases and has been suppressed.
1
Stillbirth, miscarriage, or abortion
Table 10 shows fertility preferences among currently married women age 15–49 by number of living
children.
Fourteen percent of women want another child soon (within the next 2 years), 17% want to have
another child later (in 2 or more years), and less than 1% want another child but have not decided
when.
Forty-nine percent of women want no more children, and an additional 9% are sterilized.
25
The percentage of women who want no more children increases with number of living children, from
4% among women with no living children to 72% among those with six or more children.
Percent distribution of currently married women age 15–49 by desire for children, according to number of living children, Philippines NDHS
2022
Number of living children1
Desire for children 0 1 2 3 4 5 6+ Total
2
Have another soon 63.2 25.3 7.8 4.1 3.3 2.9 1.4 13.9
Have another later3 17.9 40.0 18.2 7.7 3.5 3.9 2.2 17.4
Have another, undecided when 0.5 0.3 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.3 0.1 0.2
Undecided 5.7 10.4 9.2 6.9 5.6 6.9 7.9 8.1
Want no more 4.3 21.3 56.6 61.8 69.0 66.5 72.0 48.8
Sterilized4 0.4 0.9 5.9 17.6 16.1 15.7 12.0 8.7
Declared infecund 8.0 1.8 2.1 2.0 2.4 4.0 4.4 2.8
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Number of women 1,164 3,364 4,212 2,988 1,747 829 1,002 15,306
1
The number of living children includes a woman’s current pregnancy.
2
Wants next birth within 2 years
3
Wants to delay next birth for 2 or more years
4
Includes both female and male sterilization
Contraceptive prevalence
Percentage of women who use any contraceptive method.
Sample: Currently married women age 15–49 and sexually active unmarried
women age 15–49
Modern methods
Include male and female sterilization, injectables, intrauterine devices (IUDs),
contraceptive pills, implants, female and male condoms, emergency
contraception, the standard days method, and the lactational amenorrhea
method.
Tables 11.1 and 11.2 present contraceptive use among currently married women and sexually active
unmarried women.
Fifty-eight percent of currently married women are using any contraception method, with 42% using
any modern method and 17% using any traditional method.
The most commonly used contraceptive methods among currently married women are the pill (20%),
withdrawal (13%), female sterilization (9%), and injectables (5%).
Forty-one percent of sexually active unmarried women are using any contraceptive method; 24% are
using any modern method, and 18% are using any traditional method.
Among sexually active unmarried women, the most common methods used are withdrawal (15%) and
male condoms (12%).
26
Table 11.1 Current use of contraception according to background characteristics
Percent distribution of currently married and sexually active unmarried women age 15–49 by contraceptive method currently used, according to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Modern method Traditional method
Any Female Male Any tradi- Not
Background Any modern sterili- sterili- Injec- Male tional Calendar/ With- currently Number of
characteristic method method zation zation IUD tables Implants Pill condom LAM Other method rhythm drawal Other using Total women
CURRENTLY MARRIED WOMEN
Note: If more than one method is used, only the most effective method is considered in this tabulation. Other modern methods include other methods mentioned by the respondent and also include the patch, emergency contraception, and
SDM.
SDM = Standard days method
LAM = Lactational amenorrhea method
1
Women who have had sexual intercourse within 30 days preceding the survey
27
Table 11.2 Current use of contraception according to region
Percent distribution of currently married women age 15–49 by contraceptive method currently used, according to region, Philippines NDHS 2022
Modern method Traditional method
Any Female Male Any Not
Any modern sterili- sterili- Injec- Male traditional Calendar/ With- currently Number of
Region method method zation zation IUD tables Implants Pill condom LAM Other method rhythm drawal Other using Total women
National Capital Region 53.9 38.4 10.3 0.3 1.9 4.8 2.1 15.7 3.1 0.1 0.0 15.5 1.8 13.8 0.0 46.1 100.0 2,058
Cordillera Admin. Region 56.2 42.9 14.8 0.0 2.6 4.1 2.5 16.8 1.6 0.4 0.1 13.3 4.0 9.3 0.0 43.8 100.0 229
I - Ilocos 64.7 43.4 14.5 0.2 1.1 5.4 0.3 19.9 1.2 0.7 0.0 21.3 3.0 18.3 0.0 35.3 100.0 820
II - Cagayan Valley 68.0 58.3 13.6 0.0 3.9 4.1 2.0 33.5 1.2 0.1 0.0 9.7 1.3 8.4 0.0 32.0 100.0 479
III - Central Luzon 60.5 41.2 12.3 0.0 0.7 6.7 1.9 17.2 2.2 0.2 0.0 19.3 1.9 17.4 0.0 39.5 100.0 1,764
IVA - CALABARZON 56.9 36.9 8.8 0.1 1.0 3.3 2.0 19.8 1.6 0.2 0.0 20.0 2.5 17.4 0.0 43.1 100.0 2,261
MIMAROPA 59.6 45.1 5.5 0.0 1.4 8.4 4.9 22.8 1.9 0.2 0.1 14.5 3.2 10.9 0.4 40.4 100.0 402
V - Bicol 64.5 38.8 6.2 0.0 1.2 4.7 1.9 20.0 2.8 1.5 0.5 25.7 5.5 19.9 0.3 35.5 100.0 730
VI - Western Visayas 60.4 42.9 6.8 0.3 4.6 3.2 3.7 22.3 1.9 0.1 0.0 17.5 5.8 11.7 0.0 39.6 100.0 994
VII - Central Visayas 61.3 44.9 6.9 0.0 7.2 7.0 2.1 18.3 2.9 0.1 0.3 16.3 4.5 11.8 0.0 38.7 100.0 1,181
VIII - Eastern Visayas 65.7 42.5 7.2 0.0 2.9 7.4 2.9 17.7 2.9 0.8 0.8 23.2 4.2 18.9 0.1 34.3 100.0 545
IX - Zamboanga Peninsula 56.0 47.9 3.9 0.0 4.1 5.8 7.3 23.7 2.0 1.1 0.0 8.1 4.4 3.6 0.2 44.0 100.0 566
X - Northern Mindanao 58.3 49.5 7.3 0.0 8.8 2.9 5.1 22.3 2.2 0.8 0.2 8.8 2.5 6.2 0.0 41.7 100.0 606
XI - Davao 63.4 49.8 7.9 0.0 5.0 3.3 3.6 28.9 0.7 0.4 0.0 13.5 3.3 10.3 0.0 36.6 100.0 901
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 54.9 46.0 4.8 0.0 5.5 5.3 4.0 23.7 1.1 1.5 0.0 8.9 3.0 5.8 0.0 45.1 100.0 700
XIII - CARAGA 57.8 47.8 6.3 0.0 5.8 4.2 5.8 22.9 2.4 0.3 0.1 10.0 3.4 6.6 0.0 42.2 100.0 372
BARMM 35.2 20.5 4.0 0.0 1.2 5.4 3.1 6.0 0.5 0.2 0.0 14.7 0.6 13.7 0.4 64.8 100.0 700
Total 58.3 41.8 8.7 0.1 3.0 5.0 2.8 19.8 2.0 0.4 0.1 16.5 3.0 13.4 0.1 41.7 100.0 15,306
Note: If more than one method is used, only the most effective method is considered in this tabulation. Other modern methods include other methods mentioned by the respondent and also include the patch, emergency contraception, and
SDM.
SDM = Standard days method
LAM = Lactational amenorrhea method
28
Table 11.3 presents the percent distribution of users of modern contraceptive methods age 15–49 by most
recent source of method.
The public sector (50%) is a slightly more popular source for modern contraception in the Philippines
than the private sector (46%) (Table 11.3).
Barangay health stations serve 20% of modern contraceptive users, with government hospitals (19%)
and rural or urban health centers and lying-in clinics (10%) also prominent.
Pharmacies are the most popular private sector source of modern contraception, serving 38% of
modern method users.
Percent distribution of users of modern contraceptive methods age 15–49 by most recent source of method, according to method, Philippines NDHS
2022
Female Male Male
Source sterilization sterilization IUD Injectables Implants Pill condom Total
Public sector 73.0 * 88.3 85.3 90.0 24.1 14.2 50.1
Government hospital 67.7 * 36.6 2.6 21.7 0.5 1.0 18.9
Rural health center/urban
health center/lying-in
clinic 3.6 * 23.2 26.8 30.3 4.4 2.3 9.8
Barangay health station 1.6 * 27.5 52.4 37.0 17.8 10.1 19.9
Barangay supply/service
point officer/BHW 0.0 * 0.9 3.5 0.9 1.5 0.8 1.3
Other public sector 0.0 * 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0
Private medical sector 26.9 * 11.3 14.6 10.0 70.3 72.0 46.3
Private hospital/clinic/
lying-in clinic 26.6 * 10.5 8.7 9.3 0.5 0.0 8.3
Pharmacy 0.0 * 0.1 4.3 0.2 69.6 71.9 37.6
Private doctor 0.3 * 0.6 1.1 0.5 0.1 0.1 0.3
Private nurse/midwife 0.0 * 0.1 0.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1
Other source 0.1 * 0.4 0.1 0.0 5.6 13.8 3.6
Puericulture center 0.0 * 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
Shop/store 0.0 * 0.0 0.0 0.0 5.2 12.6 3.3
Church 0.0 * 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.1
Friend/relative 0.0 * 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.2
Other 0.1 * 0.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.9 0.1
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Number of women 1,389 15 475 779 464 3,107 435 6,676
Note: Total includes 12 other users of modern methods including the patch, emergency contraception, the standard days method, and other modern
methods mentioned by the respondent. The total excludes the lactational amenorrhea method (LAM), mucus/Billings/ovulation, basal body
temperature, and symptothermal methods. An asterisk indicates that a figure is based on fewer than 25 unweighted cases and has been suppressed.
BHW = Barangay health worker
Trends: The use of contraceptives Figure 2 Trends in use of, need for, and demand for
among currently married women family planning
increased from 40% in 1993 to 58% Percentage of currently married women age 15–49
in 2022 (Figure 2). Over this same
period, the use of modern
contraception increased from 25% 73 73 71 72 Total demand
71 70 71
to 42%. 18 12 Unmet need
25 23 22 17
30 Currently using
18 14 17 traditional
16 17 methods (met
20
15 need)
38 40 42 Currently using
28 33 34 modern methods
25
(met need)
29
3.11.2 Need and Demand for Family Planning
Table 12 presents data on unmet need, met need, and total demand for family planning among currently
married and sexually active unmarried women. These indicators help evaluate the extent to which family
planning programs in Philippines are meeting the demand for services.
Twelve percent of currently married women have an unmet need for family planning.
Seven in every 10 currently married women have a demand for family planning; 83% of this demand
is satisfied, 59% by modern methods.
Eighty-four percent of sexually active unmarried women have a demand for family planning, including
42% who have an unmet need for family planning.
Fifty percent of sexually active unmarried women have their demand for family planning satisfied;
29% have their demand satisfied by modern methods.
30
Table 12 Need and demand for family planning among currently married women and sexually active unmarried women
Percentage of currently married women and sexually active unmarried women age 15–49 with an unmet need for family planning, percentage
with a met need for family planning, percentage with a met need for family planning who are using modern methods, percentage with a
demand for family planning, percentage of the demand for family planning that is satisfied, and percentage of the demand for family planning
that is satisfied with modern methods, according to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Met need for family planning Percentage of demand
Unmet need (currently using) Total demand satisfied3
Background for family All Modern for family Number of All Modern
characteristic planning methods methods1 planning2 women methods methods1
CURRENTLY MARRIED WOMEN
Age
15–19 28.3 46.1 34.5 74.5 307 62.0 46.3
20–24 19.4 56.5 41.6 75.9 1,303 74.4 54.8
25–29 14.7 60.3 44.6 75.0 2,384 80.4 59.4
30–34 12.9 61.3 43.8 74.1 2,935 82.6 59.1
35–39 10.6 65.0 47.6 75.6 2,808 86.0 62.9
40–44 10.5 59.8 42.1 70.2 2,915 85.1 59.9
45–49 8.5 46.9 31.7 55.4 2,654 84.7 57.2
Residence
Urban 12.5 57.3 39.7 69.8 8,263 82.1 56.9
Rural 12.3 59.5 44.3 71.8 7,043 82.9 61.7
Region
National Capital Region 11.6 53.9 38.4 65.5 2,058 82.3 58.6
Cordillera Admin. Region 15.9 56.2 42.9 72.2 229 77.9 59.4
I - Ilocos 11.1 64.7 43.4 75.8 820 85.4 57.2
II - Cagayan Valley 7.3 68.0 58.3 75.2 479 90.3 77.5
III - Central Luzon 10.7 60.5 41.2 71.2 1,764 85.0 57.8
IVA - CALABARZON 12.8 56.9 36.9 69.7 2,261 81.6 53.0
MIMAROPA 13.5 59.6 45.1 73.1 402 81.6 61.8
V - Bicol 12.2 64.5 38.8 76.7 730 84.0 50.6
VI - Western Visayas 16.1 60.4 42.9 76.5 994 78.9 56.1
VII - Central Visayas 12.8 61.3 44.9 74.1 1,181 82.8 60.7
VIII - Eastern Visayas 9.7 65.7 42.5 75.4 545 87.2 56.4
IX - Zamboanga Peninsula 14.2 56.0 47.9 70.2 566 79.8 68.2
X - Northern Mindanao 12.9 58.3 49.5 71.2 606 81.9 69.5
XI - Davao 8.9 63.4 49.8 72.3 901 87.7 68.9
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 11.7 54.9 46.0 66.6 700 82.4 69.1
XIII - CARAGA 13.7 57.8 47.8 71.6 372 80.8 66.9
BARMM 19.8 35.2 20.5 55.0 700 63.9 37.3
Education
No education 19.6 31.5 27.2 51.2 135 61.6 53.2
Grades 1–6 13.0 56.9 44.5 70.0 2,144 81.4 63.6
Grades 7–10 11.6 60.5 43.9 72.0 7,102 84.0 61.0
Grades 11–12 21.5 51.5 37.5 73.0 371 70.5 51.3
Postsecondary 16.4 53.7 41.6 70.1 439 76.6 59.4
College 12.1 57.5 38.5 69.5 5,114 82.6 55.4
Wealth quintile
Lowest 13.7 59.8 45.4 73.6 3,071 81.3 61.7
Second 12.4 61.7 46.4 74.1 3,111 83.2 62.7
Middle 12.2 59.4 43.3 71.6 3,139 83.0 60.5
Fourth 12.6 54.3 34.8 66.9 3,016 81.2 52.0
Highest 11.0 56.0 38.8 67.1 2,970 83.5 57.9
Total 12.4 58.3 41.8 70.7 15,306 82.5 59.1
SEXUALLY ACTIVE UNMARRIED WOMEN4
Residence
Urban 41.8 39.4 23.4 81.1 339 48.5 28.8
Rural 42.8 45.6 24.8 88.4 167 51.6 28.1
Total 42.1 41.4 23.8 83.5 506 49.6 28.6
Note: Numbers in this table correspond to the revised definition of unmet need described in Bradley et al. 2012.
1
Modern methods include female sterilization, male sterilization, IUD, injectables, implants, patch, pill, male condom, female condom,
emergency contraception, standard days method (SDM), mucus/Billings/ovulation, basal body temperature, symptothermal, lactational
amenorrhea method (LAM), and other modern methods.
2
Total demand is the sum of unmet need and met need.
3
Percentage of demand satisfied is met need divided by total demand.
4
Women who have had sexual intercourse within 30 days preceding the survey
Trends: Total demand for family planning among currently married women has held steady at 70% to
73% since 1993 (as shown in Figure 2). Over this same period, unmet need has declined from 30% to
12%.
31
3.12 EARLY CHILDHOOD MORTALITY
Neonatal mortality: The probability of dying within the first month of life.
Postneonatal mortality: The probability of dying between the first month of
life and the first birthday (computed as the difference between infant and
neonatal mortality).
Infant mortality: The probability of dying between birth and the first birthday.
Child mortality: The probability of dying between the first and the fifth
birthday.
Under-5 mortality: The probability of dying between birth and the fifth
birthday.
Table 13 presents early childhood mortality estimates for three successive 5-year periods prior to the 2022
NDHS. The rates were estimated directly from the information collected as part of a retrospective
pregnancy history in which respondents listed all of the children to whom they have given birth, along with
each child’s date of birth, survivorship status, and current age or age at death.
During the 5 years immediately preceding the survey, the neonatal mortality rate was 15 deaths per
1,000 live births.
The infant mortality rate was 22 deaths per 1,000 live births.
The child mortality rate was 5 deaths per 1,000 children surviving to age 12 months, while the overall
under-5 mortality rate was 26 deaths per 1,000 live births.
Neonatal, postneonatal, infant, child, and under-5 mortality rates for 5-year periods preceding the survey, Philippines NDHS 2022
Neonatal Postneonatal Infant Child Under-5
mortality mortality mortality mortality mortality
Years preceding the survey (NN) (PNN)1 (1q0) (4q1) (5q0)
0–4 15 7 22 5 26
5–9 8 6 14 6 20
10–14 10 7 17 6 24
1
Computed as the difference between the infant and neonatal mortality rates
32
3.13.1 Antenatal Care
Antenatal care (ANC) from a skilled provider is important to monitor pregnancy and reduce morbidity and
mortality risks for the mother and child during pregnancy, at delivery, and during the postnatal period.
Eighty-six percent of women who had a live birth in the 2 years preceding the survey received
antenatal care from skilled providers.
Eighty-three percent of women had four or more ANC visits during their most recent pregnancy
resulting in a live birth in the 2 years preceding the survey.
Most (86%) women who had a live birth in the 2 years preceding the survey took some form of iron
supplementation during their pregnancy.
Trends: The percentage of women with a live birth in the 2 years preceding the survey who received
antenatal care from a skilled provider increased from 84% in 1993 to 95% in 2013 before decreasing to
93% in 2017 and 86% in 2022.
Tetanus toxoid injections are given during pregnancy to prevent neonatal tetanus, a major cause of early
infant death in many countries. Neonatal tetanus is often caused by failure to observe hygienic procedures
during delivery.
About 8 in 10 (78%) women with a live birth in the 2 years before the survey received sufficient
tetanus toxoid injections to protect their baby against neonatal tetanus.
33
Table 14 Maternal care indicators
Among women age 15–49 who had a live birth and/or a stillbirth in the 2 years preceding the survey, percentage who received antenatal care (ANC) from a skilled provider for the most recent live birth or stillbirth, percentage
with four or more ANC visits for the most recent live birth or stillbirth, percentage who took any iron-containing supplements during pregnancy, and percentage whose most recent live birth was protected against neonatal tetanus;
among all live births and stillbirths in the 2 years before the survey, percentage delivered by a skilled provider, percentage delivered in a health facility, and percentage delivered via cesarean section; and among women age
15–49 with a live birth or stillbirth in the 2 years preceding the survey, percentage who received a postnatal check during the first 2 days after giving birth, according to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Women who had a live birth
and/or a stillbirth in the 2 years
Women who had a live birth and/or a stillbirth in the 2 years preceding the survey Live births and stillbirths in the 2 years preceding the survey preceding the survey
Percentage
Percentage whose most
Percentage who took any recent live birth Percentage
receiving iron-containing was protected Percentage with a postnatal
antenatal care Percentage supplements against Percentage Percentage delivered by check during
Background from a skilled with 4+ ANC during neonatal Number of delivered by a delivered in a cesarean Number of the first 2 days Number of
characteristic provider1 visits pregnancy 2
tetanus3 women skilled provider1 health facility section births after birth4 women
LIVE BIRTHS
Continued...
34
Table 14—Continued
Women who had a live birth
and/or a stillbirth in the 2 years
Women who had a live birth and/or a stillbirth in the 2 years preceding the survey Live births and stillbirths in the 2 years preceding the survey preceding the survey
Percentage
Percentage whose most
Percentage who took any recent live birth Percentage
receiving iron-containing was protected Percentage with a postnatal
antenatal care Percentage supplements against Percentage Percentage delivered by check during
Background from a skilled with 4+ ANC during neonatal Number of delivered by a delivered in a cesarean Number of the first 2 days Number of
characteristic provider1 visits pregnancy 2
tetanus3 women skilled provider1 health facility section births after birth4 women
Wealth quintile
Lowest 73.5 65.6 77.5 73.1 779 72.7 71.2 5.5 817 69.4 779
Second 83.2 84.6 85.8 76.6 530 91.0 89.9 14.3 558 77.8 530
Middle 90.1 86.2 88.0 84.6 614 96.1 94.8 19.2 640 81.8 614
Fourth 94.3 92.3 91.5 82.3 453 99.0 97.7 26.9 463 76.1 453
Highest 96.5 97.6 94.0 77.3 450 99.1 98.9 43.4 464 73.5 450
Total 85.9 83.0 86.2 78.4 2,826 89.6 88.4 19.5 2,942 75.4 2,826
STILLBIRTHS
Total (97.3) (76.3) (85.0) na 39 (91.9) (91.9) (23.8) 40 (85.7) 39
5
LIVE BIRTHS AND STILLBIRTHS
Total 86.0 82.9 86.2 na 2,859 89.6 88.5 19.5 2,983 75.5 2,859
Note: If more than one source of assistance was mentioned, only the provider with the highest qualifications is considered in this tabulation. Figures in parentheses are based on 25–49 unweighted cases.
na = Not applicable
1
Skilled provider includes doctor, nurse, and midwife.
2
Iron tablets and syrup or micronutrient supplements
3
Includes mothers with two injections during the pregnancy of their most recent live birth, or two or more injections (the last within 3 years of the most recent live birth), or three or more injections (the last within 5 years of the
most recent live birth), or four or more injections (the last within 10 years of the most recent live birth), or five or more injections at any time prior to the last live birth
4
Includes women who received a check from a doctor, nurse, midwife, traditional birth attendant/hilot, or barangay health worker
5
For women who had both a live birth and a stillbirth in the 2 years preceding the survey, data on antenatal care and postnatal checks are tabulated for the most recent birth only.
35
3.13.3 Delivery Care
Institutional deliveries
Deliveries that occur in a health facility.
Sample: All live births and/or stillbirths in the 2 years before the survey
Access to proper medical attention and hygienic conditions during delivery can reduce the risk of
complications and infections that could lead to death or serious illness for the mother, the baby, or both
(Van Lerberghe and De Brouwere 2001; WHO 2006).
Overall, 90% of live births were assisted during delivery by a skilled provider.
Although the number of cases is low, the delivery care received for stillbirths was similar to that for
live births.
Trends: As shown in Figure 4, the percentage of live Figure 4 Trends in delivery assistance
births that were assisted by a skilled provider
Percentage of live births in the 2 years
increased from 54% in 1993 to 90% in 2022. preceding the survey delivered by a skilled
provider
3.13.4 Postnatal Care for the Mother 88 90
78
A large proportion of maternal and neonatal deaths 62 65
59
occur during the first 48 hours after delivery. Thus, 54
prompt postnatal care (PNC) for both the mother and
the child is important to treat any complications
arising from the delivery, as well as to provide the
mother with important information on how to care
for herself and her child. Safe motherhood programs 1993 1998 2003 2008 2013 2017 2022
recommend that all women receive a check of their NDHS NDHS NDHS NDHS NDHS NDHS NDHS
health during the first 2 days after birth.
Among women who had a live birth in the 2 years preceding the survey, 75% had a postnatal check
during the first 2 days following the birth. Although the number of cases is low, the percentage of
women who reported a postnatal check following a stillbirth was somewhat higher (86%).
The percentage of women who had a postnatal check during the 2 days following their most recent live
birth varies by region, from 45% in BARMM to 90% in Northern Mindanao.
36
Information on vaccination coverage was obtained in two ways in the Philippines NDHS: from written
vaccination records, including vaccination or health cards, and from verbal reports from the mother.
Overall, 67% of children age 12–23 months and 58% of children age 24–35 months had a vaccination card
that was seen during the interview (data not shown). Tables 15.1 and 15.2 present vaccination coverage
among children age 12–23 months and 24–35 months by background characteristics.
Historically, an important measure of vaccination coverage has been the proportion of children receiving
all “basic” antigens. Children are considered fully vaccinated against all basic antigens if they have
received the BCG vaccine, three doses each of polio vaccine (OPV or IPV) and DTP-containing vaccine,
and a single dose of measles-containing vaccine. In the Philippines, the BCG vaccine is usually given at
birth or at first clinic contact, while the DPT vaccines are given in combination with Hib and either HepB
(DPT-Hib-HepB) or IPV (DPT-Hib-IPV) at approximately age 6, 10, and 14 weeks. When the DPT
formulation does not include IPV, three doses of oral polio vaccine are given according to the same
schedule as DPT-Hib-HepB. A first dose of measles-containing vaccine should be given at or soon after
age 9 months.
Among children age 12–23 months, overall, 72% are fully vaccinated with basic antigens: 88%
received the BCG vaccine, 79% received three doses of DPT-containing vaccine, 78% received the
three doses of polio vaccine (either IPV or OPV), and 79% received an MMR vaccination.
The percentage of children age 12–23 months who are fully vaccinated with basic antigens is highest
in Cagayan Valley (90%) and lowest in BARMM (18%).
A second measure of vaccination coverage is the percentage of children age 12–23 months and 24–35
months who are fully vaccinated according to the national schedule. In this report, a child age 12–23
months is considered to be fully vaccinated according to the national schedule if the child has received all
basic antigens as well as a birth dose of HepB vaccine, a dose of IPV, three doses of HepB and Hib
(usually given as part of the DPT-containing vaccine), and three doses of the pneumococcal conjugate
vaccine (PCV). Children age 24–35 months are considered fully vaccinated according to the national
schedule if they receive a second dose of the MMR vaccine in addition to all of the vaccinations relevant
for a child age 12–23 months.
Tables 15.1 and 15.2 show that 59% of children age 12–23 months are fully vaccinated according to
the national schedule. This includes 82% who received the birth dose of HepB, 79% who received a
dose of IPV, and 72% who received three doses of PCV.
37
Among children age 24–35 months, 66% received a second dose of MMR vaccine, and 50% are fully
vaccinated according to the national schedule.
Trends: Since 1993, the percentage of children age Figure 5 Trends in childhood
12–23 months who received all basic antigens has vaccinations
fluctuated (Figure 5), rising from 72% in 1993 to Percentage of children age 12–23 months
80% in 2008, and then decreasing to 72% in 2022.
The percentage of children age 12–23 months who 80 77
72 73 70 70 72
did not receive any vaccinations increased from 4%
in 2013 to 11% in 2022. Fully vaccinated
(basic antigens)
No vaccinations
7 8 7 9 11
6 4
38
Table 15.1 Vaccinations according to background characteristics
Percentage of children age 12–23 months and children age 24–35 months who received specific vaccines at any time before the survey (according to a vaccination card or the mother’s report), percentage fully vaccinated (basic antigens), percentage
fully vaccinated according to the national schedule, and percentage who received no vaccinations, according to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Children age 12–23 months: Children age 24–35
DPT HepB Hib Polio2 PCV months:
Fully Fully
Fully vaccinated vaccinated
HepB vaccinated (according Number (according Number
Background (birth MMR (basic to national No vacci- of MMR to national of
characteristic BCG dose)1 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 IPV 1 2 3 1 antigens)3 schedule)4 nations children 2 schedule)5 children
Sex
Male 87.9 83.5 86.8 82.6 80.5 86.3 80.8 78.4 86.8 82.6 80.5 87.2 83.3 79.9 79.3 82.6 78.3 71.2 78.7 73.8 60.0 11.1 718 67.4 50.6 812
Female 87.8 80.8 86.5 83.6 77.2 85.1 81.9 76.2 86.5 83.6 77.2 85.4 81.6 75.8 78.9 81.1 77.8 71.8 79.6 69.7 58.8 11.3 724 65.3 49.2 736
Birth order
1 92.1 87.5 90.8 88.5 84.5 89.6 85.1 81.0 90.8 88.5 84.5 90.7 88.0 84.4 85.6 87.4 85.2 79.1 85.1 79.2 68.1 7.5 441 72.6 54.1 496
2–3 89.5 84.7 88.6 85.3 81.3 88.6 85.0 80.8 88.6 85.3 81.3 89.1 84.9 79.5 80.6 84.9 80.4 72.7 81.2 72.5 59.9 9.6 667 67.9 52.4 683
4–5 85.7 76.6 82.4 76.7 71.1 79.7 73.8 70.1 82.4 76.7 71.1 78.7 73.7 69.6 71.0 71.8 67.3 63.5 71.9 65.3 51.3 13.6 238 60.8 44.9 245
6+ 61.5 53.6 64.5 59.1 55.6 62.5 57.6 53.9 64.5 59.1 55.6 65.0 61.2 56.8 59.1 59.6 55.0 48.0 55.8 49.0 36.1 33.7 96 44.9 30.0 124
Vaccination card6
Seen 99.0 91.5 98.9 95.7 94.1 98.4 94.3 92.7 98.9 95.7 94.1 98.8 96.7 94.5 90.3 96.1 93.3 89.2 92.4 89.8 75.6 0.1 959 79.3 65.0 893
Not seen or no
longer has 79.8 77.4 76.6 72.2 60.5 74.1 68.8 58.1 76.6 72.2 60.5 74.6 66.5 55.2 69.3 65.5 58.8 44.9 64.9 45.5 34.3 19.1 362 52.9 32.7 519
Never had 22.7 22.3 19.8 16.4 13.2 19.3 16.4 12.6 19.8 16.4 13.2 22.0 16.5 13.0 20.2 17.1 14.3 10.9 16.6 7.8 5.8 76.1 121 33.3 16.9 135
Residence
Urban 88.5 84.4 86.6 84.0 79.2 86.7 82.8 77.8 86.6 84.0 79.2 86.8 81.8 76.6 81.7 82.4 79.6 71.9 79.6 71.5 61.7 11.0 712 65.0 49.3 815
Rural 87.2 80.0 86.7 82.3 78.5 84.7 79.9 76.8 86.7 82.3 78.5 85.7 83.1 79.0 76.6 81.2 76.5 71.1 78.8 72.0 57.2 11.4 730 68.1 50.6 733
Mother’s
education
No education (64.8) (57.1) (51.7) (51.7) (51.7) (51.7) (51.7) (51.7) (51.7) (51.7) (51.7) (54.9) (53.6) (53.6) (51.7) (51.7) (35.3) (35.3) (51.7) (51.7) (27.5) (32.0) 16 * * 10
Grades 1–6 75.5 63.0 76.7 68.5 59.1 71.8 66.6 59.8 76.7 68.5 59.1 71.8 64.9 59.6 62.9 65.1 57.5 49.3 59.8 48.0 33.6 20.3 176 47.5 35.0 195
Grades 7–10 89.0 82.9 86.9 83.4 80.5 86.7 81.7 78.6 86.9 83.4 80.5 87.3 84.1 79.4 79.7 83.0 78.9 72.1 78.8 73.7 60.3 10.4 630 68.0 52.1 746
Grades 11–12 88.6 83.3 89.0 86.7 76.3 89.6 87.7 76.3 89.0 86.7 76.3 89.6 88.4 71.5 78.0 80.2 73.8 69.6 78.7 61.8 51.2 10.4 73 58.4 35.1 77
Postsecondary (88.3) (87.8) (88.3) (88.3) (85.8) (88.3) (88.3) (85.8) (88.3) (88.3) (85.8) (88.3) (88.3) (88.3) (88.3) (88.2) (88.2) (86.0) (81.3) (81.3) (78.5) (11.7) 26 (69.0) (59.5) 52
College 91.2 88.1 90.4 87.9 84.4 89.6 85.7 82.2 90.4 87.9 84.4 90.3 86.0 83.2 84.4 87.0 85.4 78.9 87.0 79.0 68.2 8.5 520 74.0 55.0 469
Wealth quintile
Lowest 77.6 67.9 76.5 70.9 65.4 74.5 69.5 65.2 76.5 70.9 65.4 75.2 72.0 66.1 66.0 71.1 65.2 59.7 65.9 58.8 45.0 20.3 432 51.0 37.8 365
Second 90.9 84.0 91.3 86.5 80.6 91.2 84.8 78.0 91.3 86.5 80.6 89.8 84.9 78.7 82.2 82.8 79.9 71.5 83.8 75.7 62.8 7.7 263 69.5 49.5 370
Middle 91.5 86.6 87.5 85.1 80.5 87.2 84.2 79.7 87.5 85.1 80.5 88.5 85.8 80.4 82.3 84.6 80.4 74.7 81.3 74.1 62.8 8.5 298 72.4 57.9 313
Fourth 91.0 89.6 91.1 89.1 86.0 90.7 87.5 84.1 91.1 89.1 86.0 90.9 86.9 84.9 86.1 85.9 84.2 75.2 82.9 75.3 63.7 8.3 202 70.8 55.3 271
Highest 95.4 93.8 94.9 93.6 92.8 93.7 90.1 89.2 94.9 93.6 92.8 95.4 90.4 88.7 89.3 92.8 90.5 85.3 91.9 84.6 73.4 4.6 246 72.7 52.7 228
Total 87.8 82.2 86.7 83.1 78.9 85.7 81.4 77.3 86.7 83.1 78.9 86.3 82.4 77.8 79.1 81.8 78.0 71.5 79.2 71.8 59.4 11.2 1,442 66.4 49.9 1,548
Note: Children are considered to have received the vaccine if it was either written on the child’s vaccination card or reported by the mother. For children whose vaccination information is based on the mother’s report, date of vaccination is not collected.
The proportions of vaccinations given during the first and second years of life are assumed to be the same as for children with a written record of vaccination. 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.
BCG = Bacillus Calmette-Guérin
DPT = Diphtheria-pertussis-tetanus
HepB = Hepatitis B
Hib = Haemophilus influenzae type b
OPV = Oral polio vaccine
IPV = Inactivated polio vaccine
PCV = Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine
MMR = Measles, mumps, rubella
1
Children are considered to have received HepB (birth dose) if it was recorded on their card or reported by their mother, regardless of timing.
2
Polio = IPV or OPV
3
BCG, three doses of DPT-containing vaccine, three doses of polio vaccine, and one dose of MMR
4
BCG, HepB (birth dose), three doses of DPT-containing vaccine, three doses of HepB (excluding birth dose), three doses of Hib, three doses of polio vaccine, one dose of IPV, three doses of PCV, and one dose of MMR
5
BCG, HepB (birth dose), three doses of DPT-containing vaccine, three doses of HepB (excluding birth dose), three doses of Hib, three doses of polio vaccine, one dose of IPV, three doses of PCV, and two doses of MMR
6
Vaccination card, booklet, or other home-based record
39
Table 15.2 Vaccinations according to region
Percentage of children age 12–23 months and children age 24–35 months who received specific vaccines at any time before the survey (according to a vaccination card or the mother’s report), percentage fully vaccinated (basic antigens), percentage
fully vaccinated according to the national schedule, and percentage who received no vaccinations, according to region, Philippines NDHS 2022
Children age 12–23 months: Children age 24–35
DPT HepB Hib Polio2 PCV months:
Fully Fully
Fully vaccinated vaccinated Numbe
HepB vaccinated (according Number (according r of
(birth MMR (basic to national No vacci- of to national childre
Region BCG dose)1 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 1 2 3 IPV 1 2 3 1 antigens)3 schedule)4 nations children MMR 2 schedule)5 n
National Capital Region 90.8 86.3 88.6 83.9 77.8 87.9 82.0 75.8 88.6 83.9 77.8 87.1 76.5 70.3 80.5 79.9 75.9 66.7 77.8 65.7 57.0 7.3 153 64.2 48.2 147
Cordillera Admin.
Region 97.0 93.5 98.0 97.0 94.1 96.9 90.3 88.4 98.0 97.0 94.1 97.8 90.3 87.8 88.7 86.9 84.1 79.9 92.5 83.9 65.7 1.0 24 76.7 59.3 23
I - Ilocos 90.8 89.2 90.1 84.8 79.2 89.2 83.9 77.0 90.1 84.8 79.2 90.4 84.7 83.7 83.2 90.4 85.0 82.0 84.2 75.5 69.7 8.5 65 53.8 43.6 78
II - Cagayan Valley 98.6 90.9 98.7 93.5 90.6 98.7 88.5 85.6 98.7 93.5 90.6 93.6 93.6 92.2 92.2 92.4 92.3 85.4 93.1 90.2 77.7 1.3 54 96.3 83.5 46
III - Central Luzon 96.4 94.8 96.9 94.7 90.8 96.9 94.4 90.6 96.9 94.7 90.8 96.9 92.7 88.4 91.1 89.2 84.1 75.4 85.6 78.4 66.4 2.9 160 66.7 54.0 159
IVA - CALABARZON 94.1 93.3 94.1 94.1 91.4 92.3 92.3 89.6 94.1 94.1 91.4 94.1 94.1 91.4 91.6 94.1 94.1 89.0 90.0 87.4 82.3 5.9 173 79.4 59.1 233
MIMAROPA 88.5 72.8 89.4 86.4 82.3 89.4 86.4 82.3 89.4 86.4 82.3 90.9 88.7 77.2 77.1 77.1 72.4 60.2 81.4 74.3 43.2 8.3 41 75.1 42.5 46
V - Bicol 94.7 94.0 94.0 91.0 88.0 93.2 90.2 87.3 94.0 91.0 88.0 94.0 90.0 89.2 86.3 94.0 94.0 86.1 90.5 80.6 71.7 5.1 71 62.1 46.8 84
VI - Western Visayas 89.5 82.7 88.9 86.1 81.9 89.1 88.9 84.7 88.9 86.1 81.9 89.5 89.2 83.5 79.3 85.3 82.1 77.2 85.2 77.7 62.8 10.5 118 86.1 64.5 85
VII - Central Visayas 90.1 75.7 90.8 86.3 85.2 86.0 76.3 75.2 90.8 86.3 85.2 91.6 87.1 82.7 84.9 87.3 80.9 77.6 88.3 77.6 53.2 8.0 111 57.6 44.8 114
VIII - Eastern Visayas 97.8 83.9 97.1 96.6 96.6 96.8 92.4 92.4 97.1 96.6 96.6 96.6 95.9 94.1 85.4 89.2 84.0 82.6 93.4 89.8 54.7 1.2 50 84.8 65.1 77
IX - Zamboanga
Peninsula 84.5 80.4 80.8 76.8 74.3 80.8 79.6 75.0 80.8 76.8 74.3 83.3 79.9 77.5 79.1 77.4 73.6 71.9 72.5 65.8 60.1 11.8 69 56.3 47.7 70
X - Northern Mindanao 90.2 85.9 86.3 86.1 82.5 88.2 85.3 81.7 86.3 86.1 82.5 89.8 88.2 82.9 81.5 86.7 84.3 68.0 83.0 76.8 56.7 9.8 67 72.2 57.8 58
XI - Davao 89.0 77.0 89.0 80.3 68.7 81.0 72.3 68.7 89.0 80.3 68.7 81.0 78.3 68.3 67.4 78.3 69.7 61.9 61.8 59.6 54.1 11.0 77 66.9 41.5 85
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 81.4 77.0 77.1 71.1 66.7 77.1 71.9 66.7 77.1 71.1 66.7 76.3 67.9 63.5 66.9 69.8 63.3 59.9 72.9 60.8 46.8 18.6 73 58.0 42.5 93
XIII - CARAGA 85.1 79.5 85.3 83.6 72.8 86.4 86.4 74.9 85.3 83.6 72.8 84.0 79.3 70.6 79.9 83.7 79.1 64.1 82.6 64.4 49.6 13.0 39 62.5 46.0 43
BARMM 38.2 31.8 32.8 25.5 20.2 34.2 25.0 19.4 32.8 25.5 20.2 33.2 29.0 23.2 24.8 27.9 24.4 20.8 21.9 18.1 14.9 59.9 98 26.0 14.3 104
Total 87.8 82.2 86.7 83.1 78.9 85.7 81.4 77.3 86.7 83.1 78.9 86.3 82.4 77.8 79.1 81.8 78.0 71.5 79.2 71.8 59.4 11.2 1,442 66.4 49.9 1,548
Note: Children are considered to have received the vaccine if it was either written on the child’s vaccination card or reported by the mother. For children whose vaccination information is based on the mother’s report, date of vaccination is not collected.
The proportions of vaccinations given during the first and second years of life are assumed to be the same as for children with a written record of vaccination.
BCG = Bacillus Calmette-Guérin
DPT = Diphtheria-pertussis-tetanus
HepB = Hepatitis B
Hib = Haemophilus influenzae type b
OPV = Oral polio vaccine
IPV = Inactivated polio vaccine
MMR = Measles, mumps, rubella
PCV = Pneumococcal conjugate vaccine
1
Children are considered to have received HepB (birth dose) if it was recorded on their card or reported by their mother, regardless of timing.
2
Polio = IPV or OPV
3
BCG, three doses of DPT-containing vaccine, three doses of polio vaccine, and one dose of MMR
4
BCG, HepB (birth dose), three doses of DPT-containing vaccine, three doses of HepB (excluding birth dose), three doses of Hib, three doses of polio vaccine, one dose of IPV, three doses of PCV, and one dose of MMR
5
BCG, HepB (birth dose), three doses of DPT-containing vaccine, three doses of HepB (excluding birth dose), three doses of Hib, three doses of polio vaccine, one dose of IPV, three doses of PCV, and two doses of MMR
40
3.15 CARE SEEKING AND TREATMENT OF CHILD ILLNESS
Acute respiratory infection (ARI), fever, and dehydration from diarrhea are important contributing causes
of childhood morbidity and mortality in developing countries (WHO 2003). Prompt medical attention
when a child has symptoms of these illnesses is, therefore, crucial in reducing child deaths. Table 16
presents information on care seeking for ill children in the Philippines. Overall, less than 1% of children
under age 5 showed symptoms of an ARI, 11% exhibited fever, and 6% experienced diarrhea in the 2
weeks preceding the survey (data not shown).
Advice or treatment was sought for three in every four children (72%) with symptoms of ARI in the 2
weeks preceding the survey (Table 16).
Advice or treatment was sought for 41% of children with a fever in the 2 weeks preceding the survey.
Advice or treatment was sought for 37% of children with diarrhea in the 2 weeks preceding the survey.
About half (49%) of children with diarrhea received oral rehydration salts (ORS), 27% were given
zinc supplements, 19% received ORS and zinc supplements, and 13% were given ORS, zinc
supplements, and continued feeding, as recommended.
41
Table 16 Treatment for acute respiratory infection, fever, and diarrhea according to background characteristics
Among children under age 5 who had symptoms of acute respiratory infection (ARI) or had a fever during the 2 weeks preceding the survey, percentage for whom advice or treatment was sought, and among
children under age 5 who had diarrhea during the 2 weeks preceding the survey, percentage for whom advice or treatment was sought, percentage given a fluid made from oral rehydration salt (ORS) packets
or given prepackaged ORS fluid, percentage given zinc, percentage given ORS and zinc, and percentage given ORS, zinc, and continued feeding, according to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS
2022
Children with symptoms of ARI1 Children with fever Children with diarrhea
Percentage for Percentage for Percentage for Percentage Percentage
whom advice or whom advice or whom advice or given fluid from Percentage given ORS, zinc,
Background treatment was Number of treatment was Number of treatment was ORS packet or Percentage given ORS and continued Number of
characteristic sought2 children sought2 children sought2 prepackaged given zinc and zinc feeding3 children
Age in months
<6 * 3 44.7 58 * * * * * 20
6–11 * 4 32.5 144 35.1 42.9 27.9 22.2 15.0 61
12–23 * 15 45.6 204 38.9 50.6 28.7 21.4 16.7 152
24–35 * 4 47.8 160 46.3 57.0 19.2 15.1 11.8 84
36–47 * 12 36.0 162 23.9 46.2 33.0 20.5 12.6 102
48–59 * 12 40.5 137 (33.7) (40.6) (7.2) (5.3) (2.8) 37
Sex
Male (56.9) 27 43.3 457 38.8 45.9 32.1 20.4 13.9 249
Female * 22 38.8 408 33.8 51.9 20.1 17.7 12.4 206
Residence
Urban * 24 41.6 436 34.5 49.2 22.8 17.9 10.4 230
Rural (59.3) 25 40.8 429 38.5 48.0 30.6 20.5 16.1 226
Mother’s education
No education * 1 * 6 * * * * * 4
Grades 1–6 * 7 46.2 123 41.1 58.6 20.3 17.7 12.0 66
Grades 7–10 (73.7) 27 38.6 401 31.4 48.0 26.1 19.4 12.8 207
Grades 11–12 * 1 (37.8) 41 (23.3) (39.4) (21.6) (12.8) (7.2) 32
Postsecondary * 1 * 25 * * * * * 5
College * 12 43.8 270 44.9 47.0 29.8 19.3 14.1 142
Wealth quintile
Lowest * 11 37.3 235 32.1 46.9 21.4 18.9 13.3 111
Second * 16 45.4 205 29.1 45.0 22.6 13.5 9.2 138
Middle * 4 43.3 155 44.7 54.7 38.7 28.0 16.9 97
Fourth * 6 39.0 158 41.7 47.4 25.3 19.5 14.4 74
Highest * 12 41.7 113 (45.6) (54.1) (28.8) (18.0) (16.4) 37
Total 71.8 50 41.2 866 36.5 48.6 26.7 19.2 13.2 456
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.
1
Symptoms of ARI include short, rapid breathing that is chest-related and/or difficult breathing that is chest-related.
2
Includes advice or treatment from the following sources: public sector, private medical sector, puericulture center, and shops/stores. Excludes advice or treatment from a traditional practitioner,
friends/relatives, and church.
3
Continued feeding includes children who were given more, the same as usual, or somewhat less food during the diarrhea episode.
42
3.16 INFANT AND YOUNG CHILD FEEDING
Optimal infant and young child feeding (IYCF) practices are critical to the health and survival of young
children. Recommended IYCF practices include early initiation of breastfeeding (within the first hour of
life), exclusive breastfeeding for the first 6 months of life, and feeding children a diet that meets minimum
diversity criteria (WHO and UNICEF 2021).
Over half (55%) of children born in the last 2 years were put to the breast within 1 hour of birth
(Table 17).
Two in every five (41%) children under age 6 months were exclusively breastfed.
About half (47%) of children age 6–23 months met the minimum dietary diversity requirement.
43
Unhealthy infant and young child feeding practices should be avoided because they can promote unhealthy
weight gain and replace nutritious foods that provide important nutrients for children. For infants and
young children, consumption of sweet foods and beverages increases the risk of dental caries and
childhood obesity. The indicator definition below for unhealthy food consumption describes sentinel
unhealthy foods—foods that are high in sugar, salt, or unhealthy fats—that are commonly consumed by
infants and young children (WHO and UNICEF 2021).
One-third (35%) of children age 6–23 months were fed a sweet beverage.
38 41
34 34
29
Early childhood development is a multidimensional process that involves an ordered progression of motor,
cognitive, language, socioemotional, and regulatory skills and capacities across the first few years of life
(UNICEF 2016). While these are distinct domains of early childhood development, they are
interconnected. Nurturing and supporting all of these dimensions in a holistic manner is key to ensuring
that children have the best chance to reach their full potential. Physical growth, literacy and numeracy
44
skills, socioemotional development, and learning readiness set the trajectory for lifelong health, learning,
and well-being (Shonkoff and Phillips 2000).
The Early Childhood Development Index 2030 (ECDI2030) module, which captures the achievement of
key developmental milestones by children between age 24–59 months, was included in the 2022 NDHS.
Mothers were asked 20 questions about one of their randomly selected children age 24–59 months. These
questions focused on the way children behave in certain everyday situations and the skills and knowledge
they have acquired, reflecting the increasing difficulty of the skills children acquire as they grow. The 20
items are organized according to the three general domains of health, learning, and psychosocial well-
being.
The ECDI2030 module is not designed to report on individual domains separately. Rather, it is meant to
produce a single summary score that captures the interlinked developmental concepts embedded in the
three domains mentioned in SDG 4.2.1.
The results show that 77% of children age 24–59 months are developmentally on track for their age in
terms of health, learning, and psychosocial well-being (Table 18).
Early childhood development increases with increasing household wealth; 66% of children in the
lowest wealth quintile are developmentally on track, as compared with 84% of children in the highest
wealth quintile.
45
3.18 HIV
Knowledge of how HIV is transmitted is crucial to enabling people to avoid HIV infection, and this is
especially true for young people, who are often at greater risk because they may have shorter relationships
with more partners or engage in other risky behaviors.
Two-thirds (65%) of women age 15–24 know that consistent condom use is a means to prevent the
spread of HIV (Table 19).
Seven in 10 women (69%) know that limiting sexual intercourse to one uninfected partner can reduce
the likelihood of contracting HIV.
Only 26% of women age 15–24 have thorough knowledge of HIV prevention (as defined above).
46
Table 19 Knowledge about HIV prevention methods among young women
Percentage of young women age 15-24 who, in response to prompted questions, say that people can reduce the risk of
getting HIV by using condoms every time they have sexual intercourse, and by having one sex partner who is not infected
and has no other partners, and percentage who correctly identify both ways of preventing the sexual transmission of HIV and
reject major misconceptions about HIV transmission, according to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Percentage who say HIV
can be prevented by:
Limiting sexual Percentage with
Background Using intercourse to one knowledge about HIV Number
characteristic condoms1 uninfected partner2 prevention3 of women
Age
15–19 57.5 61.6 19.8 5,531
15–17 52.0 57.2 16.4 3,363
18–19 65.9 68.5 24.9 2,168
20–24 73.9 76.8 33.5 4,677
20–22 72.3 76.1 31.7 3,012
23–24 76.8 77.9 37.0 1,665
Marital status
Never married 63.9 67.3 26.1 8,524
Ever had sex 76.3 77.2 34.2 783
Never had sex 62.7 66.3 25.3 7,741
Ever married 70.3 74.8 26.0 1,683
Residence
Urban 68.1 69.3 30.1 5,504
Rural 61.4 67.7 21.3 4,703
Region
National Capital Region 73.0 70.4 45.0 1,392
Cordillera Admin. Region 66.9 75.8 32.2 165
I - Ilocos 53.2 65.1 14.2 548
II - Cagayan Valley 73.4 78.5 24.9 345
III - Central Luzon 66.2 73.9 26.0 1,178
IVA - CALABARZON 68.0 69.8 28.1 1,536
MIMAROPA 61.7 78.0 25.0 295
V - Bicol 71.4 75.4 20.8 584
VI - Western Visayas 65.8 68.4 17.0 753
VII - Central Visayas 64.4 69.0 24.5 710
VIII - Eastern Visayas 73.9 76.9 32.3 439
IX - Zamboanga Peninsula 59.0 63.6 14.3 361
X - Northern Mindanao 64.9 65.8 25.8 357
XI - Davao 68.8 66.0 22.8 469
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 60.9 64.2 21.5 425
XIII - CARAGA 54.3 63.7 21.7 228
BARMM 26.5 28.3 12.0 422
Education
No education 36.6 30.2 11.4 34
Grades 1–6 39.8 47.2 14.4 297
Grades 7–10 56.0 60.7 17.5 4,319
Grades 11–12 69.6 73.1 27.1 2,712
Postsecondary 62.2 58.3 24.9 91
College 77.6 79.6 40.0 2,755
Wealth quintile
Lowest 51.0 56.7 16.1 1,607
Second 60.8 67.6 19.5 2,027
Middle 66.4 69.2 24.4 2,119
Fourth 70.2 71.4 31.8 2,261
Highest 72.4 74.6 35.1 2,193
Total 15–24 65.0 68.6 26.1 10,208
1
Using condoms every time they have sexual intercourse
2
Partner who has no other partners
3
Knowledge about HIV prevention means knowing that consistent use of condoms during sexual intercourse and having just
one uninfected faithful partner can reduce the chance of getting HIV, knowing that a healthy-looking person can have HIV,
and rejecting two common misconceptions about transmission or prevention of HIV: HIV can be transmitted by mosquito
bites and a person can become infected by sharing food with a person who has HIV.
47
3.18.2 Sexual Behavior
Information on sexual behavior is important in designing and monitoring intervention programs to control
the spread of HIV.
Less than 1% of women age 15–49 reported having two or more sexual partners during the 12 months
prior to the survey (Table 20).
Among the 4% of women who had a partner in the last 12 months who was neither their husband nor
someone they lived with, 23% reported using a condom during their last sexual intercourse.
Among all women who ever had sexual intercourse, the mean number of lifetime sexual partners is
1.5.
Table 20 Multiple sexual partners and higher-risk sexual intercourse in the last 12 months
Among all women age 15–49, percentage who had sexual intercourse with more than one sexual partner in the last 12 months and percentage
who had intercourse in the last 12 months with a person who neither was their husband nor lived with them; among women age 15–49 who had
sexual intercourse in the last 12 months with a person who neither was their husband nor lived with them, percentage who used a condom during
last sexual intercourse with such a partner; and among women who ever had sexual intercourse, mean number of sexual partners during their
lifetime, according to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Women who had intercourse
in the last 12 months with a
person who neither was their Women who ever had sexual
All women husband nor lived with them intercourse1
Percentage
who had inter- Percentage
course in the who reported
last 12 months using a
with a person condom during
Percentage who neither last sexual Mean number
who had 2+ was their intercourse of sexual
Background partners in the husband nor Number of with such a Number of partners in Number of
characteristic last 12 months lived with them women partner women lifetime women
Age
15–24 0.2 5.4 10,208 22.3 551 1.5 2,461
15–19 0.1 2.5 5,531 22.9 136 2.0 523
20–24 0.3 8.9 4,677 22.1 415 1.4 1,938
25–29 0.8 8.1 3,904 20.5 316 1.4 3,014
30–39 0.4 3.1 7,147 10.8 223 1.5 6,544
40–49 0.2 1.6 6,562 1.2 102 1.4 6,342
Marital status
Never married 0.3 8.7 11,596 19.2 1,004 1.8 2,155
Married/living together 0.3 0.5 15,306 20.2 71 1.4 15,289
Divorced/separated/widowed 1.4 12.8 919 4.9 118 1.6 917
Residence
Urban 0.4 5.3 15,579 19.8 825 1.5 10,276
Rural 0.2 3.0 12,242 13.6 368 1.4 8,085
Region
National Capital Region 0.2 6.0 4,280 22.4 255 1.5 2,719
Cordillera Admin. Region 0.0 3.7 438 17.0 16 1.4 274
I - Ilocos 0.2 5.3 1,473 12.3 78 1.4 988
II - Cagayan Valley 0.3 2.8 833 (9.6) 23 1.2 534
III - Central Luzon 0.3 3.5 3,100 12.1 107 1.5 2,071
IVA - CALABARZON 0.5 4.4 4,215 26.1 184 1.9 2,738
MIMAROPA 0.4 3.1 715 (14.9) 22 1.4 466
V - Bicol 0.1 3.5 1,405 (28.9) 49 1.3 860
VI - Western Visayas 0.2 4.2 1,831 12.1 76 1.4 1,185
VII - Central Visayas 0.6 5.6 2,023 11.7 114 1.5 1,423
VIII - Eastern Visayas 0.5 3.1 1,062 21.1 33 1.4 642
IX - Zamboanga Peninsula 0.6 3.8 970 (5.6) 37 1.3 665
X - Northern Mindanao 0.3 3.7 1,035 12.9 38 1.6 728
XI - Davao 0.1 5.6 1,474 23.9 83 1.5 1,077
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 0.2 3.8 1,175 (9.5) 44 1.3 811
XIII - CARAGA 0.4 5.0 636 7.4 32 1.5 443
BARMM 0.1 0.1 1,156 * 1 1.1 740
Continued…
48
Table 20—Continued
Women who had intercourse
in the last 12 months with a
person who neither was their Women who ever had sexual
All women husband nor lived with them intercourse1
Percentage
who had inter- Percentage
course in the who reported
last 12 months using a
with a person condom during
Percentage who neither last sexual Mean number
who had 2+ was their intercourse of sexual
Background partners in the husband nor Number of with such a Number of partners in Number of
characteristic last 12 months lived with them women partner women lifetime women
Education
No education 0.0 2.4 197 * 5 1.3 154
Grades 1–6 0.3 0.8 2,538 * 20 1.4 2,312
Grades 7–10 0.3 2.9 11,954 17.3 349 1.5 8,187
Grades 11–12 0.3 5.3 2,751 18.0 146 2.0 634
Postsecondary 0.3 5.1 625 (0.5) 32 1.4 505
College 0.3 6.6 9,755 19.1 642 1.4 6,568
Wealth quintile
Lowest 0.3 2.1 4,595 13.3 97 1.3 3,383
Second 0.5 3.6 5,219 16.9 189 1.5 3,613
Middle 0.3 4.7 5,666 15.6 266 1.6 3,818
Fourth 0.2 5.4 6,048 17.3 325 1.5 3,775
Highest 0.3 5.0 6,292 22.3 316 1.5 3,772
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.
1
Means are calculated excluding respondents who gave non-numeric responses.
HIV testing programs diagnose people living with HIV so that they can be linked to care and access
antiretroviral therapy (ART). Knowledge of HIV status helps HIV-negative individuals reduce risk and
remain negative.
Only 9% of women age 15–49 have ever been tested for HIV and received the results; less than 1%
have ever been tested and did not receive the results (Table 21).
The percentage of women who were ever tested and received results was greatest among those age
25–29 (17%), which coincides with women with the highest fertility rates.
49
Table 21 Coverage of prior HIV testing
Percent distribution of women age 15–49 by HIV testing status and by whether they received the results of the last test, percentage of women ever
tested, and percentage of women who were tested in the last 12 months and received the results of the last test, according to background
characteristics, Philippines NDHS 2022
Percent distribution of women by testing status and by
whether they received the results of the last test
Ever tested, did
Background Ever tested and not receive Never Percentage Number of
characteristic received results results tested1 Total ever tested women
Age
15–24 4.1 0.3 95.5 100.0 4.5 10,208
15–19 1.1 0.2 98.7 100.0 1.3 5,531
20–24 7.7 0.5 91.8 100.0 8.2 4,677
25–29 17.4 0.6 82.0 100.0 18.0 3,904
30–39 15.2 0.8 84.0 100.0 16.0 7,147
40–49 6.6 0.6 92.8 100.0 7.2 6,562
Marital status
Never married 3.1 0.2 96.8 100.0 3.2 11,596
Ever had sex 11.3 0.5 88.3 100.0 11.7 2,166
Never had sex 1.2 0.1 98.7 100.0 1.3 9,431
Married or living together 13.9 0.9 85.2 100.0 14.8 15,306
Divorced/separated/widowed 13.8 0.6 85.6 100.0 14.4 919
Residence
Urban 12.3 0.7 87.0 100.0 13.0 15,579
Rural 5.7 0.4 93.9 100.0 6.1 12,242
Region
National Capital Region 16.6 0.5 82.9 100.0 17.1 4,280
Cordillera Admin. Region 6.9 0.7 92.4 100.0 7.6 438
I - Ilocos 4.2 0.5 95.3 100.0 4.7 1,473
II - Cagayan Valley 6.3 0.9 92.8 100.0 7.2 833
III - Central Luzon 12.7 1.3 86.0 100.0 14.0 3,100
IVA - CALABARZON 12.4 0.3 87.3 100.0 12.7 4,215
MIMAROPA 6.6 0.8 92.6 100.0 7.4 715
V - Bicol 5.9 0.5 93.6 100.0 6.4 1,405
VI - Western Visayas 7.7 0.8 91.5 100.0 8.5 1,831
VII - Central Visayas 11.9 0.6 87.4 100.0 12.6 2,023
VIII - Eastern Visayas 7.6 0.8 91.6 100.0 8.4 1,062
IX - Zamboanga Peninsula 3.9 0.1 96.0 100.0 4.0 970
X - Northern Mindanao 2.3 0.3 97.4 100.0 2.6 1,035
XI - Davao 7.0 0.4 92.7 100.0 7.3 1,474
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 3.7 0.1 96.2 100.0 3.8 1,175
XIII - CARAGA 6.6 0.5 92.9 100.0 7.1 636
BARMM 0.4 0.1 99.5 100.0 0.5 1,156
Education
No education 2.8 0.0 97.2 100.0 2.8 197
Grades 1–6 4.3 0.2 95.5 100.0 4.5 2,538
Grades 7–10 8.4 0.8 90.8 100.0 9.2 11,954
Grades 11–12 3.9 0.2 95.8 100.0 4.2 2,751
Postsecondary 14.1 0.6 85.4 100.0 14.6 625
College 13.3 0.5 86.2 100.0 13.8 9,755
Wealth quintile
Lowest 3.8 0.4 95.8 100.0 4.2 4,595
Second 7.1 0.7 92.1 100.0 7.9 5,219
Middle 11.0 0.6 88.4 100.0 11.6 5,666
Fourth 10.9 0.5 88.6 100.0 11.4 6,048
Highest 12.6 0.6 86.9 100.0 13.1 6,292
Total 9.4 0.6 90.0 100.0 10.0 27,821
1
Includes respondents who have not heard of HIV or who refused to answer questions on testing
50
3.19 VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
In the 2022 NDHS, information was obtained from women age 15–49 who ever had a husband or intimate
partner and who have experienced emotional, physical, or sexual violence committed by their current or
most recent husband/intimate partner. The term husband includes a partner with whom a woman is living
as if married. Husband/intimate partner refers to the current husband for currently married women; the
most recent husband for divorced, separated, or widowed women; the current intimate partner for never-
married women who currently have an intimate partner; and the most recent intimate partner for never-
married women who do not currently have an intimate partner but had one in the past.
Physical violence: push you, shake you, or throw something at you; slap you;
twist your arm or pull your hair; punch you with his fist or with something that
could hurt you; kick you, drag you, or beat you up; try to choke you or burn you
on purpose; or threaten or attack you with a knife, gun, or any other weapon.
Percentage of women who have ever experienced any physical violence
(committed by a husband or intimate partner).
Sample: Women age 15–49 who ever had a husband/intimate partner
Sexual violence: physically force you to have sexual intercourse with him
even when you did not want to, physically force you to perform any other
sexual acts you did not want to, or force you with threats or in any other way to
perform sexual acts you did not want to.
Percentage of women who have ever experienced any sexual violence
(committed by a husband or intimate partner).
Sample: Women age 15–49 who ever had a husband/intimate partner
Eighteen percent of women have ever experienced any form of physical, sexual, or emotional violence
by their current or most recent husband/intimate partner (Table 22).
Overall, women are more likely to have experienced emotional violence (15%) than physical violence
(6%) or sexual violence (2%).
Marital status is linked to whether a woman has ever experienced violence. Eleven percent of never-
married women have ever experienced any violence, as compared with 19% of ever-married women.
Forty-five percent of women who are currently divorced, separated, or widowed have experienced
violence, compared with 17% of currently married women.
51
Table 22 Intimate partner violence by background characteristics
Percentage of women age 15–49 who have ever had a husband or intimate partner and who have ever experienced emotional, physical, or
sexual violence committed by their current or most recent husband/intimate partner, according to background characteristics, Philippines NDHS
2022
Number of
women who
ever had a
Physical and Physical or husband/
Background Emotional Physical Sexual Physical and sexual and Physical or sexual or intimate
characteristic violence violence violence sexual emotional sexual emotional partner
Age
15–19 13.8 2.8 1.6 0.7 0.7 3.8 15.5 767
20–24 14.1 5.8 2.7 1.8 1.5 6.7 16.3 1,635
25–29 13.3 6.0 1.7 1.1 1.0 6.7 15.1 2,087
30–39 15.7 6.9 2.4 1.4 1.3 7.9 18.2 4,528
40–49 16.2 7.0 2.4 1.7 1.5 7.7 18.7 4,346
Religion
Roman Catholic 15.8 6.7 2.3 1.5 1.3 7.5 18.1 10,203
Protestant 16.9 8.0 3.0 1.9 1.7 9.2 19.8 1,272
Iglesia ni Cristo 14.2 5.5 2.3 1.5 1.0 6.3 16.6 400
Aglipay 15.7 7.2 5.9 2.7 2.3 10.4 19.0 197
Islam 7.7 2.0 0.6 0.0 0.0 2.6 9.0 848
Other Christian 10.6 5.3 2.0 1.3 1.3 5.9 11.3 307
Other 13.6 5.2 0.5 0.5 0.5 5.2 16.0 123
No religion * * * * * * * 12
Ethnic group
Tagalog 12.4 5.4 1.6 1.3 1.2 5.7 14.0 3,459
Cebuano 17.5 6.7 2.6 2.0 1.8 7.4 19.7 3,127
Ilokano 15.9 8.2 3.5 1.4 1.2 10.3 19.0 1,109
Hiligaynon/Ilonggo 14.6 6.2 2.6 1.5 1.2 7.4 17.6 1,139
Bikolano 19.4 9.4 3.1 1.9 1.6 10.5 21.9 969
Kapampangan 9.9 2.8 0.6 0.6 0.0 2.8 11.8 444
Maranao 11.4 2.1 0.5 0.2 0.2 2.4 11.9 196
Tausog 6.3 5.5 0.1 0.0 0.0 5.6 9.8 185
Waray 18.7 6.9 2.7 1.1 0.9 8.6 21.3 480
Aeta (26.4) (10.9) (0.0) (0.0) (0.0) (10.9) (26.4) 16
Badjao (10.8) (4.0) (0.0) (0.0) (0.0) (4.0) (14.8) 14
Other 15.7 6.6 2.4 1.2 1.1 7.8 18.5 2,226
Residence
Urban 13.4 5.8 2.1 1.4 1.2 6.6 15.6 7,354
Rural 17.4 7.1 2.5 1.5 1.3 8.1 19.9 6,008
Region
National Capital Region 11.0 5.8 2.9 1.5 1.4 7.1 13.4 1,846
Cordillera Admin. Region 18.0 5.1 2.7 1.3 0.8 6.5 19.8 215
I - Ilocos 22.3 9.7 3.8 1.9 1.9 11.6 25.0 748
II - Cagayan Valley 14.4 8.0 1.9 1.0 1.0 8.9 17.5 401
III - Central Luzon 15.3 5.8 2.0 1.8 1.6 6.1 17.0 1,552
IVA - CALABARZON 12.1 5.8 1.2 0.8 0.7 6.2 13.9 1,912
MIMAROPA 20.5 8.6 3.2 2.4 2.1 9.4 23.7 354
V - Bicol 23.4 10.0 4.3 2.5 2.2 11.8 26.5 713
VI - Western Visayas 15.5 7.1 2.4 1.4 1.2 8.0 18.7 909
VII - Central Visayas 17.5 5.5 2.3 2.0 1.8 5.8 18.6 1,015
VIII - Eastern Visayas 21.3 6.3 2.4 1.2 0.9 7.5 22.9 489
IX - Zamboanga Peninsula 17.1 8.5 1.6 0.9 0.9 9.2 20.7 525
X - Northern Mindanao 14.2 3.9 2.5 1.0 1.0 5.4 15.3 552
XI - Davao 16.6 8.3 2.5 1.9 1.7 8.9 20.7 729
XII - SOCCSKSARGEN 12.0 4.6 1.4 0.6 0.5 5.4 14.5 572
XIII - CARAGA 17.0 6.7 2.8 1.6 1.6 7.9 20.2 299
BARMM 4.9 1.4 0.2 0.0 0.0 1.7 5.6 530
Marital status
Never married 9.1 2.1 1.3 0.7 0.6 2.7 10.5 2,006
Currently has intimate
partner 5.3 1.4 0.6 0.2 0.2 1.8 6.7 1,359
Had intimate partner 17.2 3.6 2.9 1.8 1.7 4.6 18.6 647
Ever married 16.3 7.2 2.5 1.6 1.4 8.1 18.7 11,356
Married/living together 14.8 6.4 2.0 1.2 1.0 7.2 17.2 10,731
Divorced/separated/
widowed 42.0 21.3 9.5 8.4 7.8 22.4 44.6 625
Employment
Employed for cash 15.1 7.4 2.6 1.7 1.6 8.3 17.5 6,639
Employed not for cash 19.6 6.4 2.2 1.4 1.2 7.1 22.1 1,413
Not employed 14.1 5.2 1.9 1.1 0.9 6.0 16.3 5,310
Continued…
52
Table 22—Continued
Number of
women who
ever had a
Physical and Physical or husband/
Background Emotional Physical Sexual Physical and sexual and Physical or sexual or intimate
characteristic violence violence violence sexual emotional sexual emotional partner
Education
No education 9.6 2.8 0.7 0.0 0.0 3.5 10.7 102
Grades 1–6 20.4 9.4 3.3 2.4 2.1 10.3 24.0 1,558
Grades 7–10 16.6 7.0 2.3 1.3 1.2 8.0 19.2 5,951
Grades 11–12 15.4 4.1 2.1 1.3 1.2 4.9 16.7 670
Postsecondary 12.4 4.9 1.5 0.9 0.8 5.5 13.6 329
College 12.0 5.2 2.0 1.3 1.2 5.9 13.8 4,752
Wealth quintile
Lowest 17.2 7.9 2.6 1.5 1.3 9.0 20.1 2,464
Second 18.0 7.4 2.4 1.3 1.2 8.5 20.5 2,626
Middle 16.0 7.4 2.8 2.0 1.7 8.3 18.9 2,827
Fourth 14.0 5.2 2.0 1.2 1.1 6.0 15.9 2,741
Highest 11.0 4.3 1.7 1.2 1.1 4.8 12.4 2,704
Total 15.2 6.4 2.3 1.4 1.3 7.3 17.5 13,362
Notes: The term husband includes a partner with whom a woman is living as if married. Husband/intimate partner refers to the current husband
for currently married women; the most recent husband for divorced, separated, or widowed women, the current intimate partner for never-
married women who currently have an intimate partner; and the most recent intimate partner for never-married women who do not currently
have an intimate partner but had one in the past. 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.
53
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