Maternal Education and Child Health Production: Case of the Central African Republic

Gbangoula Seremandji Alain Hyacinthe
Gbangoula Seremandji Alain Hyacinthe
Christian Zamo Akono
Christian Zamo Akono
University of Yaounde II

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Maternal Education and Child Health Production: Case of the Central African Republic

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Abstract

The effect of education on health has increased over the last decades. This paper investigates the effect of the maternal education on antenatal care use. Based on the behavioural model and regression analyses with ordered multinomial logit model. We testthis hypothesis using data from the Mics survey, 2010 on the CAR. In terms of results, we find that an additional year increases, other things being equal, the probability of making all visits by 2.14 times. We find that more educated mothers have a greater advantage in using more prenatal health care during pregnancy.

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Funding

No external funding was declared for this work.

Conflict of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Ethical Approval

No ethics committee approval was required for this article type.

Data Availability

Not applicable for this article.

How to Cite This Article

Gbangoula Seremandji Alain Hyacinthe. 2026. \u201cMaternal Education and Child Health Production: Case of the Central African Republic\u201d. Global Journal of Management and Business Research - B: Economic & Commerce GJMBR-B Volume 22 (GJMBR Volume 22 Issue B3).

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Maternal education and child health influence in Central Africa with focus on maternal healthcare and pregnancy outcomes.
Journal Specifications

Crossref Journal DOI 10.17406/GJMBR

Print ISSN 0975-5853

e-ISSN 2249-4588

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GJMBR-B Classification DDC Code: 610.3 LCC Code: R121
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v1.2

Issue date
July 12, 2022

Language
en
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Maternal Education and Child Health Production: Case of the Central African Republic

Gbangoula Seremandji Alain Hyacinthe
Gbangoula Seremandji Alain Hyacinthe <p>University of Yaounde II</p>
Christian Zamo Akono
Christian Zamo Akono

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