Edhs 2019
Edhs 2019
Edhs 2019
Mini Demographic
and Health Survey 2019
FEDERAL DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC OF ETHIOPIA
ETHIOPIA
Mini Demographic and
Health Survey
2019
May 2021
The 2019 Ethiopia Mini Demographic and Health Survey (2019 EMDHS) was implemented by the Ethiopian
Public Health Institute (EPHI), in partnership with the Central Statistical Agency (CSA) and the Federal Ministry
of Health (FMoH), under the overall guidance of the Technical Working Group (TWG). Data collection lasted
from March to June 2019. Funding for the 2019 EMDHS was provided by the World Bank, the United States
Agency for International Development (USAID), and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF). ICF
provided technical assistance through The DHS Program, a USAID-funded project providing support and
technical assistance in the implementation of population and health surveys in countries worldwide.
Additional information about the 2019 EMDHS may be obtained from the Ethiopian Public Health Institute
(EPHI), Gulele Arbegnoch Street, Gulele Sub City, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; telephone: +251-11-275-4647; fax:
+251-11-275-4744; website: http://www.ephi.gov.et.
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 EPHI and ICF and do not necessarily reflect the views of
USAID, the United States Government, or other donor agencies.
Cover photo: “Ethiopian gazelles obviously concerned by the foreign intruder.” © 2008 Ralf Steinberger, used
under Creative Commons CC BY 2.0 license. https://flic.kr/p/21K5LMm
Suggested citation:
Ethiopian Public Health Institute (EPHI) [Ethiopia] and ICF. 2021. Ethiopia Mini Demographic and Health
Survey 2019: Final Report. Rockville, Maryland, USA: EPHI and ICF.
CONTENTS
Contents • iii
6 INFANT AND CHILD MORTALITY ........................................................................................ 47
6.1 Infant and Child Mortality ................................................................................................. 48
6.2 High-risk Fertility Behaviour ............................................................................................ 49
REFERENCES.......................................................................................................................................... 103
iv • Contents
TABLES AND FIGURES
T
he 2019 Ethiopia Mini Demographic and Health Survey (EMDHS) is the second EMDHS and the
fifth DHS implemented in Ethiopia. The Ethiopian Public Health Institute (EPHI) conducted the
survey in collaboration with the Central Statistical Agency (CSA) and the Federal Ministry of
Health (FMoH), with technical assistance from ICF and financial as well as technical support from
development partners. The 2019 EMDHS generates data for measuring the progress of the health sector
goals set under the Growth and Transformation Plan (GTP), which is closely aligned to the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDG).
The survey was conducted from March 21, 2019, to June 28, 2019, based on a nationally representative
sample that provided estimates at the national and regional levels and for urban and rural areas. The survey
interviewed 8,855 women of reproductive age (age 15-49) from a nationally representative sample of 8,663
households. Detailed information was collected on respondents’ background characteristics, fertility
determinants, marriage, awareness and use of family planning methods, child feeding practices, nutritional
status of children, childhood mortality, and height and weight of children age 0-59 months. This report
presents comprehensive outcomes of the survey at the national level and for Ethiopia’s nine regional states
and two city administrations.
The success of the 2019 EMDHS was made possible through the active participation of government,
nongovernmental, and international development partners. In this regard, EPHI is grateful for the
commitment of the government of Ethiopia, the United States Agency for International Development
(USAID), the World Bank, and the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF). Special thanks go to the
Federal Ministry of Health and its allies. We would like to extend our gratitude to the Central Statistical
Agency for providing technical support on survey design and for its involvement in the entire survey
process. Also, we are grateful to the Survey Steering Committee and Technical Working Group members,
who were instrumental in guiding the resource mobilisation process, the survey implementation, and
technical aspects of the survey. Similarly, we wish to express appreciation to ICF for its technical
assistance in all stages of the survey.
EPHI greatly acknowledges the principal survey coordinators and technical team members; the finance,
procurement, human resources, and operation units; and others for their management of the technical,
administrative, and logistical phases of the survey. We are also thankful to the EPHI staff, field staff, and
data processing specialists. In particular, we thank the survey respondents, who generously provided data
without which it would have been impossible to produce this report.
Foreword • ix
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
W e wish to acknowledge and thank the World Bank and United States Agency for International
Development (USAID) for their financial and technical support in all phases of this survey. In
addition, the technical assistance provided by ICF, the Central Statistical Authority (CSA), the
Ministry of Health, the United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF), the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
(BMGF), and DFID was key in ensuring the success of the survey.
We appreciate the contributions of members of the Steering Committee and Technical Committee, who
were drawn from the following organizations: USAID, CSA, the World Bank, ICF, BMGF, DFID, the
Ministry of Finance and Economic Cooperation, and UNICEF.
We extend sincere appreciation to all people not mentioned in this document but who provided suggestions
at different stages during the process and conduct of the survey. We would like to especially thank the
individual volunteers and households in the various regions of Ethiopia who provided valuable
information.
Acknowledgments • xi
ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS
EA enumeration area
EDHS Ethiopia Demographic and Health Survey
EMDHS Ethiopia Mini Demographic and Health Survey
EPHC Ethiopian Population and Housing Census
EPHI Ethiopia Public Health Institute
EPI Expanded Programme for Immunisation
ESPES Enhancing Shared Prosperity through Equitable Services
HepB hepatitis B
HEW health extension worker
Hib Haemophilus influenzae type B
HSTP Health Sector Transformation Plan
RV rotavirus vaccine
SD standard deviation
SDGs Sustainable Development Goals
SDM standard days method
SNNPR Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples’ Region
1
5.7 27.8 14.1 50.3 2.0 0.1 100.0
447.6 8,885
Refers to women who attended schooling higher than the secondary level and women who can read a whole sentence or part of a sentence
Step 1: Read the title and subtitle, highlighted in orange in the table above. They tell you the topic and the
specific population group being described. In this case, the table is about women age 15-49 by their level
of education and level of literacy. All eligible female respondents age 15-49 were asked these questions.
Step 2: Scan the column headings—highlighted in green in Example 1. They describe how the information
is categorized. In this table, the first column of data shows women with higher than secondary education.
The second through sixth columns show women with no schooling, primary, or secondary school by their
ability to read a sentence. The seventh column is the total or sum of the previous six columns totaling up to
a 100% percent distribution. The eighth column shows the percentage of women age 15-49 who are literate
(a sum of the first three columns). The last column lists the number of women age 15-49 interviewed in the
survey.
Step 3: Scan the row headings—the first vertical column highlighted in blue in Example 1. These show the
different ways the data are divided into categories based on population characteristics. In this case, the
table presents women’s literacy by age, urban-rural residence, region, and wealth quintile. Most of the
tables in the EMDHS report will be divided into these same categories.
Step 4: Look at the row at the bottom of the table highlighted in red. These percentages represent the totals
of all women age 15-49 and their level of schooling and level of literacy. In this case, 47.6%* of women
age 15-49 are literate.
By looking at patterns by background characteristics, we can see how literacy varies across Ethiopia.
Knowing how literacy varies among different groups can help program planners and policy makers
determine how to most effectively communicate health messages, for instance, and reach their target
populations.
*For the purpose of this document data are presented exactly as they appear in the table including decimal places. However,
the text in the remainder of this report rounds data to the nearest whole percentage point.
Table 8.4 Observation of vaccination history at health facilities: Children age 0-35 months
Percentage of children age 0-35 months who did not have a vaccination card seen during the home visit, and among children age 0-35 months without a
1
vaccination card seen during the home visit, percentage who received at least one vaccination at a health facility, percentage with mother’s consent for
visiting health facilities, percentage with vaccination history searched at health facilities, and percentage with vaccination history found and seen by the
interviewer at health facilities, according to background characteristics, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Among children who did not have vaccination card during home visit
2 Percentage of
children who did
not have
Percentage who
received at least Percentage with
Percentage with Percentage with
vaccination vaccination
vaccination card one vaccination mother’s consent history searched history found and
Background during home Number of at a health for visiting health at health seen by Number of
characteristic visit1 children facility facilities facilities1 interviewer children
Age in months
<6 54.5 554 31.8 29.3 16.9 14.8 302
6-11 53.2 485 48.7 47.8 32.6 29.1 258
12-23 58.7 1,028 57.2 56.2 37.6 34.8 603
24-35 73.6 1,027 59.1 55.5 35.7 30.1 756
Sex
Male 64.1 1,562 56.6 54.9 37.3 32.8 1,002
Female 59.9 1,532 48.7 45.8 28.2 25.0 918
Birth order
1 55.6 707 60.9 59.7 36.5 31.3 393
2-3 57.2 996 54.4 51.6 33.9 31.2 570
4-5 61.8 683 50.3 49.0 33.4 29.5 422
a b
6+ 75.4 708 47.1 44.0 29.0 24.8 534
Residence
Urban 45.5 802 49.9 44.9 28.6 25.1 365
Rural 67.8 2,292 53.5 51.9 34.0 30.0 1,554
Region
Tigray 28.6 213 72.0 72.0 57.2 46.1 61
Afar 80.2 49 21.8 19.8 8.7 7.6 39
Amhara 51.8 614 69.3 69.3 37.1 37.1 318
Oromia 68.6 1,236 56.2 53.2 38.3 35.2 847
Somali 78.6 201 24.3 24.3 11.2 11.2 158
Benishangul-Gumuz 62.0 37 57.2 56.2 42.3 41.8 23
SNNPR 72.5 609 43.4 40.0 26.0 16.7 442
Gambela 48.6 14 53.1 53.1 18.0 18.0 7
Harari 53.5 9 45.9 43.7 15.9 9.4 5
Addis Ababa 12.6 95 * * * * 12
Dire Dawa 42.5 17 84.3 83.6 40.0 40.0 7
Mother’s education
No education 72.0 1,533 46.2 43.6 27.4 24.9 1,104
Primary 56.2 1,161 58.6 57.2 39.0 34.1 652
Secondary
More than secondary
43.5
35.7
268
132
71.3
(81.2) 4 67.4
(79.8)
53.3
(27.4)
45.0
(18.5)
116
47
Wealth quintile
Lowest 81.6 693 39.1 39.1 23.1 20.6 565
Second 69.3 662 56.6 53.8 36.2 31.7 458
Middle 66.2 598 59.3 57.0 41.4 37.6 396
Fourth 56.8 513 61.0 58.0 35.1 27.2 291
Highest 33.2 628 57.6 51.9 33.5 32.6 208
Total 3 62.0 3,094 52.8 50.6 32.9 29.1 1,919
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
Vaccination card, booklet, or other home-based record
Step 1: Read the title and subtitle. In this case, the table is about two separate groups of children age 0-35
months: all children age 0-35 months (a) and children age 0-35 months who did not have a vaccination
card during home visit (b).
Step 2: Identify the two panels. First, identify the columns that refer to all children age 0-35 months (a),
and then isolate the columns that refer only to children who did not have a vaccination card during home
visit (b).
Step 4: Sixty-two percent of children age 0-35 months did not have a vaccination card during home visit.
Once these children are further divided into the background characteristic categories, there may be too few
cases for the percentages to be reliable.
• What percentage of children who did not have a vaccination card during home visit whose
mothers have more than a secondary education received at least one vaccination at a health
facility? 81.2%. This percentage is in parentheses because there are between 25 and 49 children
(unweighted) in this category. Readers should use this number with caution—it may not be
reliable. (For more information on weighted and unweighted numbers, see Example 3.)
• What percentage of children who did not have a vaccination card during home visit in Addis
Ababa received at least one vaccination at a health facility? There is no number in this cell—
only an asterisk. This is because there are fewer than 25 unweighted cases. Results for this
group are not reported. The subgroup is too small, and therefore the data are not reliable.
Note: When parentheses or asterisks are used in a table, the explanation will be noted under the table. If
there are no parentheses or asterisks in a table, you can proceed with confidence that enough cases were
included in all categories that the data are reliable.
A sample is a group of people who have been selected for a survey. In the EMDHS, the sample is designed
to represent the national population age 15-49. In addition to national data, most countries want to collect
and report data on smaller geographical or administrative areas. However, doing so requires a large enough
sample size in each area. For the 2019 EMDHS, the survey sample is representative at the national and
regional levels, and for urban and rural areas.
Region
may not include sufficient women from each region for Tigray 7.1 629 733
analysis. To solve this problem, regions with small Afar 1.0 85 641
Amhara 22.8 2,026 948
populations are oversampled. For example, let’s say that Oromia 37.7 3,347 1,052
Somali 4.7 420 640
you have enough money to interview 8,885 women and Benishangul-
want to produce results that are representative of Ethiopia Gumuz 1.1 98 747
SNNPR 19.2 1,705 1,008
as a whole and its regions (as in modified Table 3.1). Gambela 0.5 40 723
Harari 0.3 27 763
However, the total population of Ethiopia is not evenly Addis Ababa 5.0 442 818
distributed among the regions: some regions, such as Dire Dawa 0.7 64 812
Oromia, are heavily populated while others, such as Harari Total 15-49 100.0 8,885 8,885
are not. Thus, Harari must be oversampled.
A sampling statistician determines how many women should be interviewed in each region in order to get
reliable statistics. The blue column (1) in the table at the right shows the actual number of women
interviewed in each region. Within the regions, the number of women interviewed ranges from 640 in
Somali to 1,052 in Oromia. The number of interviews is sufficient to get reliable results in each region.
With this distribution of interviews, some regions are overrepresented and some regions are
underrepresented. For example, the population in Oromia is about 37.7% of the population in Ethiopia,
while Harari’s population contributes only 0.3% of the population in Ethiopia. But as the blue column
shows, the number of women interviewed in Oromia accounts for only about 11.9% of the total sample of
women interviewed (1,052 / 8,885) and the number of women interviewed in Harari accounts for 8.6% of
the total sample of women interviewed (763 / 8,885). This unweighted distribution of women does not
accurately represent the population.
In order to get statistics that are representative of Ethiopia, the distribution of the women in the sample
needs to be weighted (or mathematically adjusted) such that it resembles the true distribution in the
country. Women from a small region, like Harari, should only contribute a small amount to the national
total. Women from a large region, like Oromia, should contribute much more. Therefore, DHS statisticians
mathematically calculate a “weight” which is used to adjust the number of women from each region so that
each region’s contribution to the total is proportional to the actual population of the region. The numbers in
the purple column (2) represent the “weighted” values. The weighted values can be smaller or larger than
the unweighted values at the regional level. The total national sample size of 8,885 women has not
changed after weighting, but the distribution of the women in the regions has been changed to represent
their contribution to the total population size.
How do statisticians weight each category? They take into account the probability that a woman was
selected in the sample. If you were to compare the green column (3) to the actual population distribution
of Ethiopia, you would see that women in each region are contributing to the total sample with the same
weight that they contribute to the population of the country. The weighted number of women in the survey
With sampling and weighting, it is possible to interview enough women to provide reliable statistics at
national and regional levels. In general, only the weighted numbers are shown in each of the EMDHS
tables, so don’t be surprised if these numbers seem low: they may actually represent a larger number of
women interviewed.
Financial support for the 2019 EMDHS was provided by the government of Ethiopia, the World Bank via
the Ministry of Finance and Economic Development’s Enhancing Shared Prosperity through Equitable
Services (ESPES) and Promoting Basic Services (PBS) projects, the United Nations Children’s Fund
(UNICEF), and the United States Agency for International Development (USAID). ICF provided technical
assistance through The DHS Program, which is funded by USAID and offers support and technical
assistance for the implementation of population and health surveys in countries worldwide.
▪ To collect high-quality data on contraceptive use; maternal and child health; infant, child, and neonatal
mortality levels; child nutrition; and other health issues relevant to achievement of the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs)
▪ To collect information on health-related matters such as breastfeeding, maternal and child care
(antenatal, delivery, and postnatal), children’s immunisations, and childhood diseases
▪ To assess the nutritional status of children under age 5 by measuring weight and height
Four full-scale DHS surveys were conducted in 2000, 2005, 2011, and 2016. The first Ethiopia Mini-DHS,
or EMDHS, was conducted in 2014. The 2019 EMDHS provides valuable information on trends in key
demographic and health indicators over time. The information collected through the 2019 EMDHS is
intended to assist policymakers and programme managers in evaluating and designing programmes and
strategies for improving the health of the country’s population.
The current survey included a health facility component that, combined with the household data obtained,
helped facilitate collection of additional information on children’s vaccinations.
Administratively, Ethiopia is divided into nine geographical regions and two administrative cities. The
sample for the 2019 EMDHS was designed to provide estimates of key indicators for the country as a
whole, for urban and rural areas separately, and for each of the nine regions and the two administrative
cities.
To ensure that survey precision was comparable across regions, sample allocation was done through an
equal allocation wherein 25 EAs were selected from eight regions. However, 35 EAs were selected from
each of the three larger regions: Amhara, Oromia, and the Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples’
Region (SNNPR).
In the first stage, a total of 305 EAs (93 in urban areas and 212 in rural areas) were selected with
probability proportional to EA size (based on the 2019 EPHC frame) and with independent selection in
each sampling stratum. A household listing operation was carried out in all selected EAs from January
through April 2019. The resulting lists of households served as a sampling frame for the selection of
households in the second stage. Some of the selected EAs for the 2019 EMDHS were large, with more than
300 households. To minimise the task of household listing, each large EA selected for the 2019 EMDHS
was segmented. Only one segment was selected for the survey, with probability proportional to segment
size. Household listing was conducted only in the selected segment; that is, a 2019 EMDHS cluster is
either an EA or a segment of an EA.
In the second stage of selection, a fixed number of 30 households per cluster were selected with an equal
probability systematic selection from the newly created household listing. All women age 15-49 who were
either permanent residents of the selected households or visitors who slept in the household the night
before the survey were eligible to be interviewed. In all selected households, height and weight
measurements were collected from children age 0-59 months, and women age 15-49 were interviewed
using the Woman’s Questionnaire.
1.3 QUESTIONNAIRES
Five questionnaires were used for the 2019 EMDHS: (1) the Household Questionnaire, (2) the Woman’s
Questionnaire, (3) the Anthropometry Questionnaire, (4) the Health Facility Questionnaire, and (5) the
Fieldworker’s Questionnaire. These questionnaires, based on The DHS Program’s standard questionnaires,
were adapted to reflect the population and health issues relevant to Ethiopia. They were shortened
substantially to collect data on indicators of particular relevance to Ethiopia and donors to child health
programmes.
Input was solicited from various stakeholders representing government ministries and agencies,
nongovernmental organisations, and international donors. After the questionnaires were finalised in
English, they were translated into Amarigna, Tigrigna, and Afaan Oromo.
The Household Questionnaire was used to list all of the usual members of and visitors to selected
households. Basic demographic information was collected on the characteristics of each person listed,
including his or her age, sex, education, and relationship to the head of the household. The data on age and
sex of household members obtained in the Household Questionnaire were used to identify women who
were eligible for individual interviews. The Household Questionnaire was also used to collect information
on characteristics of the household’s dwelling unit, such as source of water, type of toilet facilities,
materials used for the floor of the dwelling unit, and ownership of various durable goods.
The Woman’s Questionnaire was used to collect information from all eligible women age 15-49. These
women were asked questions on the following main topics: background characteristics, reproduction,
contraception, pregnancy and postnatal care, child nutrition, childhood immunisations, and health facility
information.
The 2019 EMDHS interviewers used tablet computers to record responses during the interviews. The
tablets were equipped with Bluetooth technology to enable remote electronic transfer of files within the
computer-assisted personal interviewing (CAPI) system, including transfer of assignments from
supervisors to interviewers and transfer of completed questionnaires from interviewers to supervisors. The
electronic data collection system deployed in the 2019 EMDHS was developed by The DHS Program
using the mobile version of the Census and Survey Processing (CSPro) System. The CSPro software was
developed jointly by the U.S. Census Bureau, The DHS Program, and CSPro.
1.4 ANTHROPOMETRY
In all households, height and weight measurements were recorded for children age 0-59 months. Weight
measurements were obtained using lightweight, electronic SECA 874 scales with a digital screen and the
mother and child function. Height measurements were performed using measuring boards donated by
UNICEF. Children younger than age 24 months were measured lying down (recumbent) on the board,
while standing height was measured for older children. In contrast with the data collection procedures for
the household and individual interviews, anthropometry data were initially recorded on the paper-based
Anthropometry Questionnaire and subsequently entered into interviewers’ tablet computers.
The paper-based field practice was conducted for 3 days and included the anthropometry component.
Debriefing sessions were held with the field staff, and modifications to the paper questionnaires were made
based on lessons drawn from the exercise. Teams carried out CAPI field practice over 4 days, also
including the anthropometry component. Furthermore, regional coordinators, field supervisors, and CAPI
supervisors were trained in data quality control procedures and fieldwork coordination.
1.7 FIELDWORK
Twenty-five interviewing teams carried out data collection for the 2019 EMDHS. Each team consisted of
one field supervisor, one female CAPI supervisor, two female interviewers, and one female
anthropometrist. In addition to the field teams, 11 regional coordinators were assigned, one for each
region. The regional coordinator regularly visited and remained with respective teams throughout the
fieldwork period to supervise and monitor their work and progress. Moreover, 10 staff members from
EPHI coordinated and supervised fieldwork activities. EPHI researchers, an ICF technical specialist, a
consultant, and representatives from other organisations, including CSA, FMoH, the World Bank, and
USAID, supported the fieldwork monitoring. Data collection took place over a 3-month period, from
March 21, 2019, to June 28, 2019.
During the individual interview, mothers were asked to report vaccinations received by their children born
in the last 3 years. For each child born in the 3 years before the survey, mothers were asked to show the
interviewer the infant immunisation card or health card used to record the child’s immunisations. If the
infant immunisation card or other health card was available, the interviewer copied the dates of each
vaccination received in the respective section of the Woman’s Questionnaire. If a vaccination was not
recorded on the infant immunisation card or the health card, the mother was asked to recall whether that
particular vaccination had been administered. If the mother was not able to present the child’s infant
immunisation card, she was asked to recall whether the child had received the BCG, polio, DPT-HepB-
Hib, measles, pneumococcal, and rotavirus vaccines. If she indicated that the child had received the polio,
DPT-HepB-Hib, pneumococcal, measles, or rotavirus vaccine, she was asked the number of doses that the
child received.
If the mother did not have the infant immunisation card or health card available and the child had visited a
health facility, the field supervisor went to the health facility to collect the relevant vaccination records.
The purpose of obtaining information at the health facility was to complement the immunisation
information based on mothers’ recall.
In the interviewed households, 9,012 eligible women were identified for individual interviews; interviews
were completed with 8,885 women, yielding a response rate of 99%. Overall, there was little variation in
response rates according to residence; however, rates were slightly higher in rural than in urban areas.
1
Households interviewed/households occupied
2
Respondents interviewed/eligible respondents
I
nformation on the socioeconomic characteristics of the household population in the 2019 EMDHS
provides a context to interpret demographic and health indicators and can furnish an approximate
indication of the representativeness of the survey. In addition, this information sheds light on the living
conditions of the population.
This chapter presents information on sources of drinking water, sanitation, wealth, household status and
resiliency, household population and composition, and women’s educational attainment.
In Ethiopia, 69% of households have access to an improved source of drinking water, including 87% of
urban households and 61% of rural households (Table 2.1.1). Urban and rural households rely on different
sources of drinking water. The three most common sources of drinking water in urban households are
water piped into the household’s dwelling, yard, or plot (40%); water piped into a public tap/standpipe
(30%); and water piped to a neighbour (9%). By contrast, rural households obtain their drinking water
mainly from public taps/standpipes (31%) and protected springs (13%) (Table 2.1.1 and Figure 2.1).
2.2 SANITATION
▪ Open defecation is most prevalent in Afar (70%) and least prevalent in Addis Ababa (2%).
▪ The percentage of households with basic sanitation service rises from 6% in Somali to 49% in Addis
Ababa. Basic sanitation service also increases with increasing wealth, from 3% in the lowest wealth
quintile to 30% in the highest quintile. Similarly, households in the highest wealth quintile are more
likely to have limited sanitation service (24%) than those in the lowest and middle quintiles (2% each).
Wealth index
Households are given scores based on the number and kinds of consumer
goods they own, ranging from a television to a bicycle or car, and housing
characteristics such as source of drinking water, toilet facilities, and flooring
materials. These scores are derived using principal component analysis.
National wealth quintiles are compiled by assigning the household score to
each usual (de jure) household member, ranking each person in the
household population by her or his score, and then dividing the distribution into
five equal categories, each comprising 20% of the population.
Sample: Households
The 2019 EMDHS also collected data on access to electricity and flooring materials. Thirty-five percent of
households in Ethiopia have access to electricity (83% in urban areas and 14% in rural areas) (Table 2.4).
Overall, the two most commonly used materials for flooring in Ethiopia are earth or sand (70%) and dung
(10%). Flooring materials differ widely in urban and rural areas. Earth or sand (51%), cement (15%),
carpet (14%), and vinyl or asphalt strips (11%) are most often used in urban households, whereas
households in rural areas primarily use earth or sand (78%) and dung (14%).
In addition, the survey collected information on household effects, means of transportation, and ownership
of agricultural land and farm animals. In general, urban households are more likely than rural households
to possess household effects. The most commonly found item in households is a mobile phone (68%); 87%
of urban households and 59% of rural households own a mobile phone. As expected, rural households are
more likely than urban households to own agricultural land and farm animals. For example, 31% of urban
households own farm animals, as compared with 85% of rural households (Table 2.5).
Among the 8,663 households surveyed, 4 out of 10 (41%) reported having bank or microfinance accounts
(67% of urban households and 29% of rural households).
At the population level, 39% of Ethiopians have a bank or microfinance account, and 62% do not.
The Productive Safety Net Programme (PSNP) is a social protection programme that was initiated in
Africa. It provides food and cash transfers to chronically insecure households and builds community assets
through labour-intensive public works that also provide employment for the poor, especially in food-
insecure parts of rural Ethiopia.
Ethiopia implemented the community-based health insurance (CBHI) scheme in 2011, aimed at reaching
the very large rural agricultural sector and covering the small and informal sectors in urban settings. The
overall objectives of insurance coverage are to promote equitable access to sustainable quality health care,
increase financial protection, and enhance social inclusion for Ethiopian families via the health sector. The
CBHI benefit package covers all outpatient and inpatient services at the health centre and hospital levels
other than procedures related to dentures, eyeglasses, and cosmetics (USAID/HFG 2015).
The 2019 EMDHS results show that 28% of households are enrolled in the community-based health
insurance scheme. Rural households (32%) are more likely to be enrolled than urban households (19%). At
the population level, 3 out of 10 (28%) Ethiopians are enrolled, while 72% are not.
The 2019 EMDHS also collected information on household ownership, whether free of charge, subsidised,
or rented. Among the 8,663 households surveyed in Ethiopia, 80% are owned, 15% are rented, and 5% are
free or subsidised. Thirty-nine percent of urban households are rented, as compared with just 4% of rural
households.
Household
A person or group of related or unrelated persons who live together in the
same dwelling unit(s), who acknowledge one adult male or female as the head
of the household, who share the same housekeeping arrangements, and who
are considered a single unit.
De facto population
All persons who stayed in the selected households the night before the
interview (whether usual residents or visitors).
De jure population
All persons who are usual residents of the selected households, regardless of
where they stayed the night before the interview.
Household composition and population data provide information on age, sex, and residence. They also
provide information on dependency (or non-working) groups in Ethiopia that affect household wealth due
to the nation’s age structure.
The average household size in Ethiopia is 4.7 persons (Table 2.8). Urban households are slightly smaller
than rural households (4.1 persons versus 5.0 persons). Men head most Ethiopian households (78%), with
22% headed by women.
Trends: The age distribution of the household population differs from previous years. Children under age
15 represented 47% of the population in 2011 and 2016, as compared with 44% in 2019. No change
occurred for individuals age 65 and older, who account for 4% of the population. Average household size
remained nearly the same from 2000 to 2019 (4.8 persons versus 4.7 persons). The percentage of female-
headed households decreased from 25% in 2016 to 22% in 2019.
2.6 EDUCATION
Education is one of the most important aspects of social and economic development. Education improves
capabilities and is strongly associated with various socioeconomic variables such as lifestyle, income, and
fertility for both individuals and societies.
Overall, 43% of females age 6 and older have never attended school (Table 2.9). Among most of the
female population, primary school is the highest level of schooling attended or completed; 43% of females
age 6 or older have completed some primary schooling, and 4% have completed their primary education.
Only 1% of women have completed secondary school, and 3% have more than a secondary education. The
median number of years of education for Ethiopian women is 0.6 years.
Trends: Female educational attainment has improved since the first Ethiopia DHS in 2000. The
percentage of females age 6 and older with no education decreased from 77% in 2000 to 43% in 2019.
▪ Urban residents are much more likely than rural residents to be educated. Thirty percent of females
age 6 and older in urban areas have no education, as compared with 48% of females in rural areas.
▪ Addis Ababa has the lowest proportion of females with no education (19%), while Somali has the
highest proportion (65%).
▪ Women in the highest wealth quintile (12%) are more likely than women in the lowest wealth quintile
(<1%) to have more than a secondary education. Women with no education are more likely to live in
poverty. Fifty-nine percent of women in the lowest wealth quintile have no education, compared with
24% of women in the highest quintile.
LIST OF TABLES
For more information on household population and housing characteristics, see the following tables:
1
Includes water piped to a neighbour and those reporting a round-trip collection time of zero minutes
2
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.
3
Drinking water from an improved source, and round-trip collection time is more than 30 minutes.
1
See Table 2.1.1 for definition of an improved source.
2
See Table 2.1.1 for definition of an unimproved source.
3
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.
4
Drinking water from an improved source, and round-trip collection time is more than 30 minutes.
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 2 or more households
1
See Table 2.2.1 for definition of an improved facility.
2
See Table 2.2.1 for definition of an unimproved facility.
3
Defined as use of improved facilities that are not shared with other households. Includes safely managed sanitation service, which
is not shown separately.
4
Defined as use of improved facilities shared by 2 or more households
1
Cows, bulls, other cattle, horses, donkeys, mules, camels, goats, sheep,
chickens or other poultry, and beehives
Note: An asterisk indicates that a figure is based on fewer than 25 unweighted cases and has been suppressed.
1
Completed 8th grade at the primary level
2
Completed 4th year at the secondary level
T
his chapter presents information on demographic and socioeconomic characteristics of the survey
respondents such as age, religion, marital status, education, and wealth status. This information is
useful in understanding the factors that affect use of reproductive health services, contraceptive
use, and other health behaviours.
The main religions in Ethiopia are Orthodox Christianity (42% of women) and Muslim (30%). Twenty-
seven percent of women are Protestant.
Sixty-six percent of women are currently married or living together with a partner. Twenty-six percent of
women have never been married, while 6% are divorced or separated and 2% are widowed.
A person’s place of residence determines her or his access to services and information about health and
other aspects of life. Two-thirds of women live in rural areas (68%), and one-third live in urban areas.
Eighty percent of women live in three major regions: Amhara, Oromia, and the Southern Nations,
Nationalities, and Peoples’ Region (SNNPR). Four in 10 women (40%) age 15-49 have no formal
education, a decrease of eight percentage points from the figure reported in 2016 (48%).
Characteristics of Respondents • 23
3.2 EDUCATION AND LITERACY
Literacy
Respondents who had attended higher than secondary school were assumed
to be literate. All other respondents, shown a typed sentence to read aloud,
were considered literate if they could read all or part of the sentence.
Sample: Women age 15-49
▪ Younger respondents are more likely to have attended school and reached higher levels of education
than older respondents. The percentage of women with no education increases steadily by age group,
from 11% among those age 15-19 to 74% among those age 45-49, suggesting an improvement in
women’s education over time (Table 3.2).
24 • Characteristics of Respondents
▪ Educational attainment varies across regions. Somali and Afar have the highest proportions of women
with no education (72% and 64%, respectively), while Addis Ababa (13%) has the lowest proportion.
▪ Literacy among women decreases sharply with age, from 72% among those age 15-19 to 24% among
those age 45-49 (Table 3.3).
▪ By region, the percentage of women who are literate is highest in Addis Ababa (84%) and lowest in
Somali (12%).
▪ Literacy increases with increasing wealth, from 23% among women in the lowest wealth quintile to
75% among women in the highest quintile.
Currently married
Women who report being married or living together with a partner as though
married at the time of the survey.
Sample: Women age 15-49
Marriage helps determine the extent to which Figure 3.3 Marital status
women are exposed to the risk of pregnancy and is
Percent distribution of women age 15-49
an important determinant of fertility levels. In
Ethiopia, two in three (66%) women are currently Women
married or living together with a partner (Table 3.4
and Figure 3.2). One in four women (26%) have
Married
never been married, 6% are divorced or separated, or living Divorced/
and 2% are widowed. together separated
66% 6%
Trends: The percentage of women who are Widowed
currently in a union (married or living together) has 2%
Never
remained relatively constant over time (64% in 2016 married
and 66% in 2019). 26%
▪ There are marked differences in marital status by age. The percentage of women who have never been
married generally decreases as age increases, from 75% among those age 15-19 to 2% among those
age 45-49.
▪ The percentage of women currently in a union peaks at 89% among those age 30-34 and falls to 81%
among those age 45-49.
▪ In general, the proportion of women who are divorced, separated, or widowed increases with age. Four
percent of women age 15-19 are divorced or separated, as compared with 8% of women age 45-49.
Similarly, less than 1% of women age 15-19 are widowed, compared with 9% of women age 45-49.
LIST OF TABLES
For more information on the characteristics of survey respondents, see the following tables:
Characteristics of Respondents • 25
Table 3.1 Background characteristics of respondents
Percent distribution of women age 15-49 by selected background
characteristics, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of women
Background Weighted Weighted Unweighted
characteristic percent number number
Age
15-19 24.9 2,210 2,100
20-24 16.7 1,481 1,578
25-29 18.8 1,667 1,752
30-34 13.1 1,160 1,166
35-39 12.0 1,065 1,037
40-44 8.3 739 714
45-49 6.3 563 538
Religion
Orthodox 41.5 3,685 3,374
Catholic 0.5 47 78
Protestant 27.4 2,435 1,711
Muslim 29.5 2,619 3,635
Traditional 0.9 83 60
Other 0.2 15 27
Marital status
Never married 26.2 2,325 2,300
Married 64.6 5,743 5,613
Living together 1.4 121 129
Divorced/separated 5.7 510 616
Widowed 2.1 185 227
Residence
Urban 32.2 2,861 2,951
Rural 67.8 6,024 5,934
Region
Tigray 7.1 629 733
Afar 1.0 85 641
Amhara 22.8 2,026 948
Oromia 37.7 3,347 1,052
Somali 4.7 420 640
Benishangul-Gumuz 1.1 98 747
SNNPR 19.2 1,705 1,008
Gambela 0.5 40 723
Harari 0.3 27 763
Addis Ababa 5.0 442 818
Dire Dawa 0.7 64 812
Education
No education 40.4 3,589 3,640
Primary 41.7 3,701 3,345
Secondary 12.2 1,088 1,149
More than
secondary 5.7 507 751
Wealth quintile
Lowest 16.2 1,437 2,031
Second 18.2 1,615 1,341
Middle 18.8 1,671 1,268
Fourth 21.1 1,874 1,344
Highest 25.7 2,287 2,901
Total 15-49 100.0 8,885 8,885
26 • Characteristics of Respondents
Table 3.2 Educational attainment: Women
Percent distribution of women age 15-49 by highest level of schooling attended or completed, and median years completed, according to background
characteristics, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Highest level of schooling Median
Background No Some Completed Some Completed More than years Number of
characteristic education primary primary1 secondary secondary2 secondary Total completed women
Age
15-24 14.2 49.0 10.1 18.4 0.9 7.4 100.0 5.7 3,691
15-19 10.7 56.9 9.3 19.7 0.4 3.1 100.0 5.5 2,210
20-24 19.5 37.1 11.3 16.4 1.8 13.9 100.0 5.9 1,481
25-29 39.9 32.1 6.5 12.8 0.8 7.8 100.0 2.7 1,667
30-34 60.6 24.5 3.7 4.6 1.5 5.1 100.0 0.0 1,160
35-39 70.9 20.8 2.2 2.8 1.0 2.3 100.0 0.0 1,065
40-44 70.9 23.3 1.7 1.9 0.6 1.7 100.0 0.0 739
45-49 74.1 20.2 1.1 1.0 1.9 1.6 100.0 0.0 563
Residence
Urban 24.5 33.0 8.6 18.2 2.4 13.4 100.0 6.1 2,861
Rural 47.9 36.4 5.3 7.9 0.4 2.1 100.0 0.6 6,024
Region
Tigray 34.8 23.7 7.1 19.7 2.2 12.6 100.0 5.4 629
Afar 64.3 27.0 1.1 4.4 0.8 2.5 100.0 0.0 85
Amhara 46.4 29.8 8.2 10.3 0.2 5.0 100.0 1.8 2,026
Oromia 37.2 41.6 6.5 10.8 0.7 3.2 100.0 2.5 3,347
Somali 71.7 15.0 4.5 6.5 0.4 1.9 100.0 0.0 420
Benishangul-Gumuz 39.8 36.6 5.0 8.8 0.2 9.6 100.0 2.9 98
SNNPR 40.7 41.7 4.1 9.0 0.8 3.6 100.0 2.1 1,705
Gambela 21.1 41.9 9.0 14.9 0.4 12.6 100.0 5.6 40
Harari 32.6 31.6 6.4 12.9 1.2 15.3 100.0 4.5 27
Addis Ababa 13.3 24.8 7.9 20.1 7.3 26.5 100.0 8.6 442
Dire Dawa 26.9 28.7 7.3 16.5 2.9 17.6 100.0 6.2 64
Wealth quintile
Lowest 62.1 31.3 2.8 3.6 0.0 0.2 100.0 0.0 1,437
Second 53.8 37.6 4.3 3.7 0.0 0.5 100.0 0.0 1,615
Middle 45.2 38.8 5.4 8.8 0.4 1.5 100.0 1.5 1,671
Fourth 35.9 38.2 7.1 14.0 0.8 4.0 100.0 3.3 1,874
Highest 17.5 31.2 10.3 20.8 3.0 17.3 100.0 7.1 2,287
Total 40.4 35.3 6.4 11.2 1.0 5.7 100.0 2.5 8,885
1
Completed 8th grade at the primary level
2
Completed 4th year at the secondary level
Characteristics of Respondents • 27
Table 3.3 Literacy: Women
Percent distribution of women age 15-49 by level of schooling attended and level of literacy, and percentage literate, according to background characteristics, Ethiopia
Mini-DHS 2019
No schooling, primary or secondary school
Higher than Can read a No card with
Background secondary whole Can read part Cannot read required Blind/visually Percentage Number of
characteristic schooling sentence of a sentence at all language impaired Total literate1 women
Age
15-24 7.4 42.7 18.3 28.8 2.8 0.1 100.0 68.4 3,691
15-19 3.1 49.1 19.7 25.0 3.0 0.1 100.0 71.9 2,210
20-24 13.9 33.2 16.2 34.4 2.4 0.0 100.0 63.2 1,481
25-29 7.8 28.0 11.9 50.4 1.9 0.0 100.0 47.6 1,667
30-34 5.1 14.1 11.1 67.8 1.9 0.0 100.0 30.3 1,160
35-39 2.3 9.1 11.1 76.0 1.5 0.0 100.0 22.5 1,065
40-44 1.7 13.6 10.2 73.8 0.6 0.1 100.0 25.5 739
45-49 1.6 12.2 10.1 75.1 0.5 0.5 100.0 23.9 563
Residence
Urban 13.4 39.8 13.6 31.0 2.2 0.0 100.0 66.8 2,861
Rural 2.1 22.2 14.3 59.4 1.9 0.1 100.0 38.6 6,024
Region
Tigray 12.6 36.8 10.2 40.3 0.0 0.1 100.0 59.6 629
Afar 2.5 7.9 9.4 78.7 1.5 0.0 100.0 19.8 85
Amhara 5.0 34.7 10.1 50.0 0.0 0.2 100.0 49.8 2,026
Oromia 3.2 28.8 15.2 52.8 0.1 0.0 100.0 47.1 3,347
Somali 1.9 5.3 5.0 58.3 29.4 0.0 100.0 12.3 420
Benishangul-Gumuz 9.6 18.8 17.2 52.6 1.8 0.0 100.0 45.5 98
SNNPR 3.6 17.1 21.4 56.1 1.7 0.0 100.0 42.2 1,705
Gambela 12.6 16.6 9.0 27.7 34.1 0.0 100.0 38.2 40
Harari 15.3 28.8 9.7 46.2 0.0 0.0 100.0 53.8 27
Addis Ababa 26.5 45.6 11.8 14.9 1.2 0.0 100.0 84.0 442
Dire Dawa 17.6 32.4 10.1 38.6 1.3 0.0 100.0 60.1 64
Wealth quintile
Lowest 0.2 11.6 11.5 70.2 6.4 0.0 100.0 23.3 1,437
Second 0.5 17.1 12.6 68.1 1.6 0.2 100.0 30.1 1,615
Middle 1.5 24.2 16.5 56.8 1.0 0.0 100.0 42.2 1,671
Fourth 4.0 32.2 16.5 46.1 1.1 0.1 100.0 52.7 1,874
Highest 17.3 44.8 13.0 23.8 1.0 0.0 100.0 75.2 2,287
Total 5.7 27.8 14.1 50.3 2.0 0.1 100.0 47.6 8,885
1
Refers to women who attended schooling higher than the secondary level and women who can read a whole sentence or part of a sentence
28 • Characteristics of Respondents
FERTILITY DETERMINANTS 4
Key Findings
T he number of children that a woman bears depends on many factors, including the age she begins
childbearing, how long she waits between births, and her fecundity. Postponing first births and
extending the interval between births have played an important role in reducing fertility levels in many
countries. These factors also have positive health consequences. In contrast, short birth intervals (of less
than 24 months) can lead to harmful outcomes for both newborns and their mothers, such as preterm birth,
low birth weight, and death. Childbearing at a very young age is associated with an increased risk of
complications during pregnancy and childbirth and higher rates of neonatal mortality.
This chapter describes fertility determinants in Ethiopia. It presents information on children ever born and
living, birth intervals, and age at first birth. Information on the current level of fertility is not presented in
this report.
Of the 7.0 children on average born to currently married women age 45-49, 5.9 survived to the time of the
survey. In Ethiopia, 2% of currently married women age 45-49 have never given birth. Since voluntary
childlessness is rare, this is often viewed as a measure of primary sterility (Table 4.1).
Fertility Determinants • 29
Short birth intervals, particularly those less than 24 Figure 4.1 Birth intervals
months, place both newborns and their mothers at Percent distribution of non-first births by
increased health risk. The median birth interval in number of months since the
Ethiopia is 35.8 months; thus, half of non-first births preceding birth
occur within 3 years of the first birth (Table 4.2).
7-17
About one in four births (28%) occur within 24-35 60+ 9%
months of the previous birth, and one in five births 18%
18-23
(20%) occur within 36-47 months of the previous 14%
48-59
birth (Figure 4.1). 12%
▪ Births to older women occur after longer intervals than births to younger women. The median birth
interval among women age 40-49 is nearly 14 months longer than the median birth interval among
women age 15-19 (41.0 months versus 27.3 months) (Table 4.2).
▪ The median birth interval is 15 months longer if the child from the preceding birth is living than if the
child has died (36.5 months versus 21.6 months). In contrast, there is little difference (less than 1
month) in the median birth interval by sex of the preceding child.
▪ The median birth interval is 3.5 months longer in urban areas than in rural areas (38.6 versus 35.1
months).
▪ The median birth interval increases from 34.8 months among women with no education to 43.8
months among women with a secondary education before decreasing to 39.3 months among women
with more than a secondary education.
▪ Median birth intervals increase with increasing wealth. The birth interval among women in the highest
quintile is more than 12 months longer than the interval among women in the lowest quintile (43.3
months versus 30.9 months).
30 • Fertility Determinants
The age at which childbearing commences is an important Figure 4.2 Median age at
determinant of the overall level of fertility as well as the health and first birth by residence
well-being of the mother and child. In Ethiopia, the median age at first Median age at first birth
birth among women age 25-49 is 18.7 years. This means that half of among women age 25-49
women age 25-49 give birth for the first time before age 19 (Table
4.3). 20.0
18.7 18.1
Trends: The median age at first birth increased slightly from 19.0
years in 2005 to 19.2 years in 2011 and 2016 before decreasing to
18.7 years in 2019.
▪ Urban women age 25-49 begin childbearing 1.9 years later than Total Urban Rural
their counterparts in rural areas (20.0 versus 18.1 years) (Figure
4.2 and Table 4.4).
▪ By region, median age at first birth ranges from Figure 4.3 Median age at first birth
17.5 years among women in Gambela to 21.5 by education
years among women in Dire Dawa. Median age at first birth among women
age 25-49
▪ Women with a secondary education begin
22.6
childbearing almost 5 years later than women
with no education (22.6 years versus 17.9 years) 17.9 18.8
(Figure 4.3).
Fertility Determinants • 31
LIST OF TABLES
For more information on fertility levels and some of the determinants of fertility, see the following tables:
32 • Fertility Determinants
Table 4.1 Children ever born and living
Percent distribution of all women and currently married women age 15-49 by number of children ever born, mean number of children ever born, and mean
number of living children, according to age group, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Mean Mean
number of number of
Number of children ever born Number of children living
Age 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10+ Total women ever born children
ALL WOMEN
15-19 89.7 8.6 1.5 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 2,210 0.12 0.11
20-24 44.1 29.6 17.1 6.2 2.3 0.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 1,481 0.95 0.89
25-29 16.2 16.2 25.3 16.6 11.7 6.8 4.4 2.5 0.2 0.0 0.1 100.0 1,667 2.44 2.26
30-34 4.8 5.7 15.2 17.8 16.1 15.0 11.4 9.1 2.4 1.9 0.7 100.0 1,160 4.04 3.75
35-39 3.5 4.2 8.0 11.1 16.9 14.3 16.0 10.4 6.2 5.3 4.3 100.0 1,065 5.05 4.60
40-44 2.1 2.6 3.2 5.6 11.3 13.3 13.7 14.5 12.6 8.3 12.8 100.0 739 6.32 5.36
45-49 3.0 2.6 4.0 5.6 6.2 11.3 10.7 17.1 13.0 10.8 15.6 100.0 563 6.69 5.61
Total 34.1 11.7 11.4 8.6 8.0 6.9 6.1 5.2 3.0 2.3 2.7 100.0 8,885 2.73 2.44
CURRENTLY MARRIED WOMEN
15-19 60.5 33.2 5.6 0.5 0.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 475 0.47 0.42
20-24 20.7 40.7 25.0 8.9 3.4 1.2 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 955 1.37 1.29
25-29 7.3 16.1 28.3 18.3 13.3 8.0 5.2 3.0 0.3 0.0 0.1 100.0 1,394 2.77 2.56
30-34 2.1 4.2 13.9 17.7 17.3 16.7 12.7 9.8 2.6 2.1 0.7 100.0 1,026 4.31 4.00
35-39 2.6 3.0 6.7 10.6 16.9 14.7 17.3 10.7 6.9 5.7 4.9 100.0 919 5.29 4.85
40-44 1.6 1.9 2.1 3.9 11.4 13.2 13.3 16.7 13.9 8.6 13.3 100.0 637 6.55 5.61
45-49 1.9 2.7 1.8 5.3 5.9 10.1 11.1 19.5 12.6 11.5 17.8 100.0 458 7.03 5.91
Total 11.1 14.8 15.1 11.4 11.1 9.5 8.5 7.4 4.1 3.1 3.8 100.0 5,864 3.76 3.38
Fertility Determinants • 33
Table 4.2 Birth intervals
Percent distribution of non-first births in the 5 years preceding the survey by number of months since preceding birth, and median
number of months since preceding birth, according to background characteristics, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Median
number of
months
Number of since
Background Months since preceding birth non-first preceding
characteristic 7-17 18-23 24-35 36-47 48-59 60+ Total births birth
Mother’s age
15-19 14.3 30.2 34.2 3.4 8.1 9.9 100.0 41 27.3
20-29 11.1 16.0 28.1 21.2 12.0 11.7 100.0 1,863 33.4
30-39 6.9 12.2 28.6 19.3 12.1 20.9 100.0 1,929 37.0
40-49 8.5 10.7 22.0 19.4 12.7 26.7 100.0 473 41.0
Sex of preceding
birth
Male 8.7 13.4 27.6 20.2 13.7 16.5 100.0 2,126 36.2
Female 9.1 14.3 27.8 19.8 10.5 18.4 100.0 2,179 35.4
Survival of preceding
birth
Living 7.1 13.2 28.7 20.8 12.4 17.9 100.0 4,038 36.5
Dead 36.9 24.3 12.3 7.9 7.3 11.2 100.0 268 21.6
Birth order
2-3 7.6 14.3 24.4 19.8 13.2 20.8 100.0 1,755 37.7
4-6 9.7 12.5 28.5 19.6 11.2 18.5 100.0 1,727 35.7
7+ 10.1 15.6 33.0 21.3 11.6 8.3 100.0 824 32.5
Residence
Urban 8.1 12.2 23.0 22.3 11.5 23.0 100.0 970 38.6
Rural 9.2 14.3 29.1 19.3 12.2 15.9 100.0 3,335 35.1
Region
Tigray 3.7 6.0 32.9 20.5 14.1 22.8 100.0 275 38.7
Afar 20.9 17.3 32.1 15.2 6.2 8.4 100.0 67 27.2
Amhara 3.2 8.5 19.1 18.2 16.5 34.5 100.0 775 48.6
Oromia 9.7 16.5 31.1 20.6 9.7 12.5 100.0 1,741 32.5
Somali 22.1 18.8 37.2 12.8 6.7 2.3 100.0 359 26.0
Benishangul-Gumuz 6.1 9.9 30.3 21.1 13.4 19.2 100.0 53 37.6
SNNPR 8.3 14.0 23.4 24.0 14.4 15.9 100.0 893 37.6
Gambela 7.8 7.3 18.8 19.4 21.0 25.7 100.0 18 46.5
Harari 12.5 15.1 30.1 20.6 8.0 13.7 100.0 13 33.3
Addis Ababa 6.5 12.8 20.4 13.8 13.9 32.6 100.0 90 44.7
Dire Dawa 11.3 12.8 30.9 21.9 11.8 11.3 100.0 21 33.6
Mother’s education
No education 10.1 14.2 29.3 19.6 10.8 16.0 100.0 2,683 34.8
Primary 7.3 14.1 26.0 20.9 15.8 16.0 100.0 1,304 36.8
Secondary 7.1 10.2 16.7 19.5 6.6 39.8 100.0 230 43.8
More than secondary 4.1 9.8 31.6 19.9 9.5 25.0 100.0 89 39.3
Wealth quintile
Lowest 13.7 17.4 31.4 17.8 12.3 7.5 100.0 1,146 30.9
Second 8.1 15.0 27.7 21.9 13.6 13.7 100.0 979 35.6
Middle 6.6 12.3 28.9 20.1 12.4 19.7 100.0 809 37.3
Fourth 8.6 9.4 27.7 20.7 11.3 22.2 100.0 716 37.6
Highest 5.2 12.6 19.7 20.1 9.8 32.6 100.0 656 43.3
Total 8.9 13.8 27.7 20.0 12.1 17.5 100.0 4,306 35.8
Note: First-order births are excluded. The interval for multiple births is the number of months since the preceding pregnancy that
ended in a live birth.
34 • Fertility Determinants
Table 4.3 Age at first birth
Percentage of women age 15-49 who gave birth by exact ages, percentage who have never given birth, and
median age at first birth, according to current age, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Percentage
who have
Current Percentage who gave birth by exact age never given Number of Median age
age 15 18 20 22 25 birth women at first birth
15-19 1.1 na na na na 89.7 2,210 a
20-24 6.3 22.2 39.0 na na 44.1 1,481 a
25-29 15.3 35.0 51.1 63.6 78.7 16.2 1,667 19.9
30-34 20.7 48.1 66.3 76.8 87.6 4.8 1,160 18.2
35-39 21.4 48.1 64.5 77.0 87.9 3.5 1,065 18.2
40-44 31.1 52.3 69.2 81.3 89.3 2.1 739 17.7
45-49 22.0 48.3 60.3 73.0 84.4 3.0 563 18.3
20-49 17.5 39.6 56.0 na na 15.7 6,675 19.3
25-49 20.7 44.5 60.8 72.8 84.7 7.6 5,194 18.7
Fertility Determinants • 35
FAMILY PLANNING 5
Key Findings
C ouples can use contraceptive methods to limit or space the number of children they have. This chapter
presents information on knowledge, use, and sources of contraceptive methods.
Family planning helps women avoid unplanned or unwanted pregnancies and prevent unsafe abortions.
Additionally, contraceptive use helps women space the births of their children, which benefits the health of
the mother and child. Although previous surveys gathered data on family planning from both women and
men, the 2019 Ethiopia Mini-DHS was limited to only women.
In line with Ethiopia’s Family Planning 2020 (FP2020) commitments, the Ministry of Health (MoH)
developed the health sector transformation plan of 2015, which aimed to increase the contraceptive
prevalence rate (CPR) to 55%. This would mean reaching an additional 6.2 million women and adolescent
girls with family planning services by 2020 (MOH 2015).
Knowledge of contraceptive methods varies the most by a respondent’s region. Almost all currently
married women in Addis Ababa know at least one method of contraception, while in Somali only 67% of
currently married women know at least one method of contraception (Table 5.2).
Family Planning • 37
The contraceptive prevalence rate (CPR) among currently married women age 15-49 in Ethiopia is 41%.
Many currently married women use a modern method (41%), while only 1% use a traditional method
(Table 5.3).
Modern methods
Include male and female sterilisation, injectables, intrauterine devices (IUDs),
contraceptive pills, implants, female and male condoms, the Standard Days
Method and emergency contraception
The most commonly used modern contraceptive Figure 5.1 Contraceptive use
methods among currently married women in
Percentage of currently married women
Ethiopia are injectables (27%), followed by implants age 15-49 currently using a
(9%), and the pill and IUD (2% each) (Figure 5.1). contraceptive method
Any method 41
Trends: Modern contraceptive use among currently
married women has steadily increased over the last Any modern method 41
15 years, from 14% in 2005 to 41% in 2019 (Figure Injectables 27
5.2). The largest increases have been in the use of
Implants 9
injectables (from 10% in 2005 to 27% in 2019) and
implants (from less than 1% in 2005 to 9% in 2019). Pill 2
IUD 2
Figure 5.2 Trends in contraceptive use
Traditional method 1
Percentage of currently married women
currently using a contraceptive method
Any modern
method
41
35
27
14 Any traditional
6 method 1
2 1 <1 1
▪ Modern contraceptive use is higher among currently married women with one or two living children
(53%) than among those with five or more living children (31%) (Table 5.4).
▪ Urban women (48%) are more likely than rural women (38%) to use modern methods.
38 • Family Planning
▪ Modern contraceptive use generally increases Figure 5.3 Use of modern methods by
with increasing household wealth, from 27% household wealth
among women in the lowest wealth quintile to Percentage of currently married women
51% among those in the highest quintile (Figure age 15-49
5.3).
▪ Almost all implant and IUD users obtained their method from the public sector (96% and 94%,
respectively).
▪ Sixty-eight percent of pill users obtained their method from the public sector, mainly through a
government health station/centre (30%) or public pharmacy (18%). Thirty-two percent of pill users
obtained their method from the private sector, primarily from a private clinic or private pharmacy
(15% each).
Family Planning • 39
LIST OF TABLES
For more information on family planning, see the following tables:
40 • Family Planning
Table 5.1 Knowledge of contraceptive methods
Percentage of all women and currently married women age
15-49 who know any contraceptive method, by specific
method, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Currently
married
Method All women women
Any method 95.2 96.2
Any modern method 95.0 96.1
Female sterilisation 30.7 32.1
Male sterilisation 13.2 12.8
Pill 81.0 83.0
IUD 50.5 52.3
Injectables 91.0 92.5
Implants 84.3 87.1
Male condom 70.9 68.7
Female condom 24.7 22.3
Emergency contraception 27.2 25.0
Standard days method 19.2 20.3
Lactational amenorrhoea
(LAM) 42.1 46.9
Any traditional method 51.5 51.9
Rhythm 46.7 46.7
Withdrawal 24.0 24.7
Other traditional method 0.2 0.2
Mean number of methods
known by respondents
15-49 6.1 6.1
Number of respondents 8,885 5,864
Family Planning • 41
Table 5.2 Knowledge of contraceptive methods according to
background characteristics
Percentage of currently married women age 15-49 who have heard of at least
one contraceptive method and who have heard of at least one modern method,
by background characteristics, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Background Heard of any Heard of any Number of
characteristic method modern method1 women
Age
15-19 94.8 94.8 475
20-24 97.1 97.1 955
25-29 97.2 97.0 1,394
30-34 96.6 95.9 1,026
35-39 95.9 95.9 919
40-44 95.6 95.6 637
45-49 93.7 93.7 458
Residence
Urban 98.2 98.0 1,627
Rural 95.5 95.3 4,237
Region
Tigray 98.4 98.2 370
Afar 86.3 86.1 64
Amhara 96.2 96.2 1,313
Oromia 98.5 98.2 2,306
Somali 66.7 66.5 284
Benishangul-Gumuz 95.4 95.3 67
SNNPR 98.3 98.2 1,177
Gambela 94.7 94.4 25
Harari 98.2 98.2 16
Addis Ababa 99.4 99.4 206
Dire Dawa 95.5 95.5 36
Education
No education 94.0 93.7 3,025
Primary 98.2 98.1 2,119
Secondary 99.9 99.9 470
More than secondary 99.9 99.9 250
Wealth quintile
Lowest 89.2 88.9 1,069
Second 96.5 96.4 1,138
Middle 97.0 96.9 1,154
Fourth 98.3 98.3 1,220
Highest 99.1 98.8 1,283
Total 96.2 96.1 5,864
1
Female sterilisation, male sterilisation, pill, IUD, injectables, implants, male
condom, female condom, emergency contraception, standard days method
(SDM), lactational amenorrhoea method (LAM), and other modern methods
42 • Family Planning
Table 5.3 Current use of contraception by age
Percent distribution of all women and currently married women age 15-49 by contraceptive method currently used, according to age, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Modern method Traditional method
Emer- Any
Any Female gency tradi- Not Number
Any modern sterili- Inject- Im- Male contra- tional With- current- of
Age method method sation Pill IUD ables plants condom ception SDM LAM Other method Rhythm drawal Other ly using Total women
ALL WOMEN
15-19 9.4 9.4 0.0 0.5 0.1 6.5 1.9 0.2 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 90.6 100.0 2,210
20-24 36.2 34.7 0.0 1.4 0.2 26.1 6.2 0.1 0.1 0.0 0.6 0.0 1.5 1.5 0.0 0.0 63.8 100.0 1,481
25-29 41.4 40.5 0.0 1.9 2.0 26.7 9.0 0.1 0.0 0.2 0.6 0.0 0.9 0.5 0.4 0.0 58.6 100.0 1,667
30-34 40.3 39.5 0.1 2.3 1.6 26.4 8.7 0.2 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.0 0.8 0.5 0.2 0.0 59.7 100.0 1,160
35-39 34.6 34.1 0.8 2.2 1.9 20.7 7.7 0.2 0.0 0.4 0.1 0.0 0.5 0.1 0.4 0.0 65.4 100.0 1,065
40-44 27.6 26.9 1.5 2.0 1.1 14.7 6.4 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.7 0.2 0.8 0.1 0.6 0.0 72.4 100.0 739
45-49 14.4 13.7 0.7 0.0 0.4 8.4 3.4 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.7 0.0 0.8 0.8 0.0 0.0 85.6 100.0 563
Total 28.8 28.1 0.3 1.4 1.0 18.7 6.0 0.2 0.0 0.1 0.4 0.0 0.7 0.5 0.2 0.0 71.2 100.0 8,885
CURRENTLY MARRIED WOMEN
15-19 36.5 36.4 0.0 1.7 0.0 27.4 5.9 0.4 0.0 0.2 0.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 63.5 100.0 475
20-24 52.5 50.6 0.0 2.2 0.4 37.8 9.1 0.1 0.2 0.0 0.9 0.0 1.9 1.9 0.0 0.0 47.5 100.0 955
25-29 48.1 47.1 0.0 2.2 2.4 31.4 10.2 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.7 0.0 1.0 0.5 0.4 0.0 51.9 100.0 1,394
30-34 43.9 43.0 0.1 2.4 1.9 29.0 9.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.0 0.9 0.6 0.3 0.0 56.1 100.0 1,026
35-39 39.3 38.8 0.9 2.5 2.3 23.4 8.9 0.2 0.0 0.5 0.1 0.0 0.5 0.1 0.4 0.0 60.7 100.0 919
40-44 30.1 29.2 1.0 2.1 1.2 16.8 6.8 0.2 0.0 0.0 0.8 0.3 0.9 0.1 0.7 0.0 69.9 100.0 637
45-49 17.5 16.6 0.9 0.0 0.3 10.3 4.2 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.8 0.0 0.9 0.9 0.0 0.0 82.5 100.0 458
Total 41.4 40.5 0.3 2.0 1.5 27.2 8.5 0.1 0.0 0.2 0.6 0.0 1.0 0.7 0.3 0.0 58.6 100.0 5,864
Note: If more than one method is used, only the most effective method is considered in this tabulation.
SDM = Standard days method
LAM = Lactational amenorrhoea method
Family Planning • 43
Table 5.4 Current use of contraception according to background characteristics
Percent distribution of currently married women age 15-49 by contraceptive method currently used, according to background characteristics, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Modern method Traditional method
Emer-
Any Female gency Any tradi- Not
Background Any modern sterili- Inject- Male contra- tional With- currently Number of
characteristic method method sation Pill IUD ables Implants condom ception SDM LAM Other method Rhythm drawal Other using Total women
Number of living
children
0 28.2 25.6 0.0 2.8 0.7 18.2 3.5 0.4 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.0 2.6 2.6 0.0 0.0 71.8 100.0 694
1-2 53.7 52.9 0.1 3.4 1.3 35.5 11.5 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.7 0.0 0.9 0.5 0.3 0.0 46.3 100.0 1,857
3-4 43.7 43.5 0.3 1.3 1.4 30.2 9.1 0.0 0.0 0.3 1.0 0.0 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.0 56.3 100.0 1,463
5+ 32.2 31.1 0.8 1.0 2.0 19.9 6.8 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.1 1.0 0.5 0.5 0.0 67.8 100.0 1,850
Residence
Urban 49.7 47.7 0.3 5.2 1.5 30.7 9.2 0.2 0.0 0.2 0.5 0.0 2.0 1.9 0.1 0.0 50.3 100.0 1,627
Rural 38.2 37.7 0.4 0.8 1.5 25.8 8.2 0.1 0.0 0.2 0.6 0.0 0.6 0.2 0.4 0.0 61.8 100.0 4,237
Region
Tigray 37.3 36.3 0.0 3.8 1.0 15.0 15.4 0.4 0.0 0.0 0.7 0.0 0.9 0.6 0.4 0.0 62.7 100.0 370
Afar 12.7 12.7 0.0 2.5 0.9 7.0 1.6 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 87.3 100.0 64
Amhara 49.5 49.5 0.2 1.7 1.2 36.1 10.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 50.5 100.0 1,313
Oromia 40.7 38.9 0.7 2.0 1.6 26.1 7.4 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.9 0.1 1.8 1.2 0.5 0.0 59.3 100.0 2,306
Somali 3.4 3.4 0.0 0.3 0.0 2.0 0.4 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 96.6 100.0 284
Benishangul-Gumuz 38.5 36.7 0.0 1.0 2.2 16.8 15.8 0.0 0.0 0.8 0.0 0.0 1.8 1.5 0.2 0.1 61.5 100.0 67
SNNPR 45.0 44.6 0.2 1.3 1.5 33.5 7.7 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.4 0.1 0.3 0.0 55.0 100.0 1,177
Gambela 33.8 33.2 0.0 2.2 0.4 29.5 1.0 0.2 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.6 0.6 0.0 0.0 66.2 100.0 25
Harari 32.4 30.3 0.2 3.5 1.4 10.4 11.0 0.8 0.2 0.0 2.8 0.0 2.1 2.1 0.0 0.0 67.6 100.0 16
Addis Ababa 49.9 47.6 0.0 8.6 5.2 17.0 13.3 1.1 0.0 1.2 1.2 0.0 2.4 2.4 0.0 0.0 50.1 100.0 206
Dire Dawa 30.5 30.3 0.4 4.9 0.9 8.2 12.6 0.5 0.0 0.3 2.5 0.0 0.1 0.1 0.0 0.0 69.5 100.0 36
Education
No education 32.3 32.0 0.4 0.9 0.9 22.1 6.7 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.9 0.0 0.3 0.1 0.2 0.0 67.7 100.0 3,025
Primary 49.0 47.5 0.4 1.7 1.4 33.8 9.7 0.2 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.1 1.5 0.9 0.6 0.0 51.0 100.0 2,119
Secondary 57.2 55.8 0.0 7.1 3.5 32.7 11.5 0.1 0.3 0.5 0.1 0.0 1.5 1.5 0.0 0.0 42.8 100.0 470
More than secondary 57.5 53.8 0.0 9.7 6.0 22.3 14.1 0.6 0.0 0.8 0.4 0.0 3.8 3.7 0.0 0.0 42.5 100.0 250
Wealth quintile
Lowest 27.0 26.7 0.1 0.5 0.3 19.5 4.8 0.3 0.0 0.3 0.8 0.0 0.3 0.0 0.3 0.0 73.0 100.0 1,069
Second 35.3 35.1 0.2 0.8 0.7 24.1 8.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.6 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.0 64.7 100.0 1,138
Middle 45.2 44.6 0.1 0.2 1.9 32.1 9.3 0.1 0.1 0.3 0.5 0.0 0.6 0.1 0.4 0.0 54.8 100.0 1,154
Fourth 44.0 42.9 0.7 1.6 1.6 28.8 9.6 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.6 0.0 1.0 0.7 0.3 0.0 56.0 100.0 1,220
Highest 53.0 50.6 0.5 6.6 2.6 30.5 9.6 0.2 0.0 0.2 0.4 0.0 2.4 2.1 0.3 0.0 47.0 100.0 1,283
Total 41.4 40.5 0.3 2.0 1.5 27.2 8.5 0.1 0.0 0.2 0.6 0.0 1.0 0.7 0.3 0.0 58.6 100.0 5,864
Note: If more than one method is used, only the most effective method is considered in this tabulation.
SDM = Standard days method
LAM = Lactational amenorrhoea method
44 • Family Planning
Table 5.5 Source of modern contraceptive methods
Percent distribution of users of modern contraceptive methods age 15-49 by most recent source of method,
according to method, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Male
Source IUD Injectables Implants Pill condom Total
Public sector 93.7 85.4 95.5 68.1 (30.7) 86.6
Government hospital 9.4 1.9 4.9 6.6 (0.0) 3.8
Government health station/
centre 66.5 40.8 69.8 29.9 (9.2) 46.9
Government health post 17.8 41.7 20.8 13.3 (4.5) 34.1
Public pharmacy 0.0 1.0 0.0 18.4 (17.0) 1.7
Other public sector 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 (0.0) 0.0
NGO health facility 2.2 0.9 1.0 0.2 (0.0) 1.1
Other NGO 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.0 (0.0) 0.1
Private sector 4.1 13.3 3.5 31.7 (50.1) 11.8
Private hospital 4.1 1.0 0.3 1.5 (0.0) 1.0
Private clinic 0.0 11.5 3.2 15.2 (16.2) 9.3
Private pharmacy 0.0 0.9 0.0 15.0 (33.9) 1.5
Other private medical 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 (0.0) 0.0
Other source 0.0 0.2 0.0 0.0 (19.2) 0.3
Shop 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 (19.2) 0.1
Friend/relative 0.0 0.2 0.0 0.0 (0.0) 0.2
Other 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.0 (0.0) 0.2
Don’t know 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 (0.0) 0.0
Missing 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 (0.0) 0.0
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 (100.0) 100.0
Number of women 90 1,658 533 127 14 2,459
Note: Total includes other modern methods (female sterilisation, emergency contraception, standard days
method, and lactational amenorrhoea method). Figures in parentheses are based on 25-49 unweighted cases.
Family Planning • 45
INFANT AND CHILD MORTALITY 6
Key Findings
I
nformation on infant and child mortality is relevant to a demographic assessment of a country’s
population and is an important indicator of the country’s socioeconomic development and quality of
life. It can also help estimate how many children may be at higher risk of death and support the
development of strategies to reduce this risk, such as promoting birth spacing.
This chapter presents information on levels, trends, and differentials in neonatal, postneonatal, infant,
child, and under-5 mortality rates. It also examines biodemographic factors and fertility behaviours that
increase mortality risks for infants and children. The information was collected during a retrospective birth
history in which female respondents listed all of the children born to them, along with each child’s date of
birth, survivorship status, and current age or age at death.
The quality of mortality estimates calculated from birth histories depends on the mother’s ability to recall
all of the children to whom she has given birth, as well as their birth dates and ages at death. Potential data
quality problems include:
▪ The selective omission from birth histories of those births that did not survive, which can result in
underestimation of childhood mortality.
▪ The displacement of birth dates, which may distort mortality trends. This can occur if an interviewer
knowingly records a birth as occurring in a different year than the one in which it occurred. This may
happen if an interviewer is trying to cut down on his or her overall workload, because live births
occurring during the 5 years before the interview are the subject of a lengthy set of additional
questions.
▪ Inaccurate reporting of age at death. Misreporting the child’s age at death may distort the age pattern
of mortality, especially if the net effect of the age misreporting is to transfer deaths from one age
bracket to another.
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.
The 2019 EMDHS results show that the neonatal, Figure 6.1 Trends in early childhood
infant, and under-5 mortality rates for the 5 years mortality rates
before the survey were 33, 47, and 59 deaths per Deaths per 1,000 live births in the
1,000 live births, respectively. In other words, 1 in 5-year period before the survey
every 30 children in Ethiopia die within the first 123
Under-5 mortality
month, 1 in every 21 die before their first birthday,
and 1 in every 17 die before their fifth birthday 88
(Table 6.1). Infant mortality
67
77 59 59
Trends: Under-5 mortality declined from 123 deaths 48
Neonatal mortality 47
per 1,000 live births in 2005 to 59 deaths per 1,000
live births in 2019, a 52% decrease. Over the same 39 37
29 33
period, infant mortality declined from 77 to 47
deaths per 1,000 live births, a 39% reduction. 2005 2011 2016 2019
Neonatal mortality declined from 39 deaths per EDHS EDHS EDHS EMDHS
1,000 live births in 2005 to 29 deaths per 1,000 live
births in 2016 before increasing to 33 deaths per 1,000 births in 2019 (an overall reduction of 15% over the
past 14 years) (Figure 6.1).
91
58
43
34 36
30 30
Table 6.4 presents the percentage distribution of children born in the 5 years preceding the survey who fall
into different risk categories: not in any high-risk category, in an unavoidable risk category, in a single
high-risk category, or in a multiple high-risk category.
▪ Overall, 73% of currently married women have the potential for a high-risk birth, with 32% falling
into a single high-risk category and 41% falling into a multiple high-risk category.
▪ In the 5 years before the survey, 60% of infants in Ethiopia were at elevated odds of dying from
avoidable risks: 39% were in a single high-risk category, and 21% were in a multiple high-risk
▪ In general, risk ratios are higher for children in a multiple high-risk category than for children in a
single high-risk category. The risk ratio is highest (6.18) for births to women less than 34 years old in
which the birth interval was less than 24 months and the birth order was higher than three.
LIST OF TABLES
For more information on infant and child mortality, see the following tables:
1
Computed as the difference between the infant and neonatal mortality rates
1
Computed as the difference between the infant and neonatal mortality rates
Note: Risk ratio is the ratio of the proportion dead among births in a specific high-risk category to
the proportion dead among births not in any high-risk category. An asterisk indicates that a figure
is based on fewer than 25 unweighted cases and has been suppressed.
na = Not applicable
1
Women are assigned to risk categories according to the status they would have at the birth of a
child if they were to conceive at the time of the survey: current age less than 17 years and 3 months
or older than 34 years and 2 months, latest birth less than 15 months ago, or latest birth being of
order 3 or higher.
2
Includes the category age <18 and birth order >3
a
Includes sterilised women
H
ealth care services during pregnancy and after delivery are important for the survival and well-
being of both the mother and the infant. Skilled care during pregnancy, childbirth, and the
postpartum period is critical in reducing maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality.
As highlighted in the 2015-16 Health Sector Transformation Plan (HSTP), maternal and newborn health
are priorities for the government of Ethiopia (FMoH 2015). The key components of the HSTP are delivery
at a health facility, with skilled medical attention and hygienic conditions; reductions in complications and
infections during labour and delivery; timely postnatal care that treats complications from delivery; and
education of the mother on care for herself and her infant. The goal of the reproductive health programme
is to reduce the maternal mortality ratio to 199 maternal deaths per 100,000 live births and the neonatal
mortality rate to 10 deaths per 1,000 live births by 2020.
This chapter presents information on antenatal care (ANC) and its main components: the number and
timing of ANC visits, blood pressure measurement, blood and urine sampling, and nutritional counselling.
The chapter also presents information on childbirth and postnatal care such as place of delivery, assistance
during delivery, caesarean delivery, and postnatal health checks for mothers and newborns.
The 2019 EMDHS results show that 74% of women who had a live birth in the 5 years before the survey
received ANC from a skilled provider for their last birth (Table 7.1).
Trends: The proportion of women age 15-49 who Figure 7.1 Trends in antenatal
received ANC from a skilled provider has increased care coverage
over time, from 28% in 2005 and 34% in 2011 to
Percentage of women age 15-49 who had
62% in 2016 and 74% in 2019 (Figure 7.1). a live birth in the 5 years before the survey
(for the most recent birth)
Patterns by background characteristics Received any
74 ANC from
▪ ANC from a skilled provider varies by mother’s 62 skilled
provider
age, from a high of 77% among women age 20- 43 Had 4+ ANC
34 to a low of 59% among women age 35-49. 34 32 visits
28
19 Had ANC in
▪ ANC from a skilled provider is lowest for sixth- 12 28 first trimester
20
or higher-order births (58%) and highest for 11
6
first-order births (83%). 2005 2011 2016 2019
EDHS EDHS EDHS EMDHS
▪ Urban women are more likely than rural women
to receive ANC from a skilled provider (85% and 70%, respectively).
▪ Regionally, ANC coverage from a skilled provider is highest in Addis Ababa (97%) and lowest in
Somali (30%).
▪ ANC from a skilled provider increases with increasing mother’s education, from 62% among women
with no education to nearly 100% among women with more than a secondary education.
▪ Women in the highest wealth quintile (95%) are more likely than those in the lowest quintile (47%) to
receive ANC from a skilled provider.
Forty-three percent of women in Ethiopia had at least four ANC visits during their last pregnancy, while
26% of women had no ANC visits (Table 7.2). Rural women (29%) were more likely than urban women
(15%) to have no ANC visits.
Only 28% of women had their first ANC visit during the first trimester, while 32% had their first visit
during the fourth or fifth month of pregnancy and 12% had their first visit during the sixth or seventh
month. Two percent of women did not receive any ANC until the eight month of pregnancy or later (Table
7.2).
Forty-three percent of women in urban areas received ANC within their first trimester of pregnancy, as
compared with 22% of those in rural areas (Table 7.2).
Trends: The proportion of pregnant women who had a urine sample collected during an ANC visit
increased from 27% in 2005 to 74% in 2019. Similarly, the proportion who had a blood sample taken
increased from 26% to 79%, and the proportion who had their blood pressure measured increased from
62% to 88%.
Institutional deliveries
Deliveries that occur in a health facility.
Sample: All live births in the 5 years before the survey
Increasing institutional deliveries is important for reducing maternal and neonatal mortality. However,
access to health facilities is more difficult in rural areas than in urban areas because of distance, scarce
transport, and a lack of appropriate facilities. Although institutional delivery has been promoted in
Ethiopia, home delivery is still common, primarily in hard-to-reach areas. Forty-eight percent of live births
in the 5 years before the survey were delivered in a health facility (Table 7.4).
In the 5 years before the survey, 50% of births were Figure 7.5 Assistance during delivery
delivered by a skilled provider (Figure 7.5 and
Percent distribution of births in the 5 years
Table 7.6). Most births were attended by nurses or before the survey
midwives (36%), followed by traditional birth
attendants (31%) and doctors (8%). Relative/
other No one
6% 13%
Trends: The percentage of births delivered by a Nurse/
skilled provider increased from 11% in 2011 and midwife
36%
28% in 2016 to 50% in 2019. Traditional
birth
Patterns by background characteristics attendant
Health 31% Doctor
extension Health
▪ Skilled providers delivered 76% of births to 8%
worker officer
mothers who attended four or more ANC visits, 4% 2%
as compared with 15% of births to mothers with
no ANC visits (Table 7.6).
▪ Ninety-three percent of births to mothers with Figure 7.6 Skilled assistance at delivery
more than a secondary education are assisted by by education
a skilled provider, compared with 35% of births
Percentage of live births in the 5 years
to mothers with no education (Figure 7.6 and before the survey assisted by a
Table 7.6). skilled provider
93
▪ The proportion of births assisted by skilled 84
providers ranges from 26% in Somali to 96% in
61
Addis Ababa.
Access to caesarean sections (C-sections) can reduce maternal and neonatal mortality and complications
such as obstetric fistula. However, use of caesarean sections without medical need can put women at risk
of both short-term and long-term health problems. The World Health Organization advises that C-sections
be performed only when medically necessary. According to WHO, population-level reductions in maternal
and newborn mortality are not associated with C-section rates higher than 10%.
The 2019 EMDHS results showed that 5% of live births in the 5 years before the survey were delivered by
C-section (Table 7.7).
▪ Caesarean section deliveries are more common among mothers age 35-49 (7%) than among mothers
less than age 20 (3%).
▪ The caesarean section rate in urban areas (10%) is more than twice that in rural areas (4%).
▪ Women with more than a secondary education (19%) are more likely to undergo C-sections than
women with a secondary education (13%), primary education (6%), or no education (3%).
A large proportion of maternal and neonatal deaths occur during the first 24 hours after delivery. For both
the mother and the infant, prompt postnatal care is important in treating complications that arise from
delivery and providing the mother with important information on caring for herself and her baby. In
Ethiopia, 34% of women age 15-49 who gave birth in the 2 years before the survey had a postnatal check
during the first 2 days after birth, while 64% did not receive a postnatal check (Table 7.8).
▪ Women who delivered in a health facility were 20 times more likely to have a postnatal health check
within 2 days of delivery than those who delivered elsewhere (60% versus 3%).
▪ The proportion of women who received postnatal check-ups in the 2 days after delivery varies widely
by region, from 10% in Somali to 74% in Addis Ababa.
Type of Provider
The skills of the provider determine the provider’s ability to diagnose problems and recommend
appropriate treatment or referral. Thirty percent of women received a postnatal check from a doctor, nurse,
or midwife. Only 3% of women received a check from a health officer, and another 2% received a check
from a health extension worker (HEW) (Table 7.9).
The first 48 hours is a vulnerable phase in the life of a newborn baby and a period in which many neonatal
deaths occur. Lack of postnatal health checks during this period can delay identification of newborn
complications and initiation of appropriate care and treatment. Table 7.10 shows that only 35% of
newborns had a postnatal check within the first 2 days after birth, while 63% received no postnatal check.
▪ Newborns delivered in a health facility were much more likely to receive a postnatal health check from
a skilled provider within 2 days than those delivered elsewhere (62% versus 2%).
▪ Infants born to urban women (48%) were more likely than those born to rural women (30%) to receive
a check-up within the first 2 days of birth.
▪ The percentage of newborns receiving check-ups within the first 2 days increases with increasing
mother’s education. Twenty-two percent of babies born to women with no education received a
postnatal check-up, as compared with 70% of babies born to women with more than a secondary
education.
Type of Provider
Thirty percent of newborns received a postnatal check-up within 2 days from a doctor, nurse, or midwife,
while 3% received a check-up from a health officer, 1% from an HEW, and less than 1% from a traditional
birth attendant (Table 7.11).
The survey also collected data on other components of postnatal care such as whether selected signal
functions were performed within 2 days of birth, including measuring the newborn’s temperature and
informing the mother about danger signs in newborns. Forty percent of newborns in the 2 years before the
survey had at least two signal functions performed within 2 days after birth (Table 7.12).
LIST OF TABLES
For more information on maternal health care, see the following tables:
Note: If more than one source of ANC was mentioned, only the provider with the highest qualifications is considered in this tabulation.
1
Skilled provider includes doctor, nurse, midwife, health officer, and health extension worker.
Note: If more than one source of assistance was mentioned, only the provider with the highest qualifications is considered in this tabulation.
1
Skilled provider includes doctor, nurse, midwife, health officer, and health extension worker.
2
Includes women who received a check from a doctor, nurse, midwife, health officer, health extension worker, or traditional birth attendant
Percentage
Health facility delivered in
Background Public Private a health Number of
characteristic sector sector NGO Home Other Total facility births
Mother’s age at birth
<20 52.7 0.5 0.4 45.8 0.5 100.0 53.6 751
20-34 45.2 1.4 1.2 51.1 1.1 100.0 47.8 4,069
35-49 38.1 1.1 0.4 59.1 1.2 100.0 39.7 707
Birth order
1 65.7 1.9 1.4 30.0 0.9 100.0 69.1 1,221
2-3 47.7 2.0 1.1 48.1 1.0 100.0 50.9 1,755
4-5 37.4 0.6 0.5 60.5 1.0 100.0 38.5 1,244
6+ 30.7 0.2 0.7 67.2 1.2 100.0 31.6 1,306
Antenatal care visits1
None 13.3 0.0 0.3 85.8 0.7 100.0 13.6 1,004
1-3 50.7 0.8 0.6 47.3 0.7 100.0 52.0 1,225
4+ 69.8 2.5 1.4 25.0 1.4 100.0 73.6 1,688
Don’t know/missing * * * * * * * 10
Residence
Urban 63.2 3.7 3.5 29.2 0.4 100.0 70.4 1,367
Rural 39.5 0.4 0.1 58.7 1.2 100.0 40.0 4,160
Region
Tigray 72.0 0.0 0.4 26.5 1.1 100.0 72.4 371
Afar 27.1 0.0 1.2 71.6 0.2 100.0 28.3 86
Amhara 53.3 0.1 0.8 44.4 1.4 100.0 54.2 1,050
Oromia 39.7 0.7 0.6 57.8 1.2 100.0 41.0 2,211
Somali 16.7 1.3 5.2 76.0 0.8 100.0 23.3 409
Benishangul-Gumuz 63.4 0.0 0.3 31.3 5.0 100.0 63.7 67
SNNPR 47.3 0.0 0.2 52.1 0.4 100.0 47.5 1,106
Gambela 58.2 0.9 11.2 29.3 0.4 100.0 70.3 25
Harari 56.0 6.8 1.1 35.5 0.6 100.0 63.8 16
Addis Ababa 66.8 26.2 1.9 4.8 0.4 100.0 94.8 156
Dire Dawa 56.5 12.6 0.0 30.3 0.6 100.0 69.2 30
Mother’s education
No education 31.8 0.3 0.6 66.0 1.3 100.0 32.7 2,962
Primary 56.1 0.5 1.1 41.4 0.8 100.0 57.8 1,956
Secondary 76.3 5.1 2.3 15.5 0.7 100.0 83.8 415
More than secondary 77.3 14.2 1.6 6.9 0.0 100.0 93.1 194
Wealth quintile
Lowest 19.0 0.3 0.4 79.2 1.1 100.0 19.7 1,321
Second 38.2 0.0 0.3 60.4 1.0 100.0 38.5 1,198
Middle 42.9 0.0 0.3 55.3 1.4 100.0 43.3 1,044
Fourth 60.4 0.1 0.9 37.3 1.3 100.0 61.5 960
Highest 76.5 6.2 3.2 13.7 0.4 100.0 85.9 1,005
Total 45.3 1.2 1.0 51.4 1.0 100.0 47.5 5,527
Note: An asterisk indicates that a figure is based on fewer than 25 unweighted cases and has been suppressed.
1
Includes only the most recent birth in the 5 years preceding the survey
Note: If the respondent mentioned more than one person attending during delivery, only the most qualified person is considered in this tabulation. An
asterisk indicates that a figure is based on fewer than 25 unweighted cases and has been suppressed.
1
Skilled provider includes doctor, nurse, midwife, health officer, and health extension worker.
2
Includes only the most recent birth in the 5 years preceding the survey
1
Includes women who received a check from a doctor, midwife, nurse, health officer, health extension worker, or traditional birth attendant
2
Includes women who received a check after 41 days
1
Includes newborns who received a check from a doctor, midwife, nurse, health officer, health extension worker, or traditional birth attendant
2
Includes newborns who received a check after the first week of life
T
he Expanded Programme for Immunisation (EPI) in Ethiopia, launched in 1980, has been one of
the core priorities in past Health Sector Development Programmes (HSDPs) and the current Health
Sector Transformation Plan (HSTP) (FMoH 2015). The country has mobilised volunteers, health
extension workers, and health facilities to deliver immunisation services. Improved district planning and
management were initiated in 2011 with the goal of reaching every district. Static, outreach, and mobile
are the three important service delivery platforms for vaccination services. In addition, several campaigns
provide polio, measles, and other antigens to children.
Universal immunisation of children against the six common vaccine-preventable diseases, namely
tuberculosis, diphtheria, whooping cough (pertussis), tetanus, polio, and measles, is crucial in reducing
infant and child mortality. Other childhood vaccines given in Ethiopia protect against hepatitis B and
Haemophilus influenzae type b (Hib). Unlike previous EDHS surveys, this survey also captured
information related to the second dose of measles vaccine (MCV 2), an effort launched in early 2019.
Childhood Vaccinations • 75
According to the guidelines developed by the World Health Organization (WHO), children are considered
to have received all basic vaccinations if they have received a vaccination against tuberculosis (also known
as BCG), three doses of the DPT-HepB-Hib (also called pentavalent) vaccine, and vaccinations against
polio and measles. The BCG vaccine is usually given at birth or at first clinical contact, while the DPT-
HepB-Hib and polio vaccines are given at approximately age 6, 10, and 14 weeks. Measles vaccinations
should be given at or soon after age 9 months. The EPI in Ethiopia considers a child to have received all
basic vaccinations if the child has also received three doses of the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PVC)
(at age 6, 10, and 14 weeks) and two doses of the rotavirus vaccine (at age 6 and 10 weeks).
Information on vaccination coverage was obtained in three ways in the 2019 EMDHS: from written
vaccination records, including the infant immunisation card and other health cards; from mothers’ verbal
reports; and from health facility records. For each child born in the 3 years before the survey, mothers were
asked to show the interviewer the infant immunisation card or health card used to record the child’s
immunisations. If the infant immunisation card or other health card was available, the interviewer copied
the dates of each vaccination received in the respective section of the Woman’s Questionnaire. If a
vaccination was not recorded on the infant immunisation card or the health card, the mother was asked to
recall whether that particular vaccination had been given. If the mother was not able to present the child’s
infant immunisation card, she was asked to recall whether the child had received the BCG, polio, DPT-
HepB-Hib, measles, pneumococcal, and rotavirus vaccines. If she indicated that the child had received the
polio, DPT-HepB-Hib, pneumococcal, measles, or rotavirus vaccine, she was asked the number of doses
that the child received.
In addition, for any children missing vaccination data who also visited a health facility, the field supervisor
visited the health facility to collect the relevant vaccination records. The purpose of obtaining information
at the health facility was to complement the immunisation information based on mothers’ recall.
Data on vaccination coverage among children age 12-23 months who received specific vaccines at any
time before the survey (according to a vaccination card or the mother’s recall) showed that only 4 out of 10
children (44%) have received all basic vaccinations at some time, and 40% received these vaccinations
before their first birthday (Figure 8.1 and Table 8.1). Fifty-nine percent of children in this age group
received a measles vaccination (MCV 1), and 19% received no vaccinations.
76 78
73 71 72
61 60 59
44
19
Coverage rates decline for subsequent doses of these vaccines, with 61% of children age 12-23 months
receiving the recommended three doses of DPT-HepB-Hib vaccine and 60% receiving all three doses of
the polio vaccine. There is a 15 percentage-point dropout rate within this age group from the first to the
third dose of the DPT-HepB-Hib vaccine and an 18 percentage-point dropout rate from the first to the third
dose of the polio vaccine. Only 9 percent of children age 24-35 months received the second dose of the
measles vaccine (MCV 2).
76 • Childhood Vaccinations
8.2 UPTAKE OF THE RECENTLY INTRODUCED VACCINES
The government of Ethiopia introduced the pneumococcal conjugate vaccine (PCV) and monovalent
human rotavirus vaccine (RV) into the national infant immunisation programme in November 2011 and
October 2012, respectively. PCV protects against Streptococcus pneumoniae bacteria, which cause severe
pneumonia, meningitis, and other illnesses. Rotavirus causes gastroenteritis, an inflammation of the
stomach and intestines. If left untreated, rotavirus can lead to severe dehydration and death. Among
children age 12-23 months, 74% received the first dose of PCV and 60% received the third dose (Table
8.2). Seventy-three percent of children received the first dose of RV, while 67% received the second dose.
Trends: There has been steady progress in EPI Figure 8.2 Trends in childhood
coverage over the years. The percentage of children vaccinations
age 12-23 months who received all basic Percentage of children age 12-23 months
vaccinations increased from 20% in 2005 and 24% who received all basic vaccines at any
in 2011 to 39% in 2016 and 44% in 2019. Also, the time before the survey
proportion of children with no vaccinations
decreased from 24% in 2005 to 19% in 2019 (Figure
8.2).
44
All basic vaccinations 39
Patterns by background characteristics
24 24
No vaccinations
▪ Vaccination coverage among children age 12-23
20 19
months generally declines as birth order 15 16
increases, from 44% among first-order births to 2005 2011 2016 2019
37% among sixth- or higher-order births (Table EDHS EDHS EDHS EMDHS
8.2).
▪ Children in urban areas are more likely to Figure 8.3 Vaccination coverage by
receive all basic vaccinations than children in mother’s education
rural areas (62% versus 36%). Percentage of children age 12-23 months
who received all basic vaccines at any
▪ At the regional level, coverage of all basic time before the survey
vaccinations is highest in Addis Ababa (83%)
and Tigray (73%) and lowest in Somali (19%)
65
and Afar (20%). 59
50
▪ Children are more likely to receive all basic
33
vaccinations if their mothers have more than a
secondary education (65%) than if their mothers
have no education (33%) (Figure 8.3).
No education Primary Secondary More than
▪ Children from households in the highest wealth secondary
quintile are more likely to receive all basic
vaccinations than children from households in the lowest quintile (67% versus 26%) (Table 8.2).
Childhood Vaccinations • 77
8.3 POSSESSION AND OBSERVATION OF VACCINATION CARDS IN HOUSEHOLDS
Vaccination cards are critical tools in ensuring that children receive all recommended vaccinations
according to schedule. In Ethiopia, 45% of children age 12-23 months and 31% of children age 24-35
months were reported to have ever had a vaccination card. Interviewers were able to see a vaccination
card, booklet, or other home-based record for 41% of children age 12-23 months and 26% of children age
24-35 months (Table 8.3).
Table 8.4 presents information on observation of vaccination history at health facilities for children age
0-35 months. Sixty-two percent of children in this age group did not have a vaccination card seen during
home visits. Of these children, 53% received at least one vaccination at a health facility. For 51% of the
children, interviewers were able to obtain the mother’s consent to search for the health record at a health
facility. Vaccination history was sought at a health facility for 33% of children and found for 29% of
children.
Table 8.5 presents results from health facility visits for children age 12-35 months. Sixty-six percent did
not have a vaccination card during their home visit. Among these children, 58% received at least one
vaccination at a health facility. Interviewers obtained the mother’s consent to search for the health record
at a health facility for 56% of the children. Supervisors and field teams searched for the vaccination history
at health facilities for 37% of children and located the history for 32% of children.
Trends: The percentage of children age 0-35 months with no vaccination card during their home visit
declined from 71% in 2016 to 62% in 2019. Over the same period, the percentage of children age 12-23
months who ever had a vaccination card decreased slightly from 46% to 45%, while the percentage among
children age 24-35 months decreased from 35% to 31%.
78 • Childhood Vaccinations
LIST OF TABLES
For more information on childhood vaccinations, observation of vaccination cards, and observation of
vaccination history at health facilities, see the following tables:
Childhood Vaccinations • 79
Table 8.1 Vaccinations by source of information
Percentage of children age 12-23 months and children age 24-35 months who received specific vaccines at any time before the survey, by source of information
(vaccination card or mother’s report), and percentage who received specific vaccines by the appropriate age, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Children age 12-23 months Children age 24-35 months
Vaccinated Vaccinated
by by
Vaccination Health Mother’s appropriate Vaccination Health Mother’s appropriate
Vaccine card1 facility report Any source age2,3 card1 facility report Any source age3,4
BCG 37.2 27.7 8.0 73.0 70.4 24.7 32.0 6.2 63.0 62.6
DPT-HepB-Hib
1 40.1 28.0 8.2 76.3 75.1 26.2 32.8 5.4 64.4 63.3
2 38.2 26.5 6.6 71.3 70.3 24.6 30.1 4.4 59.1 58.4
3 35.6 22.5 3.1 61.1 60.3 22.7 24.9 2.3 50.0 49.0
Polio
0 (birth dose) 16.2 13.6 2.2 31.9 31.6 11.9 18.9 2.1 32.9 32.3
1 39.7 28.5 9.7 77.9 76.7 26.0 34.4 8.2 68.7 67.5
2 38.0 27.0 6.6 71.5 70.6 23.9 32.1 5.7 61.6 60.9
3 34.5 23.1 2.4 59.9 58.4 22.3 26.2 1.6 50.2 49.2
IPV 24.8 22.3 7.5 54.6 53.3 15.4 28.6 4.6 48.5 47.7
Pneumococcal
1 39.9 26.1 7.5 73.6 72.5 25.7 31.6 5.2 62.6 61.5
2 37.7 24.4 6.3 68.4 67.5 23.9 29.0 3.7 56.6 56.0
3 34.7 22.1 3.1 59.8 58.6 21.6 25.2 1.2 48.0 47.0
Rotavirus
1 39.3 26.2 7.0 72.5 71.4 25.4 29.8 6.0 61.3 60.3
2 36.9 23.8 6.0 66.8 65.6 23.5 27.8 4.0 55.3 53.8
Measles-containing
vaccine
1 29.0 22.8 6.7 58.5 54.8 19.0 29.7 6.2 54.9 49.9
2 na na na na na 1.9 6.6 0.6 9.1 6.9
All basic vaccinations5 26.1 17.7 0.2 44.1 40.2 17.6 20.9 1.0 39.5 36.3
All age-appropriate
vaccinations6 9.9 8.3 0.0 18.2 18.1 1.4 2.5 0.0 3.9 1.6
No vaccinations 0.0 3.7 15.5 19.2 na 0.0 5.4 23.6 29.0 na
Number of children 425 338 265 1,028 1,028 271 415 341 1,027 1,027
na = Not applicable
BCG = Bacille Calmette-Guérin
DPT = Diphtheria-pertussis-tetanus
HepB = Hepatitis B
Hib = Haemophilus influenzae type b
IPV = inactivated polio vaccine
1
Vaccination card, booklet, or other home-based record
2
Received by age 12 months
3
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.
4
Received by age 12 months for all vaccines except measles-containing vaccine 2, which should be received by age 24 months
5
BCG, three doses of DPT-HepB-Hib, three doses of oral polio vaccine (excluding polio vaccine given at birth), and one dose of measles-containing vaccine
6
For children age 12-23 months: BCG, three doses of DPT-HepB-Hib, four doses of oral polio vaccine, IPV, three doses of pneumococcal vaccine, two doses of
rotavirus vaccine, and one dose of measles-containing vaccine. For children age 24-35 months, all of the just-mentioned vaccinations plus a second dose of
measles-containing vaccine.
80 • Childhood Vaccinations
Table 8.2 Vaccinations by 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 with all basic vaccinations, and percentage with all age-appropriate vaccinations,
by background characteristics, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Childhood Vaccinations • 81
Table 8.3 Possession and observation of vaccination cards, according to background characteristics
Percentage of children age 12-23 months and children age 24-35 months who ever had a vaccination card, and
percentage with a vaccination card seen, according to background characteristics, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Children age 12-23 months Children age 24-35 months
Percentage Percentage Percentage Percentage
who ever had with a who ever had with a
Background a vaccination vaccination Number of a vaccination vaccination Number of
characteristic card1 card seen1 children card1 card seen1 children
Sex
Male 45.6 41.9 495 25.2 21.0 514
Female 44.6 40.8 533 36.7 31.8 514
Birth order
1 45.5 41.1 248 35.7 34.6 220
2-3 49.3 45.7 376 33.1 28.5 281
4-5 45.6 43.9 219 34.3 27.0 244
6+ 35.3 29.7 185 22.1 17.3 283
Residence
Urban 60.7 57.4 313 46.6 37.9 248
Rural 38.2 34.3 715 26.0 22.7 780
Region
Tigray 75.0 69.0 77 64.7 63.6 61
Afar 22.9 19.2 15 19.0 11.3 17
Amhara 53.3 52.4 218 39.6 38.6 192
Oromia 39.6 35.2 405 24.5 20.2 429
Somali 24.9 21.4 56 17.1 13.2 74
Benishangul-Gumuz 46.7 45.7 11 33.2 31.1 13
SNNPR 34.1 29.6 199 22.1 11.8 196
Gambela 58.1 53.5 4 31.5 27.6 4
Harari 52.2 48.5 3 47.7 41.0 4
Addis Ababa 91.1 85.9 34 87.6 84.8 32
Dire Dawa 58.2 54.6 6 52.7 50.0 5
Mother’s education
No education 33.9 30.8 464 24.2 19.1 576
Primary 50.6 45.8 418 36.2 33.1 338
Secondary 68.0 65.1 85 48.4 39.7 85
More than secondary 60.3 58.2 62 (53.1) (53.1) 29
Wealth quintile
Lowest 22.2 17.4 217 18.0 13.6 245
Second 36.8 35.5 214 19.9 15.7 218
Middle 44.5 40.1 179 30.4 27.9 212
Fourth 48.4 45.1 159 27.4 24.1 162
Highest 69.4 64.6 260 64.0 55.4 190
Total 45.1 41.3 1,028 30.9 26.4 1,027
82 • Childhood Vaccinations
Table 8.4 Observation of vaccination history at health facilities: Children age 0-35 months
Percentage of children age 0-35 months who did not have a vaccination card seen during the home visit, and among children age 0-35 months without a
vaccination card seen during the home visit, percentage who received at least one vaccination at a health facility, percentage with mother’s consent for
visiting health facilities, percentage with vaccination history searched at health facilities, and percentage with vaccination history found and seen by the
interviewer at health facilities, according to background characteristics, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Percentage of Among children who did not have vaccination card during home visit
children who did Percentage who Percentage with Percentage with
not have received at least Percentage with vaccination vaccination
vaccination card one vaccination mother’s consent history searched history found and
Background during home Number of at a health for visiting health at health seen by Number of
characteristic visit1 children facility facilities facilities1 interviewer children
Age in months
<6 54.5 554 31.8 29.3 16.9 14.8 302
6-11 53.2 485 48.7 47.8 32.6 29.1 258
12-23 58.7 1,028 57.2 56.2 37.6 34.8 603
24-35 73.6 1,027 59.1 55.5 35.7 30.1 756
Sex
Male 64.1 1,562 56.6 54.9 37.3 32.8 1,002
Female 59.9 1,532 48.7 45.8 28.2 25.0 918
Birth order
1 55.6 707 60.9 59.7 36.5 31.3 393
2-3 57.2 996 54.4 51.6 33.9 31.2 570
4-5 61.8 683 50.3 49.0 33.4 29.5 422
6+ 75.4 708 47.1 44.0 29.0 24.8 534
Residence
Urban 45.5 802 49.9 44.9 28.6 25.1 365
Rural 67.8 2,292 53.5 51.9 34.0 30.0 1,554
Region
Tigray 28.6 213 72.0 72.0 57.2 46.1 61
Afar 80.2 49 21.8 19.8 8.7 7.6 39
Amhara 51.8 614 69.3 69.3 37.1 37.1 318
Oromia 68.6 1,236 56.2 53.2 38.3 35.2 847
Somali 78.6 201 24.3 24.3 11.2 11.2 158
Benishangul-Gumuz 62.0 37 57.2 56.2 42.3 41.8 23
SNNPR 72.5 609 43.4 40.0 26.0 16.7 442
Gambela 48.6 14 53.1 53.1 18.0 18.0 7
Harari 53.5 9 45.9 43.7 15.9 9.4 5
Addis Ababa 12.6 95 * * * * 12
Dire Dawa 42.5 17 84.3 83.6 40.0 40.0 7
Mother’s education
No education 72.0 1,533 46.2 43.6 27.4 24.9 1,104
Primary 56.2 1,161 58.6 57.2 39.0 34.1 652
Secondary 43.5 268 71.3 67.4 53.3 45.0 116
More than secondary 35.7 132 (81.2) (79.8) (27.4) (18.5) 47
Wealth quintile
Lowest 81.6 693 39.1 39.1 23.1 20.6 565
Second 69.3 662 56.6 53.8 36.2 31.7 458
Middle 66.2 598 59.3 57.0 41.4 37.6 396
Fourth 56.8 513 61.0 58.0 35.1 27.2 291
Highest 33.2 628 57.6 51.9 33.5 32.6 208
Total 62.0 3,094 52.8 50.6 32.9 29.1 1,919
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
Vaccination card, booklet, or other home-based record
Childhood Vaccinations • 83
Table 8.5 Observation of vaccination history at health facilities: Children age 12-35 months
Percentage of children age 12-35 months who did not have a vaccination card seen during the home visit, and among children age 12-35 months without
a vaccination card seen during the home visit, percentage who received at least one vaccination at a health facility, percentage with mother’s consent for
visiting health facilities, percentage with vaccination history searched at health facilities, and percentage with vaccination history found and seen by the
interviewer at health facilities, according to background characteristics, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Percentage of Among children who did not have vaccination card during home visit
children who did Percentage who Percentage with Percentage with
not have received at least Percentage with vaccination vaccination
vaccination card one vaccination mother’s consent history searched history found and
Background during home Number of at a health for visiting health at health seen by Number of
characteristic visit1 children facility facilities facilities1 interviewer children
Age in months
12-23 58.7 1,028 57.2 56.2 37.6 34.8 603
24-35 73.6 1,027 59.1 55.5 35.7 30.1 756
Sex
Male 68.8 1,009 61.0 59.0 41.2 36.3 694
Female 63.6 1,047 55.3 52.5 31.7 27.9 666
Birth order
1 62.0 469 65.8 64.1 39.0 33.4 290
2-3 61.6 656 60.1 56.6 37.1 33.7 405
4-5 65.0 463 54.4 53.4 37.2 34.0 301
6+ 77.8 467 53.4 50.3 33.4 28.1 363
Residence
Urban 51.2 561 55.5 49.2 31.2 26.7 287
Rural 71.7 1,494 59.0 57.6 38.0 33.7 1,072
Region
Tigray 33.3 138 78.5 78.5 66.8 52.1 46
Afar 85.1 32 26.2 24.6 11.0 9.9 28
Amhara 54.0 410 79.5 79.5 41.1 41.1 222
Oromia 72.5 834 57.8 55.1 39.4 36.7 605
Somali 83.3 130 26.0 26.0 14.0 14.0 108
Benishangul-Gumuz 62.4 24 66.1 64.6 49.0 48.2 15
SNNPR 79.3 395 53.7 48.9 33.2 22.0 313
Gambela 59.1 8 59.0 59.0 22.2 22.2 5
Harari 55.9 6 50.6 48.6 17.1 9.7 3
Addis Ababa 14.6 66 * * * * 10
Dire Dawa 47.6 11 89.3 89.3 42.0 42.0 5
Mother’s education
No education 75.7 1,040 51.7 49.3 32.3 29.3 787
Primary 59.8 755 65.3 63.3 42.5 36.9 452
Secondary 47.7 170 72.9 67.3 52.8 40.9 81
More than secondary 43.4 91 (79.1) (77.5) (20.0) (20.0) 39
Wealth quintile
Lowest 84.6 462 44.2 44.2 26.9 24.5 391
Second 74.5 432 59.9 58.3 38.7 33.3 322
Middle 66.5 391 68.3 65.6 48.8 44.2 260
Fourth 65.5 321 69.5 65.2 38.1 29.2 210
Highest 39.3 450 58.1 51.4 34.4 33.3 177
Total 66.1 2,055 58.2 55.8 36.6 32.2 1,359
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
Vaccination card, booklet, or other home-based record
84 • Childhood Vaccinations
NUTRITION OF CHILDREN 9
Key Findings
T
he government of Ethiopia has taken several steps toward reducing undernutrition in the country.
The recently endorsed 2019 Food and Nutrition Policy aims to achieve optimal nutritional status
throughout the life cycle via coordinated implementation of nutrition-specific and nutrition-
sensitive interventions. In addition, through the Seqota Declaration, Ethiopia has committed to ending
undernutrition in children under age 2 by 2030. To accelerate reductions in malnutrition, Ethiopia
developed the National Nutrition Programme (NNP) I (2008-2015) and the NNP II (2016-2020) with a
specific focus on multisectoral coordination of nutrition interventions.
This chapter focuses on the nutritional status of children and provides data on indicators that can be used in
planning and monitoring national efforts to improve nutrition. The chapter describes the nutritional status
of children under age 5 and infant and young child feeding practices, including breastfeeding and
complementary feeding.
The 2019 EMDHS collected data on the nutritional status of children by measuring the weight and height
of children under age 5 in all sampled households, regardless of whether their mothers were interviewed in
the survey. Weight was measured with an electronic mother-infant scale (SECA 874 flat) designed for
mobile use. Height was measured with a UNICEF measuring board. Children younger than age 24 months
were measured lying down on the board (recumbent length), while older children were measured standing
up.
The distribution of height and weight among children under age 5 was compared against the WHO Child
Growth Standards reference population (WHO 2006). A well-nourished population will be similar to the
reference population, while a poorly nourished population will differ from the reference population. Three
indices—height-for-age, weight-for-height, and weight-for-age—can be expressed in standard deviation
Nutrition of Children • 85
units (Z-scores) from the median of the reference population, with values greater than two standard
deviations from the median of the WHO Child Growth Standards used to define malnutrition.
Stunting, or low height-for-age, is a sign of chronic undernutrition that reflects failure to receive adequate
nutrition over a long period of time. The most direct causes of stunting are inadequate nutrition (not eating
enough or eating foods that lack growth-promoting nutrients) and recurrent infections or chronic diseases
that result in poor nutrient intake, absorption, and utilisation.
Wasting, or low weight-for-height, is a measure of acute undernutrition and represents the failure to
receive adequate nutrition in the period immediately before the survey. Wasting may result from
inadequate food intake or from a recent episode of illness or infection causing weight loss.
The means of the Z-scores for height-for-age, weight-for-height, and weight-for-age are also calculated as
summary statistics representing the nutritional status of children in a population. These mean scores
describe the nutritional status of the entire population of children without the use of a cutoff point. A mean
86 • Nutrition of Children
Z-score of less than 0 (i.e., a negative mean value for stunting, wasting, or underweight) suggests a
downward shift in the entire sample population’s nutritional status relative to the reference population. The
prevalence of malnutrition rises as mean Z-scores move farther away from 0.
Health technicians were trained to measure children’s height and weight. Training on child height
measurement included standardisation exercises and re-standardisation exercises (for those who did not
successfully complete the standardisation exercises).
Table 9.1 shows that 37% of children under age 5 Figure 9.1 Trends in nutritional status
are stunted, and 12% are severely stunted. Seven of children
percent are wasted and 1% severely wasted. Twenty- Percentage of children under age 5 who
one percent of children are underweight, with 6% are malnourished
severely underweight. Only 2% of children are
overweight.
51
44
38 37
28
21 18
12
▪ The prevalence of stunting increases sharply with age, from 17% among children less than age 6
months to a peak of 45% among children age 24-35 months; this represents the impact of
undernutrition in the first 1,000 days of life (Table 9.1).
▪ Children in rural areas are more likely than those in urban areas to be stunted (40% versus 26%),
underweight (23% versus 15%), and wasted (8% versus 5%).
Nutrition of Children • 87
▪ There are wide regional variations in stunting Figure 9.3 Stunting in children by
and wasting. The proportion of children who are mother’s education
stunted is highest in Tigray (48%), Afar (42%),
Percentage of children under age 5 who
and Amhara (42%), whereas the proportion of are stunted
wasting is highest in Somali (21%), Afar (14%),
and Gambela (13%).
Initiation of breastfeeding within the first hour of life is important for both the mother and the child. The
first breast milk contains colostrum, which is highly nutritious and has antibodies that protect the newborn
from diseases. Early initiation of breastfeeding also encourages bonding between the mother and her
newborn and facilitates the production of regular breast milk. Thus, as medical guidelines suggest, children
should be put to the breast immediately or within 1 hour after birth. Prelacteal feeding (feeding newborns
anything other than breast milk) is discouraged during the first few days of life.
The National Guideline on Adolescent, Maternal, Infant, and Young Child Nutrition (AMIYCN) (FDRE
2016) promotes optimal feeding and care practices that are in line with international recommendations.
Mothers are encouraged to breastfeed exclusively until the child is age 6 months without adding any water,
other fluids, or foods and to continue breastfeeding until the child reaches age 2.
Ninety-six percent of last-born children born in the 2 years before the survey were breastfed at some point
(Table 9.2). Seventy-two percent were breastfed within 1 hour of birth, and 91% were breastfed within
1 day of birth. Twelve percent of children received a prelacteal feed.
Trends: There have been slight declines since 2016 in the percentages of children who began
breastfeeding within 1 hour of birth (from 73% to 72%) and 1 day of birth (from 92% to 91%). Over the
same period, the percentage of children receiving a prelacteal feed has increased from 8% to 12%.
88 • Nutrition of Children
Patterns by background characteristics
▪ Sixty-six percent of children whose mothers have more than a secondary education began
breastfeeding within 1 hour of birth, as compared with 72%-74% of children whose mothers are at
lower educational levels.
▪ The percentage of children who began breastfeeding within 1 hour of birth is lowest in Somali (57%)
and highest in Oromia (82%). Children in Somali were most likely to receive a prelacteal feed (45%).
▪ Children born to mothers with more than a secondary education were more likely to receive a
prelacteal feed (15%) than children born to mothers in the other education categories (11%-13%).
Breast milk contains all of the nutrients needed by children in the first 6 months of life. It is recommended
that children be given nothing but breast milk in the first 6 months of their life. Exclusive breastfeeding for
6 months prevents infections such as diarrhoea and respiratory illnesses and provides the nutrients and
liquid an infant requires for optimal growth and development. Feeding complementary foods within the
first 6 months will have the adverse effect of reducing breast milk output because the production and
release of breast milk are modulated by the frequency and intensity of suckling.
Exclusive breastfeeding
Proportion of children age 0-5 months who are fed exclusively with breast milk.
Sample: Last-born children who were born in the 2 years before the survey
Overall, 59% of children under age Figure 9.4 Breastfeeding practices by age
6 months are exclusively breastfed; Percentage of children under age 2
the percentage of exclusive 100
breastfeeding declines with age,
Exclusive
from 73% among children age 0-1 80 breastfeeding
months to 40% among those age 4-
60
5 months (Figure 9.4 and Table Breastfeeding and receiving
9.3). Contrary to the complementary foods
40
recommendation that children Not breastfeeding
under 6 months be exclusively 20
breastfed, many infants also receive
other liquids such as water (14%), 0
<2 2-3 4-5 6-7 8-9 10-11 12-13 14-15 16-17 18-19 20-21 22-23
non-milk liquids (1%), and other
Age in months
milks (8%) before reaching age 6
months. Moreover, 13% of infants
begin complementary foods before age 6 months, with nearly one-fourth of children age 4-5 months
consuming complementary foods.
Sixty-eight percent of children under age 24 months are receiving age-appropriate breastfeeding. Sixty-
nine percent of children are introduced to solid, semisolid, or soft foods at 6-8 months, an improvement
from 2016 (60%). Continued breastfeeding at age 1 is relatively high at 87%, and 72% of children continue
breastfeeding until their second birthday. Twenty-two percent of children under age 2 are bottle fed, as
compared with 14% in 2016 (Table 9.4).
Trends: Exclusive breastfeeding among children under age 6 months increased from 49% in 2005 to 59%
in 2019.
Nutrition of Children • 89
9.2.3 Median Duration of Breastfeeding
Table 9.5 shows that the median duration of any breastfeeding among children born in the 3 years before
the survey is 23.6 months. Overall, the median duration of exclusive breastfeeding is 3.7 months, and the
median duration of predominant breastfeeding (either exclusively breastfed or breastfed and receiving
plain water and/or non-milk liquids) is 5.5 months.
▪ Female children have a longer median duration (6.0 months) of predominant breastfeeding than male
children (4.9 months).
▪ The median duration of any breastfeeding is longest in Amhara (31.8 months) and SNNPR (31.2
months) and shortest in Somali (16.3 months).
▪ The median duration of any breastfeeding is longer in rural than urban areas (24.1 and 22.1 months,
respectively).
After the first 6 months, breast milk alone is no longer sufficient to meet the nutritional needs of an infant.
After 6 months, appropriate complementary foods should be introduced while breastfeeding is continued
until age 2 or older. The transition from exclusive breastfeeding to complementary family food is a
vulnerable period for children during which they can become undernourished. It is important that they
receive solid, semisolid, or soft foods during this time.
Appropriate complementary feeding should include a variety of foods to ensure that nutrient requirements
are met. Fruits and vegetables rich in vitamin A should be consumed daily. Eating a range of fruits and
vegetables, in addition to those rich in vitamin A, is also important. Studies have shown that plant-based
complementary foods by themselves are insufficient to meet the needs for certain micronutrients.
Therefore, it has been recommended that meat, poultry, fish, or eggs be part of the daily diet or eaten as
often as possible (WHO 2003).
In the 2019 EMDHS, women who had at least one child living with them who was born in 2017 or later
were asked questions about the types of liquids and foods the child consumed during the 24-hour period
(the day or night) before the interview. Mothers who had more than one child born in 2017 or later were
asked questions about the youngest child living with them.
Table 9.6 indicates the types of foods and liquids consumed by children during the day and night before
the interview by their age and breastfeeding status. Overall, the food items most commonly given to
breastfed children are grains (48%), fruits and vegetables rich in vitamin A (20%), and foods made from
legumes and nuts (19%).
▪ Only 3% of breastfed children and 7% of nonbreastfed children age 6-23 months consumed infant
formula in the 24 hours before the survey (Table 9.6).
▪ Sixty-five percent each of breastfed and nonbreastfed children consumed food made from grains in the
24 hours before the survey.
▪ Twenty-seven percent of breastfed children and 25% of nonbreastfed children are given fruits and
vegetables rich in vitamin A.
90 • Nutrition of Children
▪ Children age 6-23 months are much less likely to consume fortified baby food (5% among both
breastfed and nonbreastfed children) than other solid or semisolid foods.
Minimum dietary diversity is a proxy for adequate micronutrient density of foods. Consumption of food
from at least five groups means that the child has a high likelihood of consuming at least one animal source
of food and at least one fruit or vegetable in addition to a staple food such as grains, roots, or tubers (WHO
2008). The five groups should come from a list of eight food groups: breast milk; grains, roots, and tubers;
legumes and nuts; dairy products (milk, yogurt, and cheese); flesh foods (meat, fish, poultry, and
liver/organ meat); eggs; vitamin A-rich fruits and vegetables; and other fruits and vegetables.
Minimum meal frequency is a proxy for meeting energy requirements. Breastfed children age 6-8 months
are considered to be fed with a minimum meal frequency if they receive solid, semisolid, or soft foods at
least twice a day. Breastfed children age 6-23 months are considered to be fed with a minimum meal
frequency if they receive solid, semisolid, or soft foods at least three times a day. Nonbreastfed children
age 6-23 months are considered to be fed with a minimum meal frequency if they receive solid, semisolid,
or soft foods or milk feeds at least four times a day and if at least one of the feeds is a solid, semisolid, or
soft food.
▪ Children in urban areas (59%) are more likely than those in rural areas (54%) to be fed according to
the minimum meal frequency standards (Table 9.7).
▪ The proportion of children fed with a minimum meal frequency ranges from a high of 82% in Addis
Ababa to a low of 34% in Somali.
▪ The percentage of children fed with a minimum meal frequency increases with increasing mother’s
education, from 46% among children whose mothers have no education to 70% among those whose
mothers have more than a secondary education.
▪ Children in urban areas (16%) are more likely to be fed according to the minimum dietary diversity
standards than those in rural areas (12%).
▪ The percentage of children with an adequately diverse diet is highest in Addis Ababa (29%) and
lowest in Somali (1%).
▪ The proportion of children fed according to the minimum dietary diversity standards increases with
increasing household wealth, from 6% among children in the lowest wealth quintile to 20% among
those in the highest quintile.
Nutrition of Children • 91
9.2.6 Minimum Acceptable Diet
Infants and young children should be fed a minimum acceptable diet to ensure appropriate growth and
development. Without adequate diversity and meal frequency, infants and young children are vulnerable to
undernutrition, especially stunting and micronutrient deficiencies, and to increased morbidity and
mortality. The WHO minimum acceptable diet recommendation, which is a combination of dietary
diversity and minimum meal frequency, is different for breastfed and nonbreastfed children. The
composite indicator of a minimum acceptable diet for all children age 6-23 months is defined below.
According to the 2019 EMDHS, 11% of children age Figure 9.5 IYCF indicators on minimum
6-23 months meet the minimum standards with acceptable diet
respect to all three IYCF practices (breastfeeding Percentage of children age 6-23 months
status, number of food groups, and times they were
fed during the day or night before the survey) (Table Breastfed Nonbreastfed All children
6-23 months
9.7). Fourteen percent of children have an
adequately diverse diet (i.e., they are given foods
from the appropriate number of food groups), and 56 51 55
55% are fed the minimum number of times
appropriate for their age (Figure 9.5).
14 14 12 8 11
8
Trends: The percentage of children fed according to
the minimum acceptable diet standards has increased Minimum dietary Minimum meal Minimum
slightly since 2016, from 7% to 11%. diversity (IYCF frequency (IYCF acceptable diet
Indicator 5) Indicator 6) (IYCF Indicator 7)
Patterns by background characteristics
▪ The proportion of children fed according to the minimum acceptable dietary standards is somewhat
lower among those who are not breastfed (8%) than among those who are breastfed (12%).
▪ Children in urban areas (14%) are more likely to fed according to the minimum acceptable dietary
standards than those in rural areas (10%).
▪ The percentage of children who receive a minimum acceptable diet is highest in Addis Ababa (28%)
and lowest in Somali, Afar, and Amhara (1%, 4%, and 6%, respectively).
▪ The proportions of children receiving a minimum acceptable diet generally increase with increasing
mother’s education and household wealth. However, the proportions are quite low even among
children whose mothers have more than a secondary education (19%) and children from households in
the highest wealth quintile (17%).
The information collected on food consumption among the youngest children under age 2 is useful in
assessing the extent to which children are consuming food groups rich in two key micronutrients—vitamin
92 • Nutrition of Children
A and iron—in their daily diet. Iron deficiency is one of the primary causes of anaemia, which has serious
health consequences for both women and children. Vitamin A is an essential micronutrient for the immune
system and plays an important role in maintaining the epithelial tissue in the body. Severe vitamin A
deficiency (VAD) can cause eye damage and is the leading cause of childhood blindness. VAD also
increases the severity of infections such as measles and diarrhoeal disease in children and slows recovery
from illness. VAD is common in dry environments where fresh fruits and vegetables are not readily
available.
Consumption of foods rich in vitamin A or iron remains low among young children in Ethiopia. Thirty-
nine percent of children age 6-23 months consumed foods rich in vitamin A during the 24 hours before the
interview, while 24% consumed iron-rich foods (Table 9.8).
▪ Intake of both vitamin A-rich and iron-rich foods generally increases with age. For example, 28% of
children age 6-8 months consume foods rich in vitamin A, as compared with 52% of children age 18-
23 months.
▪ The percentage of children consuming foods rich in vitamin A ranges from 2% in Somali to 58% in
Addis Ababa.
▪ Among children age 6-35 months, those in urban areas (53%) are more likely than those in rural areas
(45%) to have received a vitamin A supplement in the 6 months before the survey.
▪ Consumption of foods rich in vitamin A and iron increases with increasing mother’s education. For
example, 41% of children whose mothers have more than a secondary education consume foods rich in
iron, compared with 14% of children whose mothers have no education.
According to the 2019 EMDHS, 40% of women with a child born in the last 5 years did not take any iron
tablets during their most recent pregnancy. Only 11% of women took iron tablets for 90 days or more
(Table 9.9).
Trends: The percentage of women taking iron supplements for 90 days or more increased from 5% in
2016 to 11% in 2019 but remains at a substandard level. The percentage of women who did not take any
iron supplements decreased from 58% to 40% over the same period.
▪ Women in urban areas were more likely than those in rural areas to have taken iron supplements for at
least 90 days during their most recent pregnancy (14% versus 9%).
▪ The percentage of women taking iron supplements for 90 days or more is highest in Dire Dawa (22%)
and Addis Ababa (19%) and lowest in Somali (2%) and SNNPR (4%).
▪ The proportion of women taking iron tablets for 90 days or more increases with increasing education.
Twenty-seven percent of women with more than a secondary education took iron tablets for 90 days or
more, as compared with 7% of women with no education.
Nutrition of Children • 93
LIST OF TABLES
For more information on nutrition of children, see the following tables:
94 • Nutrition of Children
Table 9.1 Nutritional status of children
Percentage of children under age 5 classified as malnourished according to three anthropometric indices of nutritional status: height-for-age, weight-for-height, and
weight-for-age, according to background characteristics, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Height-for-age1 Weight-for-height Weight-for-age
Percent- Percent- Percent- Percent- Percent- Percent- Percent- Percent-
age age Mean Number age age age Mean Number age age age Mean Number
Background below below Z-score of below below above Z-score of below below above Z-score of
2 2 2
characteristic -3 SD -2 SD (SD) children -3 SD -2 SD +2 SD (SD) children -3 SD -2 SD +2 SD (SD) children
Age in months
<6 4.7 17.1 -0.6 523 1.2 9.4 6.7 0.0 520 2.1 9.7 2.2 -0.4 536
6-8 5.3 21.0 -0.9 265 1.3 4.5 5.4 -0.1 270 3.2 16.2 1.5 -0.6 270
9-11 12.1 33.3 -1.2 228 0.6 8.3 4.1 -0.4 231 8.5 18.7 2.0 -0.9 230
12-17 9.3 30.1 -1.3 567 1.5 8.6 0.7 -0.5 573 5.2 20.9 0.6 -1.1 570
18-23 8.6 35.5 -1.4 471 1.1 6.8 1.9 -0.2 473 5.4 17.7 0.6 -0.9 473
24-35 17.1 44.6 -1.8 1,052 1.1 7.4 1.8 -0.3 1,079 6.8 24.2 0.1 -1.2 1,059
36-47 13.5 40.7 -1.7 1,168 0.9 5.0 1.8 -0.2 1,193 5.6 20.4 0.6 -1.1 1,170
48-59 15.7 43.5 -1.8 1,004 1.5 7.4 0.9 -0.5 1,068 8.1 29.0 0.1 -1.5 1,029
Sex
Male 14.8 39.8 -1.6 2,673 1.6 8.7 2.3 -0.4 2,745 6.9 23.1 0.9 -1.1 2,704
Female 10.0 33.6 -1.4 2,605 0.8 5.3 2.2 -0.3 2,663 4.9 19.4 0.4 -1.0 2,634
Birth interval in
months3
First birth4 8.9 35.5 -1.5 1,051 0.6 4.3 1.7 -0.3 1,055 3.2 17.7 1.3 -1.0 1,058
<24 17.6 42.7 -1.7 800 1.7 9.4 2.7 -0.4 828 7.1 27.7 0.5 -1.3 818
24-47 13.9 39.7 -1.6 1,889 1.5 8.2 1.9 -0.3 1,899 7.7 21.8 0.6 -1.1 1,905
48+ 8.6 29.6 -1.3 1,158 0.9 6.6 2.5 -0.3 1,174 4.1 18.2 0.3 -1.0 1,169
Mother’s interview
status
Interviewed 12.2 36.9 -1.5 4,898 1.2 7.2 2.1 -0.3 4,955 5.8 21.1 0.6 -1.1 4,952
Not interviewed but
in household (18.8) (29.6) 1.5 40 (0.0) (1.5) (0.0) -0.0 39 (6.2) (26.0) (0.0) 0.9 40
Not interviewed and
not in the
household5 15.0 35.7 -1.5 340 1.3 5.3 3.8 -0.3 413 7.2 23.7 1.1 -1.0 347
Residence
Urban 6.3 26.2 -1.1 1,338 1.0 5.4 2.4 -0.2 1,350 3.8 15.1 0.9 -0.8 1,347
Rural 14.5 40.4 -1.6 3,941 1.3 7.5 2.2 -0.3 4,058 6.6 23.4 0.6 -1.2 3,991
Region
Tigray 15.1 48.4 -1.8 361 0.7 9.1 1.8 -0.5 363 7.8 30.5 0.3 -1.4 363
Afar 20.6 42.2 -1.5 77 2.8 13.5 1.5 -0.8 79 11.7 31.1 1.4 -1.4 78
Amhara 13.4 41.5 -1.7 1,001 1.6 7.6 0.9 -0.5 1,012 6.2 27.1 0.0 -1.4 1,009
Oromia 11.9 35.3 -1.5 2,134 0.3 4.3 3.4 -0.1 2,186 5.2 16.3 0.4 -0.9 2,161
Somali 11.5 30.6 -1.1 359 5.7 21.4 0.8 -1.1 380 9.6 31.9 1.1 -1.4 363
Benishangul-Gumuz 19.2 40.7 -1.7 62 0.8 6.4 1.5 -0.6 63 10.2 32.0 1.7 -1.4 63
SNNPR 12.3 36.4 -1.4 1,078 1.2 6.3 1.5 -0.3 1,116 5.3 20.3 1.4 -1.0 1,090
Gambela 4.1 17.3 -0.7 21 2.7 13.1 0.5 -0.8 22 4.2 17.6 0.6 -0.9 21
Harari 13.8 36.4 -1.5 15 0.8 4.1 2.3 -0.2 16 6.5 20.2 0.4 -1.0 16
Addis Ababa 4.0 15.0 -0.8 144 0.0 2.2 5.1 0.3 145 0.5 4.9 2.8 -0.2 149
Dire Dawa 5.4 25.4 -1.0 26 1.0 5.9 1.8 -0.4 27 3.7 15.8 0.9 -0.9 26
Mother’s education6
No education 15.9 41.5 -1.7 2,667 1.7 9.2 2.2 -0.4 2,713 8.4 26.1 0.5 -1.3 2,701
Primary 9.3 35.4 -1.4 1,732 0.6 4.9 2.2 -0.2 1,742 3.2 17.3 0.9 -1.0 1,747
Secondary 4.2 19.0 -1.0 360 0.6 5.7 1.9 -0.2 361 1.6 9.4 0.5 -0.7 362
More than
secondary 0.1 21.6 -0.9 96 0.1 0.2 0.8 -0.2 96 0.1 3.4 0.0 -0.6 97
Wealth quintile
Lowest 17.2 43.3 -1.7 1,188 2.7 11.7 2.3 -0.6 1,268 10.4 30.2 0.5 -1.4 1,213
Second 13.9 38.6 -1.6 1,168 1.1 6.9 2.9 -0.4 1,183 5.9 23.1 1.1 -1.2 1,183
Middle 14.0 42.2 -1.6 1,007 0.5 5.1 1.6 -0.3 1,022 4.4 22.0 0.5 -1.1 1,014
Fourth 10.9 35.2 -1.5 940 0.6 6.2 2.1 -0.2 945 5.5 17.0 0.5 -1.0 944
Highest 4.7 22.6 -1.1 976 0.6 3.9 2.3 -0.1 990 2.3 11.5 0.6 -0.7 985
Total 12.4 36.8 -1.5 5,279 1.2 7.0 2.3 -0.3 5,408 5.9 21.3 0.7 -1.1 5,338
Note: Each of the indices is expressed in standard deviation units (SD) from the median of the WHO Child Growth Standards. Figures in parentheses are based on 25-
49 unweighted cases.
1
Recumbent length is measured for children under age 2; standing height is measured for all other children.
2
Includes children who are below -3 standard deviations (SD) from the WHO Child Growth Standards population median
3
Excludes children whose mothers were not interviewed
4
First-born twins (triplets, etc.) are counted as first births because they do not have a previous birth interval.
5
Includes children whose mothers are deceased
6
For women who are not interviewed, information is taken from the Household Questionnaire. Excludes children whose mothers are not listed in the Household
Questionnaire.
Nutrition of Children • 95
Table 9.2 Initial breastfeeding
Among last-born children who were born in the 2 years preceding the survey, percentage who were ever breastfed and percentages who
started breastfeeding within 1 hour and within 1 day of birth, and among last-born children born in the 2 years preceding the survey who
were ever breastfed, percentage who received a prelacteal feed in the first 3 days after birth, according to background characteristics,
Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Among last-born children born in
the past 2 years who were ever
Among last-born children born in the past 2 years: breastfed:
Percentage who Percentage who
started started
breastfeeding breastfeeding Percentage who Number of last-
Background Percentage ever within 1 hour of within 1 day of Number of last- received a born children
characteristic breastfed birth birth1 born children prelacteal feed2 ever breastfed
Sex
Male 93.7 70.7 88.6 1,084 12.3 1,015
Female 97.4 73.3 94.1 1,021 11.7 995
Assistance at delivery
Health personnel3 96.8 73.9 92.6 1,177 10.7 1,139
Traditional birth attendant 95.3 70.2 90.1 558 18.1 532
Other 94.1 63.7 90.5 112 7.0 106
No one 90.5 70.5 87.8 257 7.3 233
Place of delivery
Health facility 96.9 74.0 92.5 1,137 10.9 1,101
At home 93.7 70.1 89.8 942 13.6 882
Other 100.0 52.4 93.0 48 16.5 48
Residence
Urban 98.2 70.2 94.8 553 12.9 543
Rural 94.5 72.6 90.0 1,552 11.7 1,467
Region
Tigray 97.0 73.4 93.1 155 4.2 151
Afar 95.1 65.6 89.7 31 24.2 30
Amhara 96.2 61.2 87.3 433 13.4 417
Oromia 96.2 81.5 93.5 825 7.7 793
Somali 93.5 57.3 86.4 132 44.9 124
Benishangul-Gumuz 97.0 75.5 94.4 24 4.1 23
SNNPR 93.0 68.5 92.0 411 10.7 383
Gambela 98.2 79.4 93.2 10 6.0 10
Harari 95.5 72.0 84.8 6 19.7 6
Addis Ababa 97.9 71.7 90.6 64 15.7 63
Dire Dawa 95.5 71.5 85.3 13 22.6 12
Mother’s education
No education 93.8 71.5 90.8 977 13.3 917
Primary 96.5 72.9 91.7 840 10.5 810
Secondary 99.1 73.6 91.4 182 11.0 180
More than secondary 97.1 66.2 91.0 105 15.0 102
Wealth quintile
Lowest 95.8 70.2 90.8 460 17.3 441
Second 94.9 76.7 92.9 449 12.0 427
Middle 95.0 70.5 90.2 392 7.0 373
Fourth 93.6 69.5 89.9 364 8.5 341
Highest 97.9 72.4 92.1 438 13.9 429
Total 95.5 72.0 91.2 2,105 12.0 2,010
Note: Table is based on last-born children born in the 2 years preceding the survey regardless of whether the children are living or dead at
the time of the interview.
1
Includes children who started breastfeeding within 1 hour of birth
2
Children given something other than breast milk during the first 3 days of life
3
Doctor, nurse, midwife, health officer, or health extension worker
96 • Nutrition of Children
Table 9.3 Breastfeeding status by age
Percent distribution of youngest children under age 2 who are living with their mother by breastfeeding status and percentage currently breastfeeding, and
percentage of all children under age 2 using a bottle with a nipple, according to age in months, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Breastfeeding status
Breast- Number of
Breast- Breast- feeding and youngest
feeding and feeding and Breast- consuming Percentage children Percentage
consuming consuming feeding and comple- currently under age 2 using a Number of
Age in Not breast- Exclusively plain water non-milk consuming mentary breast- living with bottle with a all children
months feeding breastfed only liquids1 other milk foods Total feeding their mother nipple under age 2
0-1 7.6 73.1 9.2 1.5 1.7 6.8 100.0 92.4 176 1.9 178
2-3 5.3 68.8 11.6 0.1 9.8 4.4 100.0 94.7 159 9.2 159
4-5 3.9 39.6 20.0 1.7 11.0 23.9 100.0 96.1 214 15.6 217
6-8 5.7 8.3 8.8 7.6 3.2 66.6 100.0 94.3 255 28.6 257
9-11 6.9 7.2 4.5 4.1 2.3 75.0 100.0 93.1 221 26.2 227
12-17 14.5 2.8 4.1 3.5 0.9 74.2 100.0 85.5 551 25.2 561
18-23 24.5 2.7 2.9 0.4 0.5 68.9 100.0 75.5 435 25.3 467
0-3 6.5 71.1 10.3 0.8 5.5 5.7 100.0 93.5 336 5.3 337
0-5 5.5 58.8 14.1 1.2 7.6 12.8 100.0 94.5 550 9.3 554
6-9 5.3 7.4 6.9 5.9 3.1 71.4 100.0 94.7 331 30.1 334
12-15 13.3 2.7 3.8 2.3 0.8 77.2 100.0 86.7 390 27.0 399
12-23 18.9 2.8 3.6 2.1 0.7 71.8 100.0 81.1 987 25.3 1,028
20-23 27.8 2.2 3.7 0.7 0.2 65.4 100.0 72.2 269 26.7 295
Note: Breastfeeding status refers to a “24-hour” period (yesterday and last night). Children who are classified as breastfeeding and consuming plain water only
consumed no liquid or solid supplements. The categories of not breastfeeding, exclusively breastfed, breastfeeding and consuming plain water, non-milk liquids,
other milk, and complementary foods (solids and semisolids) are hierarchical and mutually exclusive, and their percentages add to 100%. Thus, children who
receive breast milk and non-milk liquids and who do not receive other milk and who do not receive complementary foods are classified in the non-milk liquid
category even though they may also get plain water. Any children who get complementary food are classified in that category as long as they are breastfeeding
as well.
1
Non-milk liquids include juice, juice drinks, clear broth, or other liquids.
1
For children age 0-5 months: exclusively breastfed; for children
age 6-23 months: received breast milk and complementary foods
2
Either exclusively breastfed or received breast milk and plain water
and/or non-milk liquids only
3
Received breast milk and fresh, tinned, or powdered animal milk
or commercial infant formula
Nutrition of Children • 97
Table 9.5 Median duration of breastfeeding
Median duration of any breastfeeding, exclusive breastfeeding, and
predominant breastfeeding among children born in the 3 years
preceding the survey, according to background characteristics, Ethiopia
Mini-DHS 2019
Median duration (months) of breastfeeding
among children born in the past 3 years1
Background Any breast- Exclusive Predominant
characteristic feeding breastfeeding breastfeeding2
Sex
Male 23.2 3.2 4.9
Female 24.0 4.4 6.0
Residence
Urban 22.1 3.3 5.8
Rural 24.1 3.8 5.5
Region
Tigray (23.0) 4.3 (7.5)
Afar 19.7 (1.9) 3.2
Amhara 31.8 (5.3) (6.1)
Oromia 22.4 3.3 4.9
Somali 16.3 a 3.9
Benishangul-Gumuz 29.0 4.4 5.6
SNNPR 31.2 4.2 6.1
Gambela (28.4) 3.3 6.8
Harari (21.3) (3.6) (5.2)
Addis Ababa (21.7) (3.4) *
Dire Dawa (18.2) * *
Mother’s education
No education 22.9 3.9 5.9
Primary 23.3 3.5 5.0
Secondary (29.6) a 6.3
More than secondary * (4.2) (4.3)
Wealth quintile
Lowest 22.4 3.5 5.6
Second 24.0 4.1 5.8
Middle 29.5 4.5 5.6
Fourth 24.9 * 5.0
Highest 22.5 (2.9) 5.1
Total 23.6 3.7 5.5
Mean for all children 24.8 5.2 7.4
98 • Nutrition of Children
Table 9.6 Foods and liquids consumed by children in the day or night preceding the interview
Percentage of youngest children under age 2 who are living with their mother by type of foods consumed in the day or night preceding the interview, according to
breastfeeding status and age, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Liquids Solid or semisolid foods
Fruits and Food Food Number
Food vege- Other made made Cheese, Any solid of
Fortified made tables rich fruits and from roots from yogurt, or children
Age in Infant Other Other baby from in vitamin vege- and legumes Meat, fish, other milk semisolid under age
months formula milk1 liquids2 foods grains3 A 4
tables tubers and nuts poultry Eggs products food 2
BREASTFEEDING CHILDREN
0-1 0.1 2.0 2.8 0.0 3.1 1.2 0.0 0.9 1.3 0.0 0.8 3.8 7.4 163
2-3 7.8 7.8 5.9 1.4 4.2 1.3 0.2 1.6 3.2 1.2 2.8 2.4 4.7 151
4-5 3.6 11.7 17.7 1.0 15.4 4.8 3.9 2.4 6.0 0.6 8.0 11.1 24.8 206
6-8 5.1 21.3 39.4 9.3 50.4 12.6 6.5 12.6 17.5 1.4 20.2 18.7 70.6 241
9-11 2.7 23.3 42.9 4.8 60.3 27.6 13.2 30.5 19.3 2.5 15.9 15.3 80.6 206
12-17 4.2 18.5 45.3 5.4 69.9 28.8 10.5 24.1 27.7 13.1 18.9 19.2 86.7 471
18-23 0.6 14.1 40.8 2.1 71.7 35.3 12.4 36.5 33.5 12.9 18.3 17.5 91.3 328
6-23 3.2 18.7 42.6 5.2 65.0 27.2 10.6 26.2 25.9 9.0 18.5 18.0 83.8 1,246
Total 3.3 15.4 32.9 3.9 48.3 20.0 8.0 19.0 19.3 6.5 14.3 14.6 63.1 1,765
NONBREASTFEEDING CHILDREN
0-1 * * * * * * * * * * * * * 13
2-3 * * * * * * * * * * * * * 9
4-5 * * * * * * * * * * * * * 8
6-8 * * * * * * * * * * * * * 14
9-11 * * * * * * * * * * * * * 15
12-17 3.7 29.2 55.3 6.4 57.7 14.2 9.4 19.1 15.0 3.6 5.7 27.4 84.3 80
18-23 7.0 34.8 51.6 4.3 80.5 36.1 14.0 33.5 22.3 10.3 22.8 33.6 96.6 107
6-23 6.6 33.3 48.6 5.4 64.7 24.6 11.1 24.9 19.0 7.6 16.4 28.9 85.9 217
Total 6.3 30.1 45.6 4.8 58.5 22.1 10.2 22.4 16.6 6.7 14.4 25.8 77.8 247
Note: Breastfeeding status and food consumed refer to a “24-hour” period (yesterday and last night). An asterisk indicates that a figure is based on fewer than 25
unweighted cases and has been suppressed.
1
Other milk includes fresh, tinned, and powdered cow or other animal milk.
2
Does not include plain water
3
Includes fortified baby food
4
Includes pumpkin, squash, carrots, yellow or orange sweet potatoes, dark green leafy vegetables, mangoes, papayas, and other locally grown fruits and vegetables
that are rich in vitamin A
Nutrition of Children • 99
Table 9.7 Minimum acceptable diet
Percentage of youngest children age 6-23 months living with their mother who are fed a minimum acceptable diet based on breastfeeding status, number of food groups, and times they are fed during the day or night preceding the survey, according
to background characteristics, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Among breastfed children age 6-23 months, percentage fed: Among nonbreastfed children age 6-23 months, percentage fed: Among all children age 6-23 months, percentage fed:
Number of Number of
Minimum Minimum breastfed Minimum milk Minimum Minimum nonbreastfed Breast milk, Minimum Minimum Number of all
Background dietary Minimum meal acceptable children age feeding dietary Minimum meal acceptable children age 6- milk, or milk dietary Minimum meal acceptable children age
characteristic diversity1 frequency2 diet3 6-23 months frequency4 diversity1 frequency5 diet6 23 months products7 diversity1 frequency8 diet9 6-23 months
Age in months
6-11 8.7 50.2 6.8 446 (30.5) (5.1) (37.6) (5.0) 30 95.6 8.5 49.4 6.7 476
6-8 6.6 50.4 3.8 241 * * * * 14 95.9 6.9 49.5 4.2 255
9-11 11.1 49.9 10.4 206 * * * * 15 95.4 10.4 49.3 9.6 221
12-17 18.7 54.0 15.3 471 28.1 4.2 38.4 4.0 80 89.6 16.6 51.7 13.7 551
18-23 16.1 66.3 13.9 328 38.9 11.7 63.8 11.1 107 85.0 15.0 65.7 13.2 435
Sex
Male 14.5 55.4 11.6 649 41.1 11.5 53.9 11.5 114 91.2 14.0 55.2 11.6 764
Female 14.4 56.3 12.2 597 25.5 4.2 47.4 3.4 102 89.1 12.9 55.0 11.0 699
Residence
Urban 17.9 58.1 15.4 347 40.3 8.1 63.0 6.8 66 90.5 16.4 58.9 14.0 413
Rural 13.1 55.0 10.6 899 30.9 8.0 45.6 8.0 151 90.1 12.4 53.6 10.2 1,050
Region
Tigray 21.1 64.8 15.6 94 * * * * 9 92.7 20.2 63.5 15.1 103
Afar 3.7 52.1 3.7 14 (37.0) (6.7) (52.3) (3.4) 6 82.3 4.5 52.2 3.6 20
Amhara 7.3 52.4 6.3 302 * * * * 24 92.5 6.8 50.7 5.8 326
Oromia 21.6 64.2 18.1 458 * * * * 83 88.4 19.5 61.5 16.4 541
Somali 1.8 29.1 1.8 59 (53.8) (0.0) (44.0) (0.0) 30 84.5 1.2 34.1 1.2 89
Benishangul-Gumuz 13.5 68.2 11.3 15 * * * * 1 92.2 12.3 65.7 10.4 17
SNNPR 9.3 43.9 6.8 252 (45.8) (10.3) (58.6) (10.3) 46 91.6 9.4 46.1 7.3 298
Gambela 9.2 51.3 8.8 6 * * * * 0 98.0 8.6 53.7 8.2 7
Harari 20.8 58.5 15.0 3 * * * * 1 93.0 18.2 60.1 12.5 4
Addis Ababa 26.2 76.7 26.2 35 * * * * 13 92.7 29.1 82.3 27.8 48
Dire Dawa 21.4 80.0 21.4 6 (65.6) (2.5) (78.8) (2.5) 2 90.4 16.1 79.7 16.1 9
Mother’s education
No education 8.9 47.6 7.9 535 28.7 4.8 35.8 4.8 115 87.4 8.2 45.5 7.3 650
Primary 17.2 60.0 13.7 530 35.6 7.5 69.2 7.5 79 91.7 16.0 61.2 12.9 609
Secondary 22.5 65.3 18.6 112 * * * * 7 97.2 23.2 66.0 19.0 120
More than secondary 22.8 72.7 18.3 68 * * * * 15 91.4 22.9 69.9 18.9 84
Wealth quintile
Lowest 7.6 35.6 2.5 225 24.7 2.7 38.0 2.7 70 82.1 6.4 36.1 2.6 295
Second 11.3 52.4 10.3 282 (36.1) (0.0) (43.2) (0.0) 27 94.4 10.3 51.6 9.4 309
Middle 15.6 59.2 14.3 241 (24.8) (13.8) (49.6) (13.8) 35 90.5 15.4 58.0 14.2 275
Fourth 15.5 58.8 13.3 238 (65.0) (5.0) (71.0) (5.0) 20 97.3 14.7 59.8 12.6 258
Highest 21.8 71.3 18.3 260 37.8 15.0 62.3 13.7 65 87.6 20.4 69.5 17.4 325
Total 14.4 55.9 11.9 1,246 33.7 8.0 50.8 7.7 217 90.2 13.5 55.1 11.3 1,463
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
Children received foods from four or more of the following food groups: a. breast milk; b. infant formula, milk other than breast milk, cheese or yogurt or other milk products; c. foods made from grains, roots, and tubers, including porridge and fortified
baby food from grains; d. vitamin A-rich fruits and vegetables; e. other fruits and vegetables; f. eggs; g. meat, poultry, fish, and shellfish (and organ meats); h. legumes and nuts
2
For breastfed children, minimum meal frequency is receiving solid, semisolid, or soft food at least twice a day for infants age 6-8 months and at least three times a day for children age 9-23 months.
3
Breastfed children age 6-23 months are considered to be fed a minimum acceptable diet if they are fed the minimum dietary diversity as described in footnote 1 and the minimum meal frequency as defined in footnote 2.
4
Includes two or more feedings of commercial infant formula; fresh, tinned, and powdered animal milk; and yogurt
5
For nonbreastfed children age 6-23 months, minimum meal frequency is receiving solid, semisolid, or soft food or milk feeds at least four times a day. At least one of the feeds must be a solid, semisolid, or soft feed.
6
Nonbreastfed children age 6-23 months are considered to be fed a minimum acceptable diet if they receive other milk or milk products at least twice a day, receive the minimum meal frequency as defined in footnote 5, and receive solid, semisolid,
or soft foods from at least four food groups not including the milk or milk products food group.
7
Breastfeeding, or not breastfeeding and receiving two or more feedings of commercial infant formula; fresh, tinned, and powdered animal milk; and yogurt
8
Children are fed the minimum recommended number of times per day according to their age and breastfeeding status as described in footnotes 2 and 5.
9
Children age 6-23 months are considered to be fed a minimum acceptable diet if they receive breast milk, other milk, or milk products as described in footnote 7; are fed the minimum dietary diversity as described in footnote 1; and are fed the
minimum meal frequency as described in footnotes 2 and 5.
na = Not applicable
1
Includes meat (and organ meat), fish, poultry, eggs, pumpkin, squash, carrots, yellow or orange sweet potatoes,
dark green leafy vegetables, mangoes, papayas, and other locally grown fruits and vegetables that are rich in vitamin
A
2
Includes meat (and organ meat), fish, poultry, and eggs
3
Based on both mother’s recall and the vaccination card (where available)
Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia (FDRE). 2016. National Guideline on Adolescent, Maternal,
Infant and Young Child Nutrition. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: FDRE.
Federal Ministry of Health (FMoH) [Ethiopia]. 2015. Health Sector Transformation Plan, 2015/16–
2019/20. Addis Ababa, Ethiopia: FMoH.
United States Agency for International Development and Abt Associates (USAID/HFG). 2015. Ethiopia’s
Community-based Health Insurance: A Step on the Road to Universal Health Coverage.
https://pdf.usaid.gov/pdf_docs/PA00KDXT.pdf
World Health Organization (WHO). 2003. Complementary Feeding: Report of the Global Consultation,
and Summary of Guiding Principles for Complementary Feeding of the Breastfed Child. Geneva: WHO.
https://www.who.int/nutrition/publications/infantfeeding/924154614X/en/
World Health Organization (WHO). 2006. Child Growth Standards. Geneva: WHO.
https://www.who.int/childgrowth/publications/technical_report_pub/en/
World Health Organization (WHO). 2008. Indicators for Assessing Infant and Young Child Feeding
Practices. Part 1: Definitions. Geneva: WHO.
http://www.who.int/nutrition/publications/infantfeeding/9789241596664/en/
References • 103
SAMPLE DESIGN Appendix A
A.1 INTRODUCTION
T
his appendix describes the objectives of the survey, the overall sample size, and survey domains.
The 2019 Ethiopia Mini Demographic and Health Survey (EMDHS) is a nationwide survey with a
nationally representative sample of 9,150 selected households. All women age 15-49 who were
usual members of the selected households and those who spent the night before the survey in the selected
households were eligible to be interviewed in the survey. In the selected households, all children under age
5 were eligible for height and weight measurements. The survey was designed to produce reliable
estimates of key indicators at the national level as well as for urban and rural areas and each of the 11
regions in Ethiopia.
Administratively, Ethiopia is divided into 11 geographical regions. Each region is subdivided into zones,
each zone into woredas, each woreda into towns, and each town into kebeles. The sample was designed to
provide estimates in the 11 regions for most health and demographic indicators. Table A.1 presents the
percentage distribution of households by region and type of residence. The table indicates that about 80%
of Ethiopia’s households are concentrated in three regions (Amhara, Oromia, and SNNPR), while less than
4% of households are located in the five smallest regions (Afar, Benishangul-Gumuz, Gambela, Harari,
and Dire Dawa). Region size (as a proportion of the total) varies from 0.29% (Harari, the smallest region)
to 36.96% (Oromia, the largest region). In Ethiopia, 30.70% of households are in urban areas. Other than
Addis Ababa, which is predominantly urban, the percentage of urban areas varies greatly, from 24.94% in
SNNPR to 67.22% in Dire Dawa.
Source: The 2019 Population and Housing Census (PHC) sampling frame provided by the Central
Statistical Agency (CSA).
Appendix A • 105
Table A.2 indicates the distribution of EAs and their average size in number of households by region and
type of residence. There are a total of 149,093 EAs; among them, 35,292 are in urban areas and 113,801 in
rural areas. The average EA size is 131 households; on average, rural EAs are smaller than urban EAs (119
households versus 170 households). The EA size in the survey is adequate in terms of the primary
sampling unit (PSU), with a sample of 30 households per EA.
Distribution of enumeration areas (EAs) and average number of households per EA by region, according to residence,
Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of EAs Average EA size
Region Urban Rural Total Urban Rural Total
Tigray 2,337 6,914 9,251 174 122 135
Afar 383 1,410 1,793 170 119 130
Amhara 7,212 29,316 36,528 177 121 132
Oromia 11,526 45,456 56,982 166 117 127
Somali 1,561 5,478 7,039 172 122 133
Benishangul-Gumuz 431 1,275 1,706 166 119 131
SNNPR 5,408 23,097 28,505 169 119 129
Gambela 216 414 630 168 100 123
Harari 183 194 377 181 121 150
Addis Ababa 5,669 0 5,669 168 0 168
Dire Dawa 366 247 613 173 125 154
Ethiopia 35,292 113,801 149,093 170 119 131
Source: The 2019 Population and Housing Census (PHC) sampling frame provided by the Central Statistical Agency
(CSA).
In the first stage, 305 EAs were selected with probability proportional to EA size and with independent
selection in each sampling stratum; the sample allocation is given in Table A.3. The EA size is the number
of residential households in the EA according to the sampling frame. A household listing operation was
carried out in all of the selected EAs, and the resulting lists of households served as the sampling frame for
the selection of households in the second stage. Some of the selected EAs were large in size. In order to
minimise the task of household listing, the selected large EAs with more than 300 households were
segmented. Only one segment was selected for the survey with probability proportional to segment size.
Household listing was conducted only in the selected segment.
In the second stage of selection, a fixed number of 30 households per cluster were selected with an equal
probability systematic selection from the newly created household listing. The survey interviewer
interviewed only the pre-selected households. No replacements and no changes of the pre-selected
households were allowed in the implementing stages in order to prevent bias. All women age 15-49 who
were usual members of the selected households or who spent the night before the survey in the selected
households were eligible for the survey. In all of the selected households, height and weight measurements
were collected from children age 0-59 months.
Table A.3 shows the allocation of selected households according to regions and urban-rural areas, and
Table A.4 shows the expected number of completed interviews with women age 15-49 and the expected
number of children age 0-59 months with valid height and weight measurements. To ensure that the survey
precision was comparable across regions, sample allocation was done through an equal allocation in which
25 EAs were selected from each region other than the three large regions (Amhara, Oromia, and SNNPR).
106 • Appendix A
Thirty-five EAs were selected from each of these regions. Proportional allocation was used to allocate the
EAs within each region to urban and rural strata. A total of 305 EAs (93 in urban areas and 212 in rural
areas) were selected based on a fixed sample take of 30 households per cluster. The survey was conducted
in 9,150 residential households (2,790 in urban areas and 6,360 in rural areas). The sample was expected to
result in about 7,959 completed interviews with women age 15-49 (2,636 in urban areas and 5,323 in rural
areas) and 4,825 children age 0-59 months with height and weight measurements (852 in urban areas and
3,973 in rural areas). Table A.5 indicates the regional-level household response rates, as well as individual
response rates for women and men.
Table A.4 Sample allocation of expected number of completed interviews with women measured children
Sample allocation of expected number of completed interviews with women age 15-49 and expected number of children
age 0-59 months with height and weight measurements by region, according to residence, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Expected number of children age 0-59
Expected number of interviews with women months with height and weight
age 15-49 measurements
Region Urban Rural Total Urban Rural Total
Tigray 142 502 644 46 375 421
Afar 142 502 644 46 375 421
Amhara 142 754 896 46 562 608
Oromia 169 728 897 55 543 598
Somali 142 502 644 46 375 421
Benishangul-Gumuz 85 552 637 27 412 439
SNNPR 85 804 889 27 600 627
Gambela 142 502 644 46 375 421
Harari 425 251 676 137 187 324
Addis Ababa 709 0 709 229 0 229
Dire Dawa 453 226 679 147 169 316
Ethiopia 2,636 5,323 7,959 852 3,973 4,825
The sample allocations were derived with information obtained from the 2016 EDHS. The overall
household completion rate was 92.5%; there were 1.10 women age 15-49 per household in urban areas and
0.95 women age 15-49 per household in rural areas; the response rate for women was 93.5% in urban areas
and 95% in rural areas; and 0.33 and 0.67 children age 0-59 months per household were measured for
height and weight in urban areas and rural areas, respectively.
Appendix A • 107
P1hi: first-stage sampling probability of the ith cluster in stratum h
Let ah be the number of EAs selected in stratum h, Mhi the number of households according to the
sampling frame in the ith EA, and M hi the total number of households in the stratum. The probability of
selecting the ith EA in the 2019 EMDHS sample is calculated as follows:
a h M hi
M hi
Let bhi be the proportion of households in the selected cluster relative to the total number of households in
EA i in stratum h if the EA is segmented; otherwise, bhi = 1 . Then the probability of selecting cluster i in
the sample is:
ah M hi
P1hi = bhi
M hi
Let Lhi be the number of households listed in the household listing operation in cluster i in stratum h, and
let g hi be the number of households selected in the cluster. The second stage’s selection probability for each
household in the cluster is calculated as follows:
g hi
P2 hi =
Lhi
The overall selection probability of each household in cluster i of stratum h is therefore the product of the
selection probabilities:
Phi = P1hi P2 hi
The sampling weight for each household in cluster i of stratum h is the inverse of its overall selection
probability:
Whi = 1 / Phi
The sampling weights were adjusted for household non-response and individual non-response to obtain the
survey weights for households and for women, respectively. Non-response is adjusted at the sampling
stratum level. For the household survey weight, the household sampling weight is multiplied by the inverse
of the household response rate by stratum. For women’s individual survey weight, the household sampling
weight is multiplied by the inverse of women’s individual response rate by stratum. After adjusting for
non-response, the survey weights are normalized to obtain the final standard weights that appear in the data
files. The normalization process is done to obtain a total number of unweighted cases equal to the total
number of weighted cases at the national level for the total number of households and women.
Normalization is done by multiplying the survey weight by the estimated sampling fraction obtained from
the survey for the household weight and the individual woman’s weights. The normalized weights are
relative weights that are valid for estimating means, proportions, ratios, and rates but are not valid for
estimating population totals or for pooled data.
108 • Appendix A
Table A.5 Sample implementation: Women
Percent distribution of households and eligible women age 15-49 by results of the household and individual interviews, and household, eligible women, and overall women response rates, according to residence and region (unweighted), Ethiopia
Mini-DHS 2019
Residence Region
Benishangul-
Result Urban Rural Tigray Afar Amhara Oromia Somali Gumuz SNNPR Gambela Harari Addis Ababa Dire Dawa Total
Selected households
Completed (C) 94.8 94.6 95.2 88.5 95.9 97.0 87.6 97.9 96.9 92.4 95.9 93.6 98.4 94.7
Household present but no
competent respondent at
home (HP) 1.0 0.6 0.8 1.9 0.6 0.6 0.5 0.3 0.3 1.5 0.4 0.9 0.3 0.7
Postponed (P) 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0 0.0
Refused (R) 0.6 0.2 0.1 1.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.5 1.3 0.0 0.3
Dwelling not found (DNF) 0.3 0.5 0.5 0.3 1.3 0.3 0.9 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.4 0.3 0.0 0.4
Household absent (HA) 1.3 1.7 1.3 2.5 0.9 1.0 3.3 1.2 1.5 3.6 1.5 0.8 0.4 1.6
Dwelling vacant/address not a
dwelling (DV) 1.3 1.0 1.3 2.4 0.5 0.9 2.9 0.3 0.7 0.5 1.2 1.6 0.3 1.1
Dwelling destroyed (DD) 0.3 1.1 0.4 2.8 0.6 0.3 3.9 0.1 0.2 1.5 0.0 0.4 0.4 0.9
Other (O) 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.5 0.2 0.0 0.7 0.1 0.3 0.3 0.1 0.9 0.3 0.3
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Number of sampled households 2,790 6,360 750 750 1,050 1,050 750 750 1,050 750 750 750 750 9,150
Household response rate (HRR)1 98.0 98.7 98.5 96.5 98.0 99.0 98.2 99.6 99.5 98.2 98.6 97.2 99.7 98.5
Eligible women
Completed (EWC) 98.4 98.7 98.5 99.8 98.3 98.7 98.8 99.5 98.1 96.3 99.3 99.0 98.4 98.6
Not at home (EWNH) 1.1 0.8 0.9 0.0 0.6 0.9 0.5 0.4 1.6 2.8 0.1 0.7 0.8 0.9
Refused (EWR) 0.4 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.4 0.1 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.4 0.4 0.0 0.4 0.2
Incapacitated (EWI) 0.1 0.2 0.4 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.0 0.2 0.2 0.2
Other (EWO) 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.4 0.0 0.5 0.0 0.1 0.3 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.1
Total 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0
Number of women 2,999 6,013 744 642 964 1,066 648 751 1,027 751 768 826 825 9,012
Eligible women response rate
(EWRR)2 98.4 98.7 98.5 99.8 98.3 98.7 98.8 99.5 98.1 96.3 99.3 99.0 98.4 98.6
Overall women response rate
(OWRR)3 96.5 97.4 97.0 96.4 96.3 97.7 97.0 99.1 97.7 94.5 98.0 96.3 98.2 97.1
1
Using the number of households falling into specific response categories, the household response rate (HRR) is calculated as:
100 * C
——————————
C + HP + P + R + DNF
2
The eligible women response rate (EWRR) is equivalent to the percentage of interviews completed (EWC).
3
The overall women response rate (OWRR) is calculated as:
Appendix A • 109
ESTIMATES OF SAMPLING ERRORS Appendix B
T
he estimates from a sample survey are affected by two types of errors: nonsampling errors and
sampling errors. Nonsampling errors are the results of mistakes made in implementing data
collection and data processing, such as failure to locate and interview the correct household,
misunderstanding of the questions on the part of either the interviewer or the respondent, and data entry
errors. Although numerous efforts were made during the implementation of the 2019 Ethiopia Mini
Demographic and Health Survey (EMDHS) to minimize this type of error, nonsampling errors are
impossible to avoid and difficult to evaluate statistically.
Sampling errors, on the other hand, can be evaluated statistically. The sample of respondents selected in
the 2019 EMDHS is only one of many samples that could have been selected from the same population,
using the same design and expected size. Each of these samples would yield results that differ somewhat
from the results of the actual sample selected. Sampling errors are a measure of the variability among all
possible samples. Although the degree of variability is not known exactly, it can be estimated from the
survey results.
Sampling error is usually measured in terms of the standard error for a particular statistic (mean,
percentage, etc.), which is the square root of the variance. The standard error can be used to calculate
confidence intervals within which the true value for the population can reasonably be assumed to fall. For
example, for any given statistic calculated from a sample survey, the value of that statistic will fall within a
range of plus or minus two times the standard error of that statistic in 95% of all possible samples of
identical size and design.
If the sample of respondents had been selected as a simple random sample, it would have been possible to
use straightforward formulas for calculating sampling errors. However, the 2019 EMDHS sample is the
result of a multi-stage stratified design, and, consequently, it was necessary to use more complex formulas.
Sampling errors are computed in SAS, using programs developed by ICF. These programs use the Taylor
linearization method to estimate variances for survey estimates that are means, proportions, or ratios. The
Jackknife repeated replication method is used for variance estimation of more complex statistics such as
fertility and mortality rates.
The Taylor linearization method treats any percentage or average as a ratio estimate, r = y/x, where y
represents the total sample value for variable y, and x represents the total number of cases in the group or
subgroup under consideration. The variance of r is computed using the formula given below, with the
standard error being the square root of the variance:
1− f H mh mh 2 zh2
SE ( r ) = var ( r ) = 2
2
x
zhi −
h =1 mh − 1 i =1
mh
in which
Appendix B • 111
The Jackknife repeated replication method derives estimates of complex rates from each of several
replications of the parent sample and calculates standard errors for these estimates using simple formulae.
Each replication considers all but one cluster in the calculation of the estimates. Pseudo-independent
replications are thus created. In the 2019 EMDHS there were 305 non-empty clusters. Hence, 305
replications were created. The variance of a rate r is calculated as follows:
k
1
SE 2 (r ) = var (r ) =
k ( k − 1) i =1
(ri − r ) 2
in which
ri = kr − (k − 1)r(i )
where r is the estimate computed from the full sample of 305 clusters,
r(i) is the estimate computed from the reduced sample of 304 clusters (ith cluster excluded), and
k is the total number of clusters.
In addition to the standard error, the design effect (DEFT) for each estimate is also calculated. The design
effect is defined as the ratio between the standard error using the given sample design and the standard
error that would result if a simple random sample had been used. A DEFT value of 1.0 indicates that the
sample design is as efficient as a simple random sample, while a value greater than 1.0 indicates the
increase in the sampling error due to the use of a more complex and less statistically efficient design.
Relative standard errors and confidence limits for the estimates are also calculated.
Sampling errors for the 2019 EMDHS are calculated for selected variables considered to be of primary
interest. The results are presented in this appendix for the country as a whole, for urban and rural areas, and
for each of the 11 regions. For each variable, the type of statistic (mean, proportion, or rate) and the base
population are given in Table B.1. Tables B.2 through B.15 present the value of the statistic (R), its
standard error (SE), the number of unweighted (N) and weighted (WN) cases, the design effect (DEFT),
the relative standard error (SE/R), and the 95% confidence limits (R±2SE), for each selected variable. The
DEFT and relative standard error are considered undefined (NA) when the standard error is zero (when the
estimate is close to 0 or 1).
The confidence interval (e.g., as calculated for currently using a modern contraceptive method) can be
interpreted as follows: the overall prevalence among currently married women 15-49 from the national
sample is 0.405 and its standard error is 0.017. Therefore, to obtain the 95 percent confidence limits, one
adds and subtracts twice the standard error to the sample estimate, i.e., 0.405 ± 2×0.017. There is a high
probability (95 percent) that the true prevlance is between 0.370 and 0.439.
For the total sample, the value of the DEFT, averaged over all indicators in the appendix, is about 2. This
means that, due to multi-stage clustering of the sample, the average standard error is increased by a factor
of 2 over that in an equivalent simple random sample.
112 • Appendix B
Table B.1 List of selected variables for sampling errors, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Variable Estimate Base population
Urban residence Proportion Women 15-49
Literacy Proportion Women 15-49
No education Proportion Women 15-49
Secondary education or higher Proportion Women 15-49
Never married/never in union Proportion Women 15-49
Currently married/in union Proportion Women 15-49
Currently pregnant Proportion Women 15-49
Know any contraceptive method Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Know a modern method Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using any method Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using a modern method Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using pill Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using IUD Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using condoms Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using injectables Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using implants Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Currently using female sterilisation Proportion Currently married women 15-49
Used public sector source Proportion Current users of modern method
Births with skilled attendant at delivery Proportion Births occurring 1-59 months before survey
Ever had vaccination card Proportion Children 12-23 months
Received BCG vaccination Proportion Children 12-23 months
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) Proportion Children 12-23 months
Received birth dose polio 0 vaccination Proportion Children 12-23 months
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) Proportion Children 12-23 months
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) Proportion Children 12-23 months
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) Proportion Children 12-23 months
Received measles-containing vaccine 1 vaccination Proportion Children 12-23 months
Received all basic vaccinations Proportion Children 12-23 months
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-23 months) Proportion Children 12-23 months
Received measles-containing vaccine 2 vaccination Proportion Children 24-35 months
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-35 months) Proportion Children 24-35 months
Height-for-age (-2SD) Proportion Children under 5 who are measured
Weight-for-height (-2SD) Proportion Children under 5 who are measured
Weight-for-age (-2SD) Proportion Children under 5 who are measured
Neonatal mortality rate¹ Rate Children exposed to the risk of mortality
Postneonatal mortality rate¹ Rate Children exposed to the risk of mortality
Infant mortality rate¹ Rate Children exposed to the risk of mortality
Child mortality rate¹ Rate Children exposed to the risk of mortality
Under-5 mortality rate¹ Rate Children exposed to the risk of mortality
1
Mortality rates are calculated for the 5 years before the survey for the national, urban, and rural samples and for the 10 years
before the survey for regional samples.
Appendix B • 113
Table B.2 Sampling errors: Total sample, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of cases Relative Confidence limits
Standard standard
error Unweighted Weighted Design effect error Lower Upper
Variable Value (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
Urban residence 0.322 0.013 8,885 8,885 2.628 0.040 0.296 0.348
Literacy 0.476 0.017 8,885 8,885 3.199 0.036 0.442 0.510
No education 0.404 0.014 8,885 8,885 2.729 0.035 0.376 0.432
Secondary or higher education 0.180 0.010 8,885 8,885 2.398 0.054 0.160 0.199
Never married (never in union) 0.262 0.010 8,885 8,885 2.217 0.040 0.241 0.282
Currently married (in union) 0.660 0.011 8,885 8,885 2.181 0.017 0.638 0.682
Currently pregnant 0.078 0.005 8,885 8,885 1.774 0.065 0.067 0.088
Know any contraceptive method 0.962 0.004 5,742 5,864 1.445 0.004 0.955 0.970
Know a modern method 0.961 0.004 5,742 5,864 1.581 0.004 0.953 0.969
Currently using any method 0.414 0.018 5,742 5,864 2.754 0.043 0.378 0.450
Currently using a modern method 0.405 0.017 5,742 5,864 2.645 0.042 0.370 0.439
Currently using pill 0.020 0.003 5,742 5,864 1.803 0.165 0.014 0.027
Currently using IUD 0.015 0.004 5,742 5,864 2.513 0.271 0.007 0.023
Currently using condoms 0.001 0.000 5,742 5,864 1.009 0.416 0.000 0.002
Currently using injectables 0.272 0.013 5,742 5,864 2.187 0.047 0.246 0.298
Currently using implants 0.085 0.009 5,742 5,864 2.347 0.102 0.067 0.102
Currently using female sterilisation 0.003 0.001 5,742 5,864 1.863 0.415 0.001 0.006
Using public sector source 0.866 0.020 2,010 2,459 2.632 0.023 0.825 0.906
Births with skilled attendant at delivery 0.498 0.029 5,753 5,527 3.581 0.058 0.440 0.556
Vaccination card seen 0.413 0.038 1,008 1,028 2.441 0.092 0.337 0.490
Received BCG vaccination 0.730 0.027 1,008 1,028 1.916 0.037 0.676 0.783
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) 0.611 0.034 1,008 1,028 2.224 0.056 0.542 0.680
Received polio 0 vaccination 0.319 0.028 1,008 1,028 1.877 0.086 0.264 0.375
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.599 0.032 1,008 1,028 2.044 0.053 0.536 0.663
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) 0.598 0.032 1,008 1,028 2.081 0.054 0.533 0.663
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) 0.668 0.029 1,008 1,028 1.943 0.043 0.610 0.725
Received measles vaccination 0.585 0.034 1,008 1,028 2.191 0.058 0.517 0.653
Received all basic vaccinations 0.441 0.035 1,008 1,028 2.207 0.078 0.372 0.510
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-
23 months) 0.182 0.022 1,008 1,028 1.852 0.123 0.137 0.227
Received measles 2 vaccination 0.091 0.015 1,093 1,027 1.621 0.160 0.062 0.121
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-
35 months) 0.039 0.012 1,093 1,027 1.998 0.310 0.015 0.063
Height-for-age (-2SD) 0.368 0.013 5,380 5,279 1.830 0.035 0.342 0.394
Weight-for-height (-2SD) 0.070 0.006 5,556 5,408 1.577 0.082 0.059 0.082
Weight-for-age (-2SD) 0.213 0.013 5,447 5,338 2.176 0.061 0.187 0.239
Neonatal mortality (last 0-4 years) 32.894 4.183 5,770 5,552 1.680 0.127 24.528 41.259
Postneonatal mortality (last 0-4 years) 13.606 2.470 5,791 5,568 1.449 0.182 8.667 18.546
Infant mortality (last 0-4 years) 46.500 5.210 5,775 5,560 1.618 0.112 36.081 56.919
Child mortality (last 0-4 years) 13.380 1.952 5,658 5,424 1.269 0.146 9.475 17.285
Under-5 mortality (last 0-4 years) 59.258 5.454 5,817 5,594 1.557 0.092 48.349 70.166
114 • Appendix B
Table B.3 Sampling errors: Urban sample, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of cases Relative Confidence limits
Standard standard
error Unweighted Weighted Design effect error Lower Upper
Variable Value (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
Urban residence 1.000 0.000 2,951 2,861 na na 1.000 1.000
Literacy 0.668 0.033 2,951 2,861 3.827 0.050 0.601 0.734
No education 0.245 0.026 2,951 2,861 3.244 0.105 0.193 0.296
Secondary or higher education 0.340 0.023 2,951 2,861 2.664 0.068 0.293 0.386
Never married (never in union) 0.320 0.023 2,951 2,861 2.635 0.071 0.275 0.366
Currently married (in union) 0.569 0.022 2,951 2,861 2.403 0.039 0.525 0.613
Currently pregnant 0.066 0.010 2,951 2,861 2.146 0.149 0.046 0.085
Know any contraceptive method 0.982 0.006 1,572 1,627 1.715 0.006 0.971 0.994
Know a modern method 0.980 0.008 1,572 1,627 2.170 0.008 0.965 0.995
Currently using any method 0.497 0.036 1,572 1,627 2.836 0.072 0.425 0.568
Currently using a modern method 0.477 0.031 1,572 1,627 2.425 0.064 0.416 0.538
Currently using pill 0.052 0.011 1,572 1,627 1.929 0.209 0.030 0.073
Currently using IUD 0.015 0.004 1,572 1,627 1.441 0.293 0.006 0.024
Currently using condoms 0.002 0.001 1,572 1,627 0.660 0.417 0.000 0.003
Currently using injectables 0.307 0.019 1,572 1,627 1.591 0.060 0.270 0.345
Currently using implants 0.092 0.018 1,572 1,627 2.505 0.199 0.055 0.128
Currently using female sterilisation 0.003 0.003 1,572 1,627 2.007 0.994 0.000 0.008
Using public sector source 0.711 0.048 681 834 2.756 0.068 0.615 0.807
Births with skilled attendant at delivery 0.721 0.067 1,328 1,367 4.529 0.093 0.586 0.855
Vaccination card seen 0.574 0.095 267 313 3.269 0.165 0.384 0.763
Received BCG vaccination 0.888 0.042 267 313 2.353 0.048 0.804 0.973
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) 0.767 0.082 267 313 3.181 0.107 0.603 0.930
Received polio 0 vaccination 0.406 0.066 267 313 2.319 0.162 0.274 0.538
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.729 0.066 267 313 2.488 0.091 0.596 0.862
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) 0.779 0.066 267 313 2.598 0.084 0.647 0.910
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) 0.807 0.046 267 313 2.038 0.057 0.715 0.899
Received measles vaccination 0.781 0.077 267 313 3.242 0.099 0.627 0.935
Received all basic vaccinations 0.622 0.086 267 313 3.008 0.138 0.450 0.794
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-
23 months) 0.287 0.060 267 313 2.293 0.208 0.168 0.407
Received measles 2 vaccination 0.103 0.032 244 248 1.663 0.314 0.038 0.168
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-
35 months) 0.075 0.035 244 248 2.095 0.473 0.004 0.145
Height-for-age (-2SD) 0.262 0.033 1,236 1,338 2.561 0.127 0.195 0.329
Weight-for-height (-2SD) 0.054 0.009 1,259 1,350 1.354 0.165 0.036 0.072
Weight-for-age (-2SD) 0.151 0.017 1,248 1,347 1.624 0.114 0.117 0.185
Neonatal mortality (last 0-4 years) 21.119 7.328 1,329 1,366 1.549 0.347 6.462 35.775
Postneonatal mortality (last 0-4 years) 11.305 4.963 1,330 1,367 1.300 0.439 1.379 21.231
Infant mortality (last 0-4 years) 32.423 11.232 1,329 1,366 1.823 0.346 9.960 54.887
Child mortality (last 0-4 years) 14.181 4.563 1,295 1,323 1.540 0.322 5.055 23.307
Under-5 mortality (last 0-4 years) 46.145 10.873 1,337 1,376 1.622 0.236 24.399 67.890
na = Not applicable
Appendix B • 115
Table B.4 Sampling errors: Rural sample, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of cases Relative Confidence limits
Standard standard
error Unweighted Weighted Design effect error Lower Upper
Variable Value (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
Urban residence 0.000 0.000 5,934 6,024 na na 0.000 0.000
Literacy 0.386 0.018 5,934 6,024 2.827 0.046 0.350 0.421
No education 0.479 0.016 5,934 6,024 2.510 0.034 0.447 0.512
Secondary or higher education 0.103 0.009 5,934 6,024 2.203 0.084 0.086 0.121
Never married (never in union) 0.234 0.010 5,934 6,024 1.886 0.044 0.213 0.255
Currently married (in union) 0.703 0.012 5,934 6,024 1.943 0.016 0.680 0.726
Currently pregnant 0.083 0.006 5,934 6,024 1.599 0.069 0.072 0.095
Know any contraceptive method 0.955 0.005 4,170 4,237 1.400 0.005 0.946 0.964
Know a modern method 0.953 0.005 4,170 4,237 1.463 0.005 0.944 0.963
Currently using any method 0.382 0.020 4,170 4,237 2.635 0.052 0.343 0.422
Currently using a modern method 0.377 0.020 4,170 4,237 2.657 0.053 0.337 0.417
Currently using pill 0.008 0.002 4,170 4,237 1.481 0.248 0.004 0.013
Currently using IUD 0.015 0.005 4,170 4,237 2.832 0.360 0.004 0.025
Currently using condoms 0.001 0.001 4,170 4,237 1.210 0.659 0.000 0.002
Currently using injectables 0.258 0.016 4,170 4,237 2.371 0.062 0.226 0.290
Currently using implants 0.082 0.010 4,170 4,237 2.258 0.117 0.063 0.101
Currently using female sterilisation 0.004 0.002 4,170 4,237 1.821 0.454 0.000 0.007
Using public sector source 0.945 0.010 1,329 1,625 1.563 0.010 0.925 0.965
Births with skilled attendant at delivery 0.425 0.032 4,425 4,160 3.582 0.076 0.360 0.490
Vaccination card seen 0.343 0.033 741 715 1.818 0.095 0.278 0.409
Received BCG vaccination 0.660 0.032 741 715 1.822 0.049 0.595 0.725
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) 0.543 0.032 741 715 1.719 0.059 0.478 0.608
Received polio 0 vaccination 0.281 0.026 741 715 1.546 0.093 0.229 0.334
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.542 0.033 741 715 1.756 0.061 0.476 0.608
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) 0.519 0.034 741 715 1.801 0.065 0.451 0.587
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) 0.606 0.034 741 715 1.879 0.057 0.538 0.675
Received measles vaccination 0.500 0.032 741 715 1.698 0.064 0.436 0.563
Received all basic vaccinations 0.361 0.028 741 715 1.526 0.076 0.306 0.417
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-
23 months) 0.136 0.017 741 715 1.317 0.125 0.102 0.169
Received measles 2 vaccination 0.088 0.016 849 780 1.607 0.186 0.055 0.120
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-
35 months) 0.028 0.012 849 780 2.050 0.436 0.004 0.052
Height-for-age (-2SD) 0.404 0.014 4,144 3,941 1.676 0.035 0.376 0.431
Weight-for-height (-2SD) 0.075 0.007 4,297 4,058 1.624 0.092 0.061 0.089
Weight-for-age (-2SD) 0.234 0.016 4,199 3,991 2.307 0.071 0.201 0.267
Neonatal mortality (last 0-4 years) 36.734 4.830 4,441 4,187 1.686 0.131 27.073 46.394
Postneonatal mortality (last 0-4 years) 14.352 2.845 4,461 4,200 1.482 0.198 8.661 20.042
Infant mortality (last 0-4 years) 51.085 5.604 4,446 4,194 1.528 0.110 39.877 62.294
Child mortality (last 0-4 years) 13.099 2.162 4,363 4,101 1.171 0.165 8.774 17.424
Under-5 mortality (last 0-4 years) 63.515 6.129 4,480 4,218 1.508 0.096 51.257 75.774
na = Not applicable
116 • Appendix B
Table B.5 Sampling errors: Tigray sample, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of cases Relative Confidence limits
Standard standard
error Unweighted Weighted Design effect error Lower Upper
Variable Value (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
Urban residence 0.387 0.020 733 629 1.098 0.051 0.347 0.426
Literacy 0.596 0.027 733 629 1.488 0.045 0.542 0.650
No education 0.348 0.023 733 629 1.298 0.066 0.302 0.393
Secondary or higher education 0.344 0.036 733 629 2.018 0.103 0.273 0.415
Never married (never in union) 0.289 0.025 733 629 1.502 0.087 0.239 0.340
Currently married (in union) 0.588 0.028 733 629 1.550 0.048 0.531 0.644
Currently pregnant 0.081 0.007 733 629 0.728 0.090 0.067 0.096
Know any contraceptive method 0.984 0.004 452 370 0.727 0.004 0.975 0.992
Know a modern method 0.982 0.004 452 370 0.702 0.004 0.973 0.991
Currently using any method 0.373 0.032 452 370 1.409 0.086 0.309 0.437
Currently using a modern method 0.363 0.030 452 370 1.339 0.083 0.303 0.424
Currently using pill 0.038 0.016 452 370 1.780 0.421 0.006 0.070
Currently using IUD 0.010 0.005 452 370 1.085 0.512 0.000 0.020
Currently using condoms 0.004 0.002 452 370 0.878 0.694 0.000 0.008
Currently using injectables 0.150 0.018 452 370 1.042 0.117 0.115 0.186
Currently using implants 0.154 0.028 452 370 1.629 0.180 0.099 0.210
Currently using female sterilisation 0.000 0.000 452 370 na na 0.000 0.000
Using public sector source 0.933 0.019 179 162 1.031 0.021 0.894 0.971
Births with skilled attendant at delivery 0.733 0.050 454 371 2.084 0.068 0.633 0.832
Vaccination card seen 0.690 0.069 93 77 1.433 0.100 0.552 0.829
Received BCG vaccination 0.917 0.037 93 77 1.302 0.041 0.842 0.992
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) 0.844 0.049 93 77 1.295 0.058 0.746 0.942
Received polio 0 vaccination 0.546 0.063 93 77 1.210 0.115 0.420 0.671
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.836 0.049 93 77 1.260 0.058 0.739 0.933
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) 0.784 0.059 93 77 1.379 0.076 0.665 0.902
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) 0.780 0.062 93 77 1.438 0.080 0.656 0.905
Received measles vaccination 0.829 0.050 93 77 1.274 0.060 0.728 0.929
Received all basic vaccinations 0.730 0.065 93 77 1.399 0.089 0.601 0.860
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-
23 months) 0.389 0.059 93 77 1.155 0.151 0.272 0.506
Received measles 2 vaccination 0.172 0.047 78 61 1.051 0.271 0.078 0.265
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-
35 months) 0.074 0.031 78 61 1.017 0.422 0.012 0.137
Height-for-age (-2SD) 0.484 0.030 450 361 1.220 0.063 0.423 0.544
Weight-for-height (-2SD) 0.091 0.017 452 363 1.192 0.183 0.058 0.124
Weight-for-age (-2SD) 0.305 0.035 452 363 1.523 0.115 0.235 0.376
Neonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 28.013 8.824 847 683 1.397 0.315 10.365 45.661
Postneonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 9.575 2.953 854 688 0.878 0.308 3.669 15.480
Infant mortality (last 0-9 years) 37.588 9.612 848 684 1.316 0.256 18.364 56.811
Child mortality (last 0-4 years) 5.996 2.834 837 667 1.042 0.473 0.329 11.664
Under-5 mortality (last 0-4 years) 43.358 9.117 850 686 1.260 0.210 25.125 61.592
na = Not applicable
Appendix B • 117
Table B.6 Sampling errors: Afar sample, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of cases Relative Confidence limits
Standard standard
error Unweighted Weighted Design effect error Lower Upper
Variable Value (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
Urban residence 0.310 0.064 641 85 3.487 0.207 0.182 0.439
Literacy 0.198 0.027 641 85 1.686 0.134 0.145 0.251
No education 0.643 0.042 641 85 2.199 0.065 0.559 0.727
Secondary or higher education 0.076 0.014 641 85 1.365 0.188 0.048 0.105
Never married (never in union) 0.134 0.016 641 85 1.151 0.116 0.103 0.165
Currently married (in union) 0.751 0.016 641 85 0.908 0.021 0.720 0.782
Currently pregnant 0.114 0.015 641 85 1.157 0.128 0.085 0.143
Know any contraceptive method 0.863 0.028 482 64 1.778 0.032 0.807 0.919
Know a modern method 0.861 0.028 482 64 1.747 0.032 0.806 0.916
Currently using any method 0.127 0.027 482 64 1.786 0.214 0.073 0.181
Currently using a modern method 0.127 0.027 482 64 1.786 0.214 0.073 0.181
Currently using pill 0.025 0.010 482 64 1.410 0.398 0.005 0.046
Currently using IUD 0.009 0.005 482 64 1.112 0.544 0.000 0.018
Currently using condoms 0.000 0.000 482 64 na na 0.000 0.000
Currently using injectables 0.070 0.020 482 64 1.731 0.289 0.029 0.110
Currently using implants 0.016 0.007 482 64 1.239 0.437 0.002 0.031
Currently using female sterilisation 0.000 0.000 482 64 na na 0.000 0.000
Using public sector source 0.818 0.065 59 9 1.282 0.080 0.687 0.948
Births with skilled attendant at delivery 0.306 0.041 652 86 1.829 0.134 0.223 0.388
Vaccination card seen 0.192 0.050 111 15 1.352 0.261 0.092 0.292
Received BCG vaccination 0.456 0.067 111 15 1.434 0.148 0.321 0.590
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) 0.270 0.056 111 15 1.347 0.209 0.157 0.382
Received polio 0 vaccination 0.206 0.062 111 15 1.621 0.300 0.082 0.330
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.250 0.063 111 15 1.541 0.251 0.125 0.376
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) 0.236 0.058 111 15 1.459 0.248 0.119 0.352
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) 0.344 0.065 111 15 1.447 0.188 0.214 0.473
Received measles vaccination 0.296 0.054 111 15 1.261 0.183 0.187 0.404
Received all basic vaccinations 0.197 0.053 111 15 1.412 0.269 0.091 0.302
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-
23 months) 0.041 0.020 111 15 1.073 0.489 0.001 0.081
Received measles 2 vaccination 0.084 0.031 135 17 1.288 0.373 0.021 0.147
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-
35 months) 0.009 0.009 135 17 1.067 0.991 0.000 0.026
Height-for-age (-2SD) 0.422 0.027 588 77 1.222 0.064 0.368 0.476
Weight-for-height (-2SD) 0.135 0.022 613 79 1.412 0.160 0.092 0.179
Weight-for-age (-2SD) 0.311 0.026 598 78 1.245 0.084 0.259 0.363
Neonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 22.308 5.418 1,155 151 1.101 0.243 11.473 33.143
Postneonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 23.620 5.053 1,163 152 0.961 0.214 13.514 33.727
Infant mortality (last 0-9 years) 45.928 9.145 1,157 151 1.278 0.199 27.639 64.217
Child mortality (last 0-9 years) 12.509 4.229 1,139 148 0.917 0.338 4.052 20.967
Under-5 mortality (last 0-9 years) 57.863 10.309 1,158 151 1.326 0.178 37.246 78.481
na = Not applicable
118 • Appendix B
Table B.7 Sampling errors: Amhara sample, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of cases Relative Confidence limits
Standard standard
error Unweighted Weighted Design effect error Lower Upper
Variable Value (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
Urban residence 0.276 0.026 948 2,026 1.812 0.096 0.223 0.328
Literacy 0.498 0.036 948 2,026 2.191 0.072 0.426 0.569
No education 0.464 0.030 948 2,026 1.830 0.064 0.405 0.524
Secondary or higher education 0.155 0.020 948 2,026 1.687 0.128 0.116 0.195
Never married (never in union) 0.237 0.027 948 2,026 1.977 0.116 0.182 0.291
Currently married (in union) 0.648 0.027 948 2,026 1.714 0.041 0.595 0.701
Currently pregnant 0.054 0.009 948 2,026 1.165 0.158 0.037 0.072
Know any contraceptive method 0.962 0.009 630 1,313 1.156 0.009 0.945 0.980
Know a modern method 0.962 0.009 630 1,313 1.156 0.009 0.945 0.980
Currently using any method 0.495 0.030 630 1,313 1.500 0.060 0.435 0.555
Currently using a modern method 0.495 0.030 630 1,313 1.500 0.060 0.435 0.555
Currently using pill 0.017 0.008 630 1,313 1.471 0.452 0.002 0.032
Currently using IUD 0.012 0.006 630 1,313 1.293 0.462 0.001 0.024
Currently using condoms 0.000 0.000 630 1,313 na na 0.000 0.000
Currently using injectables 0.361 0.024 630 1,313 1.265 0.067 0.312 0.409
Currently using implants 0.101 0.016 630 1,313 1.311 0.156 0.069 0.132
Currently using female sterilisation 0.002 0.002 630 1,313 0.988 1.009 0.000 0.005
Using public sector source 0.863 0.041 317 694 2.113 0.048 0.781 0.946
Births with skilled attendant at delivery 0.557 0.046 511 1,050 1.856 0.083 0.465 0.650
Vaccination card seen 0.524 0.091 99 218 1.859 0.174 0.342 0.706
Received BCG vaccination 0.792 0.051 99 218 1.285 0.064 0.690 0.894
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) 0.778 0.054 99 218 1.325 0.069 0.670 0.886
Received polio 0 vaccination 0.373 0.069 99 218 1.459 0.185 0.235 0.511
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.754 0.059 99 218 1.399 0.078 0.636 0.872
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) 0.778 0.054 99 218 1.325 0.069 0.670 0.886
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) 0.779 0.059 99 218 1.457 0.076 0.660 0.897
Received measles vaccination 0.713 0.056 99 218 1.274 0.079 0.600 0.826
Received all basic vaccinations 0.629 0.073 99 218 1.548 0.117 0.482 0.775
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-
23 months) 0.234 0.065 99 218 1.563 0.277 0.104 0.363
Received measles 2 vaccination 0.133 0.047 91 192 1.326 0.353 0.039 0.227
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-
35 months) 0.084 0.036 91 192 1.250 0.430 0.012 0.156
Height-for-age (-2SD) 0.415 0.032 494 1,001 1.362 0.078 0.350 0.480
Weight-for-height (-2SD) 0.076 0.012 500 1,012 1.003 0.156 0.052 0.100
Weight-for-age (-2SD) 0.271 0.032 498 1,009 1.493 0.116 0.208 0.334
Neonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 45.648 8.350 989 2,032 1.139 0.183 28.948 62.348
Postneonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 12.466 3.746 988 2,028 0.866 0.301 4.974 19.959
Infant mortality (last 0-9 years) 58.115 8.806 990 2,033 0.992 0.152 40.503 75.727
Child mortality (last 0-9 years) 11.438 3.666 995 2,046 0.994 0.320 4.106 18.770
Under-5 mortality (last 0-9 years) 68.888 10.251 993 2,039 1.054 0.149 48.386 89.390
na = Not applicable
Appendix B • 119
Table B.8 Sampling errors: Oromia sample, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of cases Relative Confidence limits
Standard standard
error Unweighted Weighted Design effect error Lower Upper
Variable Value (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
Urban residence 0.261 0.020 1,052 3,347 1.488 0.077 0.221 0.301
Literacy 0.471 0.036 1,052 3,347 2.343 0.077 0.399 0.544
No education 0.372 0.029 1,052 3,347 1.938 0.078 0.314 0.430
Secondary or higher education 0.147 0.017 1,052 3,347 1.517 0.113 0.113 0.180
Never married (never in union) 0.258 0.019 1,052 3,347 1.431 0.075 0.220 0.297
Currently married (in union) 0.689 0.019 1,052 3,347 1.340 0.028 0.651 0.727
Currently pregnant 0.083 0.011 1,052 3,347 1.249 0.128 0.062 0.104
Know any contraceptive method 0.985 0.005 729 2,306 1.085 0.005 0.975 0.995
Know a modern method 0.982 0.007 729 2,306 1.355 0.007 0.969 0.995
Currently using any method 0.407 0.036 729 2,306 1.989 0.089 0.335 0.480
Currently using a modern method 0.389 0.034 729 2,306 1.862 0.087 0.322 0.457
Currently using pill 0.020 0.006 729 2,306 1.217 0.319 0.007 0.032
Currently using IUD 0.016 0.009 729 2,306 2.004 0.591 0.000 0.034
Currently using condoms 0.000 0.000 729 2,306 na na 0.000 0.000
Currently using injectables 0.261 0.025 729 2,306 1.557 0.097 0.210 0.312
Currently using implants 0.074 0.015 729 2,306 1.508 0.198 0.045 0.103
Currently using female sterilisation 0.007 0.004 729 2,306 1.156 0.520 0.000 0.014
Using public sector source 0.852 0.043 280 896 2.004 0.050 0.767 0.938
Births with skilled attendant at delivery 0.437 0.058 719 2,211 2.613 0.133 0.321 0.554
Vaccination card seen 0.352 0.056 127 405 1.298 0.158 0.241 0.464
Received BCG vaccination 0.697 0.054 127 405 1.324 0.077 0.590 0.805
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) 0.529 0.064 127 405 1.414 0.121 0.401 0.657
Received polio 0 vaccination 0.208 0.046 127 405 1.276 0.221 0.116 0.299
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.538 0.056 127 405 1.235 0.104 0.427 0.649
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) 0.526 0.057 127 405 1.266 0.109 0.412 0.640
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) 0.674 0.053 127 405 1.274 0.078 0.569 0.780
Received measles vaccination 0.487 0.065 127 405 1.449 0.133 0.358 0.616
Received all basic vaccinations 0.292 0.051 127 405 1.250 0.173 0.190 0.393
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-
23 months) 0.099 0.034 127 405 1.269 0.338 0.032 0.167
Received measles 2 vaccination 0.052 0.022 140 429 1.135 0.417 0.009 0.095
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-
35 months) 0.021 0.020 140 429 1.629 0.963 0.000 0.060
Height-for-age (-2SD) 0.353 0.024 698 2,134 1.176 0.067 0.306 0.401
Weight-for-height (-2SD) 0.043 0.008 715 2,186 1.041 0.195 0.026 0.060
Weight-for-age (-2SD) 0.163 0.026 707 2,161 1.681 0.157 0.112 0.214
Neonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 38.885 7.280 1,488 4,570 1.341 0.187 24.325 53.445
Postneonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 22.933 4.155 1,481 4,549 0.976 0.181 14.624 31.242
Infant mortality (last 0-9 years) 61.818 8.671 1,489 4,573 1.238 0.140 44.475 79.161
Child mortality (last 0-9 years) 10.755 2.535 1,500 4,606 0.843 0.236 5.685 15.824
Under-5 mortality (last 0-9 years) 71.907 9.741 1,492 4,584 1.287 0.135 52.426 91.389
na = Not applicable
120 • Appendix B
Table B.9 Sampling errors: Somali sample, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of cases Relative Confidence limits
Standard standard
error Unweighted Weighted Design effect error Lower Upper
Variable Value (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
Urban residence 0.381 0.036 640 420 1.873 0.095 0.309 0.454
Literacy 0.123 0.031 640 420 2.348 0.249 0.062 0.184
No education 0.717 0.034 640 420 1.877 0.047 0.650 0.784
Secondary or higher education 0.088 0.021 640 420 1.906 0.243 0.045 0.131
Never married (never in union) 0.247 0.031 640 420 1.801 0.125 0.185 0.309
Currently married (in union) 0.676 0.041 640 420 2.197 0.060 0.594 0.757
Currently pregnant 0.140 0.017 640 420 1.249 0.123 0.106 0.174
Know any contraceptive method 0.667 0.035 446 284 1.569 0.053 0.597 0.737
Know a modern method 0.665 0.035 446 284 1.577 0.053 0.595 0.736
Currently using any method 0.034 0.016 446 284 1.903 0.484 0.001 0.066
Currently using a modern method 0.034 0.016 446 284 1.903 0.484 0.001 0.066
Currently using pill 0.003 0.003 446 284 1.137 0.975 0.000 0.009
Currently using IUD 0.000 0.000 446 284 na na 0.000 0.000
Currently using condoms 0.000 0.000 446 284 na na 0.000 0.000
Currently using injectables 0.020 0.012 446 284 1.805 0.602 0.000 0.044
Currently using implants 0.004 0.003 446 284 0.876 0.679 0.000 0.009
Currently using female sterilisation 0.000 0.000 446 284 na na 0.000 0.000
Using public sector source 0.555 0.280 12 10 1.702 0.505 0.000 1.116
Births with skilled attendant at delivery 0.260 0.055 637 409 2.304 0.212 0.150 0.371
Vaccination card seen 0.214 0.049 85 56 1.071 0.229 0.116 0.312
Received BCG vaccination 0.395 0.073 85 56 1.342 0.184 0.250 0.541
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) 0.262 0.068 85 56 1.392 0.259 0.126 0.398
Received polio 0 vaccination 0.156 0.043 85 56 1.052 0.277 0.069 0.242
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.268 0.069 85 56 1.406 0.258 0.130 0.406
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) 0.229 0.064 85 56 1.365 0.279 0.101 0.357
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) 0.356 0.069 85 56 1.312 0.194 0.218 0.495
Received measles vaccination 0.309 0.062 85 56 1.215 0.201 0.185 0.433
Received all basic vaccinations 0.185 0.049 85 56 1.115 0.263 0.088 0.282
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-
23 months) 0.045 0.024 85 56 0.895 0.523 0.000 0.092
Received measles 2 vaccination 0.014 0.014 120 74 1.298 1.018 0.000 0.043
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-
35 months) 0.000 0.000 120 74 na na 0.000 0.000
Height-for-age (-2SD) 0.306 0.031 566 359 1.474 0.102 0.243 0.368
Weight-for-height (-2SD) 0.214 0.018 605 380 1.029 0.085 0.178 0.251
Weight-for-age (-2SD) 0.319 0.034 574 363 1.529 0.106 0.252 0.387
Neonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 44.959 7.753 1,322 853 1.166 0.172 29.454 60.465
Postneonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 26.513 6.420 1,330 860 1.295 0.242 13.673 39.353
Infant mortality (last 0-9 years) 71.472 11.338 1,323 854 1.429 0.159 48.797 94.148
Child mortality (last 0-9 years) 31.916 6.099 1,332 860 0.966 0.191 19.719 44.113
Under-5 mortality (last 0-9 years) 101.107 11.542 1,339 864 1.158 0.114 78.024 124.191
na = Not applicable
Appendix B • 121
Table B.10 Sampling errors: Benishangul-Gumuz sample, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of cases Relative Confidence limits
Standard standard
error Unweighted Weighted Design effect error Lower Upper
Variable Value (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
Urban residence 0.327 0.032 747 98 1.886 0.099 0.262 0.392
Literacy 0.455 0.055 747 98 3.026 0.122 0.345 0.566
No education 0.398 0.042 747 98 2.346 0.106 0.314 0.483
Secondary or higher education 0.186 0.060 747 98 4.145 0.321 0.066 0.305
Never married (never in union) 0.255 0.017 747 98 1.056 0.066 0.221 0.288
Currently married (in union) 0.680 0.023 747 98 1.362 0.034 0.633 0.726
Currently pregnant 0.081 0.015 747 98 1.516 0.187 0.051 0.111
Know any contraceptive method 0.954 0.016 530 67 1.716 0.016 0.923 0.985
Know a modern method 0.953 0.015 530 67 1.677 0.016 0.922 0.984
Currently using any method 0.385 0.032 530 67 1.509 0.083 0.321 0.449
Currently using a modern method 0.367 0.030 530 67 1.450 0.083 0.306 0.428
Currently using pill 0.010 0.008 530 67 1.742 0.752 0.000 0.025
Currently using IUD 0.022 0.009 530 67 1.403 0.406 0.004 0.040
Currently using condoms 0.000 0.000 530 67 na na 0.000 0.000
Currently using injectables 0.168 0.032 530 67 1.936 0.187 0.105 0.232
Currently using implants 0.158 0.025 530 67 1.555 0.156 0.109 0.207
Currently using female sterilisation 0.000 0.000 530 67 na na 0.000 0.000
Using public sector source 0.925 0.041 202 26 2.186 0.044 0.842 1.007
Births with skilled attendant at delivery 0.650 0.078 530 67 3.044 0.121 0.493 0.807
Vaccination card seen 0.457 0.071 83 11 1.290 0.156 0.314 0.599
Received BCG vaccination 0.856 0.041 83 11 1.054 0.048 0.775 0.938
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) 0.773 0.060 83 11 1.302 0.078 0.652 0.893
Received polio 0 vaccination 0.610 0.065 83 11 1.194 0.106 0.481 0.740
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.747 0.059 83 11 1.228 0.079 0.629 0.865
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) 0.746 0.063 83 11 1.307 0.084 0.621 0.872
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) 0.800 0.050 83 11 1.143 0.063 0.699 0.901
Received measles vaccination 0.767 0.054 83 11 1.155 0.070 0.660 0.875
Received all basic vaccinations 0.661 0.059 83 11 1.129 0.089 0.543 0.779
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-
23 months) 0.417 0.070 83 11 1.283 0.168 0.277 0.557
Received measles 2 vaccination 0.016 0.010 102 13 0.829 0.648 0.000 0.036
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-
35 months) 0.016 0.010 102 13 0.829 0.648 0.000 0.036
Height-for-age (-2SD) 0.407 0.063 478 62 2.587 0.154 0.282 0.533
Weight-for-height (-2SD) 0.064 0.014 490 63 1.171 0.217 0.036 0.092
Weight-for-age (-2SD) 0.320 0.077 490 63 3.289 0.239 0.167 0.474
Neonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 54.868 12.035 1,055 132 1.347 0.219 30.798 78.939
Postneonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 19.072 4.697 1,068 133 1.083 0.246 9.679 28.466
Infant mortality (last 0-9 years) 73.940 10.899 1,056 132 1.133 0.147 52.142 95.739
Child mortality (last 0-9 years) 17.136 4.354 1,069 133 0.894 0.254 8.428 25.843
Under-5 mortality (last 0-9 years) 89.809 11.717 1,060 133 1.062 0.130 66.375 113.243
na = Not applicable
122 • Appendix B
Table B.11 Sampling errors: SNNPR sample, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of cases Relative Confidence limits
Standard standard
error Unweighted Weighted Design effect error Lower Upper
Variable Value (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
Urban residence 0.260 0.046 1,008 1,705 3.337 0.178 0.167 0.353
Literacy 0.422 0.026 1,008 1,705 1.691 0.062 0.369 0.475
No education 0.407 0.029 1,008 1,705 1.848 0.070 0.350 0.465
Secondary or higher education 0.135 0.025 1,008 1,705 2.285 0.183 0.085 0.184
Never married (never in union) 0.250 0.016 1,008 1,705 1.151 0.063 0.219 0.282
Currently married (in union) 0.690 0.025 1,008 1,705 1.698 0.036 0.641 0.740
Currently pregnant 0.077 0.011 1,008 1,705 1.274 0.139 0.056 0.099
Know any contraceptive method 0.983 0.006 709 1,177 1.237 0.006 0.971 0.995
Know a modern method 0.982 0.006 709 1,177 1.208 0.006 0.970 0.994
Currently using any method 0.450 0.038 709 1,177 2.009 0.084 0.375 0.526
Currently using a modern method 0.446 0.038 709 1,177 2.009 0.084 0.371 0.522
Currently using pill 0.013 0.005 709 1,177 1.123 0.373 0.003 0.022
Currently using IUD 0.015 0.005 709 1,177 1.124 0.344 0.005 0.025
Currently using condoms 0.002 0.002 709 1,177 1.107 0.989 0.000 0.005
Currently using injectables 0.335 0.028 709 1,177 1.552 0.082 0.280 0.391
Currently using implants 0.077 0.025 709 1,177 2.460 0.321 0.028 0.127
Currently using female sterilisation 0.002 0.002 709 1,177 0.917 0.704 0.000 0.006
Using public sector source 0.934 0.017 313 531 1.219 0.018 0.900 0.969
Births with skilled attendant at delivery 0.501 0.060 660 1,106 2.538 0.119 0.382 0.620
Vaccination card seen 0.296 0.103 116 199 2.380 0.349 0.089 0.503
Received BCG vaccination 0.714 0.043 116 199 1.017 0.061 0.627 0.801
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) 0.563 0.074 116 199 1.596 0.132 0.414 0.712
Received polio 0 vaccination 0.347 0.052 116 199 1.159 0.150 0.243 0.451
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.530 0.078 116 199 1.655 0.147 0.374 0.685
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) 0.540 0.074 116 199 1.579 0.137 0.392 0.688
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) 0.544 0.061 116 199 1.315 0.113 0.422 0.667
Received measles vaccination 0.582 0.066 116 199 1.420 0.114 0.449 0.714
Received all basic vaccinations 0.435 0.079 116 199 1.702 0.182 0.277 0.593
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-
23 months) 0.182 0.039 116 199 1.097 0.216 0.104 0.260
Received measles 2 vaccination 0.153 0.037 119 196 1.113 0.245 0.078 0.227
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-
35 months) 0.042 0.030 119 196 1.607 0.719 0.000 0.101
Height-for-age (-2SD) 0.364 0.027 645 1,078 1.415 0.075 0.310 0.419
Weight-for-height (-2SD) 0.063 0.017 679 1,116 1.708 0.269 0.029 0.097
Weight-for-age (-2SD) 0.203 0.019 652 1,090 1.144 0.093 0.165 0.241
Neonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 21.627 6.273 1,467 2,414 1.569 0.290 9.081 34.173
Postneonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 15.211 3.936 1,472 2,414 1.014 0.259 7.338 23.084
Infant mortality (last 0-9 years) 36.838 7.863 1,468 2,416 1.456 0.213 21.113 52.563
Child mortality (last 0-9 years) 20.149 3.267 1,521 2,471 0.887 0.162 13.615 26.684
Under-5 mortality (last 0-9 years) 56.245 8.452 1,469 2,417 1.331 0.150 39.341 73.148
Appendix B • 123
Table B.12 Sampling errors: Gambela sample, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of cases Relative Confidence limits
Standard standard
error Unweighted Weighted Design effect error Lower Upper
Variable Value (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
Urban residence 0.548 0.036 723 40 1.937 0.066 0.476 0.620
Literacy 0.382 0.041 723 40 2.258 0.107 0.300 0.464
No education 0.211 0.030 723 40 2.001 0.144 0.150 0.272
Secondary or higher education 0.280 0.026 723 40 1.537 0.092 0.228 0.331
Never married (never in union) 0.198 0.021 723 40 1.404 0.105 0.156 0.239
Currently married (in union) 0.622 0.026 723 40 1.429 0.042 0.570 0.673
Currently pregnant 0.076 0.018 723 40 1.843 0.239 0.040 0.113
Know any contraceptive method 0.947 0.017 458 25 1.628 0.018 0.913 0.981
Know a modern method 0.944 0.017 458 25 1.580 0.018 0.910 0.978
Currently using any method 0.338 0.069 458 25 3.072 0.203 0.201 0.475
Currently using a modern method 0.332 0.065 458 25 2.915 0.195 0.203 0.462
Currently using pill 0.022 0.008 458 25 1.183 0.373 0.005 0.038
Currently using IUD 0.004 0.002 458 25 0.743 0.551 0.000 0.008
Currently using condoms 0.002 0.002 458 25 0.873 1.008 0.000 0.005
Currently using injectables 0.295 0.060 458 25 2.775 0.202 0.176 0.414
Currently using implants 0.010 0.005 458 25 1.164 0.538 0.000 0.021
Currently using female sterilisation 0.000 0.000 458 25 na na 0.000 0.000
Using public sector source 0.470 0.064 176 9 1.694 0.137 0.341 0.598
Births with skilled attendant at delivery 0.699 0.041 450 25 1.610 0.059 0.617 0.781
Vaccination card seen 0.535 0.070 77 4 1.196 0.130 0.396 0.675
Received BCG vaccination 0.818 0.058 77 4 1.298 0.071 0.702 0.934
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) 0.604 0.059 77 4 1.032 0.098 0.486 0.722
Received polio 0 vaccination 0.614 0.099 77 4 1.729 0.161 0.416 0.811
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.572 0.053 77 4 0.910 0.092 0.467 0.677
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) 0.608 0.061 77 4 1.062 0.100 0.487 0.730
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) 0.658 0.104 77 4 1.861 0.158 0.450 0.866
Received measles vaccination 0.576 0.053 77 4 0.923 0.093 0.470 0.683
Received all basic vaccinations 0.398 0.054 77 4 0.956 0.136 0.290 0.507
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-
23 months) 0.226 0.069 77 4 1.433 0.308 0.087 0.365
Received measles 2 vaccination 0.215 0.061 79 4 1.260 0.285 0.092 0.337
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-
35 months) 0.118 0.065 79 4 1.707 0.552 0.000 0.249
Height-for-age (-2SD) 0.173 0.027 412 21 1.463 0.156 0.119 0.227
Weight-for-height (-2SD) 0.131 0.015 420 22 0.878 0.117 0.101 0.162
Weight-for-age (-2SD) 0.176 0.029 415 21 1.531 0.167 0.117 0.234
Neonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 33.257 8.490 937 50 1.374 0.255 16.276 50.237
Postneonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 16.869 5.168 942 50 1.106 0.306 6.534 27.204
Infant mortality (last 0-9 years) 50.126 11.330 938 50 1.416 0.226 27.465 72.786
Child mortality (last 0-9 years) 38.226 8.711 956 50 1.137 0.228 20.803 55.648
Under-5 mortality (last 0-9 years) 86.435 11.564 945 51 1.012 0.134 63.308 109.563
na = Not applicable
124 • Appendix B
Table B.13 Sampling errors: Harari sample, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of cases Relative Confidence limits
Standard standard
error Unweighted Weighted Design effect error Lower Upper
Variable Value (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
Urban residence 0.566 0.039 763 27 2.189 0.070 0.488 0.645
Literacy 0.538 0.034 763 27 1.894 0.064 0.469 0.606
No education 0.326 0.032 763 27 1.853 0.097 0.263 0.389
Secondary or higher education 0.294 0.034 763 27 2.078 0.117 0.225 0.362
Never married (never in union) 0.281 0.028 763 27 1.729 0.100 0.225 0.338
Currently married (in union) 0.611 0.026 763 27 1.469 0.043 0.559 0.663
Currently pregnant 0.111 0.011 763 27 1.006 0.103 0.088 0.134
Know any contraceptive method 0.982 0.007 457 16 1.158 0.007 0.967 0.996
Know a modern method 0.982 0.007 457 16 1.158 0.007 0.967 0.996
Currently using any method 0.324 0.024 457 16 1.104 0.075 0.276 0.373
Currently using a modern method 0.303 0.027 457 16 1.243 0.088 0.250 0.357
Currently using pill 0.035 0.009 457 16 1.074 0.262 0.017 0.054
Currently using IUD 0.014 0.008 457 16 1.429 0.564 0.000 0.030
Currently using condoms 0.008 0.004 457 16 0.884 0.452 0.001 0.016
Currently using injectables 0.104 0.011 457 16 0.776 0.107 0.082 0.126
Currently using implants 0.110 0.024 457 16 1.635 0.218 0.062 0.158
Currently using female sterilisation 0.002 0.002 457 16 0.956 1.003 0.000 0.006
Using public sector source 0.867 0.030 138 5 1.017 0.034 0.808 0.926
Births with skilled attendant at delivery 0.647 0.065 447 16 2.362 0.101 0.516 0.778
Vaccination card seen 0.485 0.079 73 3 1.306 0.162 0.328 0.642
Received BCG vaccination 0.696 0.071 73 3 1.260 0.102 0.554 0.838
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) 0.536 0.070 73 3 1.158 0.130 0.397 0.675
Received polio 0 vaccination 0.444 0.060 73 3 1.009 0.136 0.323 0.564
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.509 0.070 73 3 1.156 0.137 0.370 0.648
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) 0.538 0.070 73 3 1.164 0.130 0.398 0.678
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) 0.481 0.066 73 3 1.094 0.137 0.350 0.613
Received measles vaccination 0.599 0.076 73 3 1.280 0.127 0.446 0.751
Received all basic vaccinations 0.447 0.064 73 3 1.077 0.144 0.318 0.576
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-
23 months) 0.163 0.035 73 3 0.800 0.216 0.092 0.233
Received measles 2 vaccination 0.072 0.032 94 4 1.211 0.438 0.009 0.135
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-
35 months) 0.000 0.000 94 4 na na 0.000 0.000
Height-for-age (-2SD) 0.364 0.034 416 15 1.363 0.093 0.296 0.432
Weight-for-height (-2SD) 0.041 0.010 433 16 1.025 0.247 0.021 0.061
Weight-for-age (-2SD) 0.202 0.022 418 16 1.087 0.108 0.158 0.245
Neonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 36.631 5.006 874 33 0.763 0.137 26.619 46.643
Postneonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 12.683 4.884 881 33 1.250 0.385 2.915 22.450
Infant mortality (last 0-9 years) 49.314 7.614 876 33 1.018 0.154 34.087 64.541
Child mortality (last 0-9 years) 15.866 6.158 887 33 1.155 0.388 3.551 28.181
Under-5 mortality (last 0-9 years) 64.397 10.780 879 33 1.083 0.167 42.838 85.956
Appendix B • 125
Table B.14 Sampling errors: Addis Ababa sample, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of cases Relative Confidence limits
Standard standard
error Unweighted Weighted Design effect error Lower Upper
Variable Value (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
Urban residence 1.000 0.000 818 442 na na 1.000 1.000
Literacy 0.840 0.023 818 442 1.786 0.027 0.794 0.885
No education 0.133 0.018 818 442 1.486 0.133 0.098 0.169
Secondary or higher education 0.540 0.041 818 442 2.366 0.077 0.457 0.622
Never married (never in union) 0.444 0.028 818 442 1.604 0.063 0.388 0.500
Currently married (in union) 0.467 0.029 818 442 1.651 0.062 0.409 0.524
Currently pregnant 0.069 0.011 818 442 1.217 0.156 0.047 0.091
Know any contraceptive method 0.994 0.004 385 206 1.007 0.004 0.986 1.002
Know a modern method 0.994 0.004 385 206 1.007 0.004 0.986 1.002
Currently using any method 0.499 0.031 385 206 1.198 0.061 0.438 0.560
Currently using a modern method 0.476 0.031 385 206 1.223 0.066 0.413 0.538
Currently using pill 0.086 0.020 385 206 1.395 0.232 0.046 0.127
Currently using IUD 0.052 0.010 385 206 0.863 0.188 0.032 0.071
Currently using condoms 0.011 0.005 385 206 0.949 0.461 0.001 0.021
Currently using injectables 0.170 0.029 385 206 1.517 0.171 0.112 0.228
Currently using implants 0.133 0.019 385 206 1.074 0.140 0.095 0.170
Currently using female sterilisation 0.000 0.000 385 206 na na 0.000 0.000
Using public sector source 0.600 0.046 201 107 1.328 0.077 0.507 0.692
Births with skilled attendant at delivery 0.957 0.009 291 156 0.773 0.010 0.939 0.976
Vaccination card seen 0.859 0.061 64 34 1.389 0.071 0.738 0.981
Received BCG vaccination 0.963 0.024 64 34 1.019 0.025 0.914 1.011
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) 0.931 0.030 64 34 0.945 0.032 0.871 0.991
Received polio 0 vaccination 0.749 0.052 64 34 0.959 0.070 0.645 0.854
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.858 0.044 64 34 1.000 0.051 0.771 0.946
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) 0.931 0.030 64 34 0.945 0.032 0.871 0.991
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) 0.944 0.028 64 34 0.964 0.029 0.889 1.000
Received measles vaccination 0.906 0.033 64 34 0.904 0.037 0.840 0.972
Received all basic vaccinations 0.833 0.049 64 34 1.049 0.059 0.735 0.931
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-
23 months) 0.549 0.069 64 34 1.108 0.126 0.411 0.688
Received measles 2 vaccination 0.034 0.024 61 32 1.007 0.699 0.000 0.081
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-
35 months) 0.034 0.024 61 32 1.007 0.699 0.000 0.081
Height-for-age (-2SD) 0.150 0.030 271 144 1.359 0.202 0.089 0.211
Weight-for-height (-2SD) 0.022 0.008 272 145 0.904 0.364 0.006 0.039
Weight-for-age (-2SD) 0.049 0.015 279 149 1.147 0.301 0.020 0.078
Neonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 17.238 5.111 477 258 0.855 0.297 7.015 27.461
Postneonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 3.792 2.805 474 256 0.981 0.740 0.000 9.401
Infant mortality (last 0-9 years) 21.030 6.498 477 258 0.981 0.309 8.034 34.026
Child mortality (last 0-9 years) 4.724 3.240 456 247 0.956 0.686 0.000 11.203
Under-5 mortality (last 0-9 years) 25.655 7.069 477 258 0.886 0.276 11.517 39.794
na = Not applicable
126 • Appendix B
Table B.15 Sampling errors: Dire Dawa sample, Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Number of cases Relative Confidence limits
Standard standard
error Unweighted Weighted Design effect error Lower Upper
Variable Value (R) (SE) (N) (WN) (DEFT) (SE/R) (R-2SE) (R+2SE)
Urban residence 0.673 0.049 812 64 2.987 0.073 0.574 0.772
Literacy 0.601 0.039 812 64 2.286 0.066 0.522 0.680
No education 0.269 0.030 812 64 1.921 0.111 0.209 0.329
Secondary or higher education 0.371 0.034 812 64 1.983 0.091 0.303 0.438
Never married (never in union) 0.321 0.031 812 64 1.912 0.098 0.258 0.384
Currently married (in union) 0.552 0.028 812 64 1.589 0.050 0.497 0.608
Currently pregnant 0.086 0.008 812 64 0.816 0.093 0.070 0.102
Know any contraceptive method 0.955 0.015 464 36 1.572 0.016 0.925 0.985
Know a modern method 0.955 0.015 464 36 1.572 0.016 0.925 0.985
Currently using any method 0.305 0.026 464 36 1.214 0.085 0.253 0.357
Currently using a modern method 0.303 0.026 464 36 1.228 0.087 0.251 0.356
Currently using pill 0.049 0.011 464 36 1.067 0.218 0.028 0.070
Currently using IUD 0.009 0.006 464 36 1.261 0.603 0.000 0.021
Currently using condoms 0.005 0.004 464 36 1.082 0.677 0.000 0.013
Currently using injectables 0.082 0.015 464 36 1.157 0.180 0.052 0.111
Currently using implants 0.126 0.020 464 36 1.277 0.156 0.087 0.166
Currently using female sterilisation 0.004 0.003 464 36 0.935 0.707 0.000 0.009
Using public sector source 0.864 0.036 133 11 1.215 0.042 0.791 0.937
Births with skilled attendant at delivery 0.708 0.050 402 30 1.745 0.071 0.607 0.808
Vaccination card seen 0.546 0.068 80 6 1.208 0.124 0.411 0.681
Received BCG vaccination 0.955 0.023 80 6 0.983 0.024 0.909 1.001
Received DPT-HepB-Hib vaccination (3 doses) 0.736 0.054 80 6 1.095 0.074 0.627 0.844
Received polio 0 vaccination 0.651 0.049 80 6 0.912 0.075 0.553 0.749
Received polio vaccination (3 doses) 0.690 0.050 80 6 0.961 0.072 0.591 0.790
Received pneumococcal vaccination (3 doses) 0.682 0.056 80 6 1.060 0.081 0.571 0.793
Received rotavirus vaccination (2 doses) 0.792 0.048 80 6 1.045 0.060 0.697 0.888
Received measles vaccination 0.745 0.064 80 6 1.304 0.086 0.617 0.873
Received all basic vaccinations 0.564 0.077 80 6 1.381 0.137 0.410 0.719
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (12-
23 months) 0.281 0.060 80 6 1.196 0.215 0.160 0.402
Received measles 2 vaccination 0.171 0.044 74 5 0.968 0.256 0.083 0.258
Received all age-appropriate vaccinations (24-
35 months) 0.077 0.032 74 5 0.994 0.412 0.013 0.140
Height-for-age (-2SD) 0.254 0.023 362 26 0.941 0.092 0.207 0.300
Weight-for-height (-2SD) 0.059 0.013 377 27 1.003 0.222 0.033 0.086
Weight-for-age (-2SD) 0.158 0.027 364 26 1.261 0.171 0.104 0.212
Neonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 31.045 6.315 816 60 0.948 0.203 18.416 43.674
Postneonatal mortality (last 0-9 years) 29.708 13.543 819 60 1.506 0.456 2.621 56.794
Infant mortality (last 0-9 years) 60.753 13.182 817 60 1.185 0.217 34.388 87.117
Child mortality (last 0-9 years) 19.806 10.152 796 58 1.458 0.513 0.000 40.110
Under-5 mortality (last 0-9 years) 79.356 21.743 820 60 1.592 0.274 35.870 122.841
Appendix B • 127
DATA QUALITY TABLES Appendix C
Table C.1 Household age distribution
Single-year age distribution of the de facto household population by sex (weighted), Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Female Male Female Male
Age Number Percent Number Percent Age Number Percent Number Percent
0 478 2.4 557 2.7 36 109 0.5 101 0.5
1 550 2.8 480 2.4 37 135 0.7 100 0.5
2 551 2.8 534 2.6 38 213 1.1 201 1.0
3 578 2.9 623 3.1 39 92 0.5 90 0.4
4 525 2.6 583 2.9 40 408 2.0 603 3.0
5 441 2.2 480 2.4 41 41 0.2 42 0.2
6 598 3.0 633 3.1 42 129 0.6 109 0.5
7 727 3.6 726 3.6 43 81 0.4 51 0.3
8 690 3.4 712 3.5 44 45 0.2 30 0.1
9 526 2.6 486 2.4 45 327 1.6 419 2.1
10 693 3.5 753 3.7 46 32 0.2 57 0.3
11 543 2.7 492 2.4 47 54 0.3 72 0.4
12 631 3.2 722 3.6 48 72 0.4 108 0.5
13 771 3.9 534 2.6 49 69 0.3 37 0.2
14 419 2.1 573 2.8 50 189 0.9 403 2.0
15 528 2.6 627 3.1 51 76 0.4 26 0.1
16 473 2.4 556 2.7 52 156 0.8 52 0.3
17 343 1.7 371 1.8 53 129 0.6 29 0.1
18 617 3.1 652 3.2 54 81 0.4 37 0.2
19 282 1.4 250 1.2 55 321 1.6 185 0.9
20 517 2.6 575 2.8 56 89 0.4 47 0.2
21 176 0.9 180 0.9 57 64 0.3 51 0.3
22 304 1.5 312 1.5 58 74 0.4 68 0.3
23 274 1.4 219 1.1 59 18 0.1 19 0.1
24 226 1.1 212 1.0 60 361 1.8 298 1.5
25 665 3.3 526 2.6 61 18 0.1 24 0.1
26 208 1.0 222 1.1 62 38 0.2 48 0.2
27 268 1.3 209 1.0 63 26 0.1 32 0.2
28 418 2.1 336 1.7 64 25 0.1 17 0.1
29 136 0.7 112 0.6 65 147 0.7 179 0.9
30 653 3.3 638 3.1 66 7 0.0 17 0.1
31 69 0.3 75 0.4 67 25 0.1 38 0.2
32 187 0.9 189 0.9 68 29 0.1 61 0.3
33 131 0.7 97 0.5 69 2 0.0 8 0.0
34 113 0.6 71 0.3 70+ 466 2.3 634 3.1
35 527 2.6 603 3.0 Don’t know/
missing 18 0.1 64 0.3
Total 20,004 100.0 20,276 100.0
Note: The de facto population includes all residents and nonresidents who stayed in the household the night before the interview.
Household Percentage
population Interviewed women of eligible
of women age 15-49 women
Age group age 10-54 Number Percentage interviewed
10-14 3,057 na na na
15-19 2,243 2,180 24.9 97.2
20-24 1,497 1,474 16.8 98.5
25-29 1,694 1,672 19.1 98.7
30-34 1,153 1,133 12.9 98.2
35-39 1,076 1,067 12.2 99.2
40-44 704 697 7.9 99.0
45-49 554 544 6.2 98.3
50-54 630 na na na
15-49 8,921 8,768 100.0 98.3
Appendix C • 129
Table C.3 Completeness of reporting
Percentage of observations missing information for selected demographic and health questions (weighted), Ethiopia Mini-DHS
2019
Percentage with
information Number of
Subject Reference group missing cases
Birth date Births in the 15 years preceding the survey
Day only 7.63 16,413
Month only 4.83 16,413
Month and year 0.83 16,413
Age at death Deceased children born in the 15 years preceding the survey 0.00 1,218
Age/date at first union1 Ever-married women age 15-49 0.00 6,560
Respondent’s education All women age 15-49 0.00 8,885
Anthropometry of children Women age 15-49 (from the Biomarker Questionnaire)
Height 1.48 5,512
Weight 1.13 5,512
Height or weight 1.48 5,512
1
Both year and age missing
na = Not applicable
1
(Bm/Bf)x100, where Bm and Bf are the numbers of male and female births, respectively
2
[2Bx/(Bx-1+Bx+1)]x100, where Bx is the number of births in calendar year x
130 • Appendix C
Table C.5 Reporting of age at death in days
Distribution of reported deaths under age 1 month by age at death in days and
percentage of neonatal deaths reported to occur at age 0-6 days, for 5-year periods
preceding the survey (weighted), Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
1
0-6 days/0-30 days
1
Under 1 month/under 1 year
Appendix C • 131
Table C.7 Height and weight data completeness and quality for children
Among children under age 5 (age 0-59 months) who were eligible for anthropometry, percentage with incomplete or missing height and/or
weight measurements and/or date of birth; percentage with implausible height-for-age, and/or weight-for-height, and/or weight-for-age data;
and percentage with valid data, according to background characteristics (unweighted), Ethiopia Mini-DHS 2019
Percentage with data missing Percentage with implausible
or incomplete: data for4: Percentage with valid data for8:
Background Age in Height- Weight- Weight- Height- Weight- Weight- Number
characteristic Height1 Weight2 months3 for-age5 for-height6 for-age7 for-age for-height for-age of children
Age in months
<6 2.8 1.3 0.8 1.7 1.3 1.0 94.7 95.9 96.9 605
6-8 2.6 1.8 0.4 1.1 0.0 0.0 96.0 97.4 97.8 274
9-11 0.8 0.8 2.3 0.8 0.8 0.0 96.5 98.5 97.3 259
12-17 0.9 0.7 2.0 1.2 0.2 0.2 95.9 99.0 97.1 587
18-23 2.2 1.5 1.5 0.4 0.2 0.0 96.1 97.6 97.2 458
24-35 1.7 1.3 2.3 0.9 0.6 0.1 95.1 97.7 96.3 1,151
36-47 1.8 1.5 4.1 0.6 0.3 0.2 93.6 97.9 94.3 1,165
48-59 1.7 1.6 4.9 1.1 1.3 0.0 92.4 97.1 93.6 1,196
Sex
Male 2.0 1.5 2.8 0.8 0.5 0.1 94.5 97.5 95.6 2,902
Female 1.5 1.2 3.0 1.1 0.8 0.2 94.5 97.6 95.7 2,793
Mother’s interview status
Interviewed 1.6 1.2 1.2 1.0 0.5 0.2 96.2 97.9 97.4 5,262
Not interviewed but in
household 0.0 0.0 0.0 2.7 2.7 0.0 97.3 97.3 100.0 37
Not interviewed and not in
the household9 4.0 3.8 25.5 0.8 3.0 0.0 70.7 92.9 71.7 396
Region
Tigray 0.5 0.5 0.2 0.5 0.2 0.0 98.9 99.3 99.3 442
Afar 1.6 1.3 3.5 1.7 1.1 0.5 93.4 97.3 95.0 634
Amhara 1.9 1.7 1.2 0.6 0.2 0.0 96.7 97.9 97.5 518
Oromia 1.5 1.1 1.7 0.8 0.1 0.0 96.0 98.3 97.2 720
Somali 2.6 1.7 7.1 0.8 1.5 0.2 89.7 95.8 91.2 648
Benishangul-Gumuz 2.2 1.8 0.6 2.2 0.4 0.4 95.0 97.4 97.2 500
SNNPR 1.2 1.2 4.3 0.9 0.4 0.0 93.6 98.4 94.5 691
Gambela 2.1 2.1 2.5 1.4 1.6 0.7 94.0 96.3 94.7 432
Harari 0.9 0.5 3.9 0.2 0.5 0.0 95.2 98.6 95.9 435
Addis Ababa 4.8 2.4 1.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 93.4 95.2 95.8 289
Dire Dawa 1.4 1.4 3.3 0.8 1.1 0.3 94.6 97.5 95.1 367
Mother’s education
No education 1.4 1.1 1.7 1.2 0.4 0.2 95.7 98.2 97.0 2,941
Primary 1.6 1.0 0.8 0.8 0.7 0.1 96.8 97.7 98.0 1,635
Secondary 1.8 1.8 0.0 0.7 0.5 0.5 97.5 97.7 97.7 441
More than secondary 3.0 1.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 97.0 97.0 98.5 133
Total 1.8 1.4 2.9 0.9 0.7 0.2 94.5 97.6 95.6 5,695
1
Child’s height in centimetres is missing, child was not present, child refused, and “other” result codes
2
Child’s weight in kilograms is missing, child was not present, child refused, and “other” result codes
3
Incomplete date of birth; a complete date of birth is month/day/year or month/year.
4
Cases with missing or incomplete data are not considered to be implausible cases.
5
Implausible cases for height-for-age are defined as more than 6 standard deviations (SD) above or below the standard population median (Z-
scores) based on the WHO Child Growth Standards.
6
Implausible cases for weight-for-height are defined as more than 5 SD above or below the standard population median (Z-scores) based on
the WHO Child Growth Standards.
7
Implausible cases for weight-for-age are defined as more than 6 SD below or 5 SD above the standard population median (Z-scores) based
on the WHO Child Growth Standards.
8
No missing data, incomplete data, or implausible data.
9
Includes children whose mothers are deceased.
132 • Appendix C
Table C.8 Number of enumeration areas completed by month, according to region, Ethiopia
Mini-DHS 2019
Month
Region July August September October November Total
Tigray 7 11 7 0 0 25
Afar 13 9 3 0 0 25
Amhara 11 17 6 0 1 35
Oromia 13 16 6 0 0 35
Somali 10 10 5 0 0 25
Benishangul-Gumuz 6 10 4 4 1 25
SNNPR 11 20 4 0 0 35
Gambela 6 15 4 0 0 25
Harari 7 11 7 0 0 25
Addis Ababa 0 9 16 0 0 25
Dire Dawa 7 10 8 0 0 25
Percent 29.8 45.2 23.0 1.3 0.7 100.0
Total 91 138 70 4 2 305
Note: Enumeration areas are classified by month according to the date by which the last biomarker
questionnaire in the enumeration area was completed.
Appendix C • 133
EMDHS CONTRIBUTORS Appendix D
ETHIOPIAN PUBLIC HEALTH INSTITUTE (EPHI)
Mr. Abebe Bekele ........................ Principal Investigator
Mr. Geremew Gonfa .................... National Survey Coordinator
TECHNICAL STAFF
Mr. Terefe Gelibo ........................ Survey Manager
Mrs. Alemtsehay Beru ................. Survey Technical Expert
Mr. Jemal Ayalew ........................ Data Manager
Ministry of Health
Prof. Wakgari Deresa Shegaw Mulu
Wubaye Weaelegn Teklay Kidane
Zerihun Hika Hilina Dejene
Abraham Alemeyehu Sheleme Humnesa
Teklay Kidane
Appendix D • 135
United States Agency for International Development
Gebeyehu Abelti Doug Arbucki
Olivia Padis Hilina Worku
ICF
Christian Reed Alemtsehay Beru
Trevor Croft Mahmoud Elkasabi
World Bank
Wendimsiyameregn Mekasha Dr. Yonas Regasa
UNICEF
Martha Kibur Agazi Ameha
Mekiya Feki
BMGF
Ali Karim
DFID
Luwam Teshome
FIELD STAFF
Regional Supervisors/Coordinators
Gemechu Gudeta Yared Gashawbeza
Shishay Wahdey Getahun Hibdye
Aklilu Negash Asfaw Berta
Minda Wasie Amare Lisanu
Abebe Minda Fitsum Belay
Habtamu Asnake
136 • Appendix D
Interviewers
Rahel Abraham Semira Bedru
Tinsae Fiseha Hanan Husien
Eyerusalem Abera Teamir Daniel
Etaferaw Elifiyos Alem Mulugeta
Tsehay Tegegn Mekdes Mamush
Aysha Kedir Amriya Misra
Abeba Getie Heriya Abdilkader
Genet Kiflemariam Simegn Girma
Tensae Tsega Feruza Ali
Sara Arega Kidist Alemu
Fetihya Mohammed Betelihem Tenaw
Eskedar Shume Ribka Getachew
Addis Yenealem Samrawit Tufa
Tenaye Geremew Meseret Abera
Hayat Ibrahim Tibeyin Wondwosen
Menbere Yedemie Tsehay Birhane
Redeat Ali Rigbey Birhanu
Aster Alemayehu Rahel Abay
Selamawit Bekele Hawi Defar
Bitanya Sinshaw Marge Gonfa
Eyerusalem Haile Tsedey Bedasa
Emebet Hunegnaw Dureti Ahmed
Mekdes Bililign Misrak Mulugeta
Genet Teshome Helen Birhane
Almaz Kebede Meseret Hailu
Betelehem Mehari Lidia Gahenov
Ebise Mideta Eman Ahmed
Melat Dendene Azeb Mesfin
Meskerem Matewos Abrehet Fisseha
Marta Aklilu Ahlam Mohammed
Muluberhan Alemu Yemsrach Hanania
Azeb Mesfin Bezawit Girma
Data Quality
Biruktait Mekonen Kalkidan Teka
Tizita Achiko Hayat Abdurahman
Kebedu Meseret Yordanos Alem
Kidist Tebebu Blen Merdekios
Tigist Mamo Metages Yohannes
Emnet Teklu Dagmawit Asaye
Terefech Bayou Berhan Wangore
Mahlet Worku Kedija Nuruhusien
Semhal Asfaw Merkeb Zeray
Selamawit Aseffa Yelshaday Shewangzawe
Hiwot Damtew Sinidu Desalegn
Azeb Assefa Hana Mergia
Enkuwork Abebe Blen Alemayehu
Nebyat Afework Tsiyon Endale
Genet Nega
Appendix D • 137
Field Supervisors
Yonas Hailu Biniyam Nigussie
Kirubel Dagnaw Yalemgeta Biyazin
Gezu Girma Addisu Molla
Tadesse Sahle Deneke Gebre
Musie Belachew Samuel Keede
Teshome Worke Yafet Demeke
Segni Dufera Gemeda Dale
Yonas Feleke Hayat Abdurahman
Abdisa Abate Yordanos Alem
Hasna Musema Blen Merdekios
Endrias Asfaw Metages Yohannes
Yidnkachw Abebe Bilisa Abate
Yonas Assegid Adugna Dufera
Mezinew Sintayehu Sirak Assefa
Zerihun Alemu Nigussie Yunkura
Ketema Birhane
Listers
Fitsum Fiseha Abreham Markos
Yared Kebede Teshome Mezgebu
Abeshu Shuba Abebe Muche
Beshatu Duguma Daniel Molla
Ayele Kumssa Adisu Asefa
Mussie Assefa Wasihun Zewdu
Zeleke Mengist Adinaw Makebo
Misganaw Adino Degena Dahrey
Mamaru Molla Dawit Fikadu
Gizaw Ababu Yikeber Argachew
Yitayeh Belstie Tilahun Saol
Yididiya Bergena Afeworki Teklie
Fekadu Nigussie Belay Debalkie
Mestawot Wondimu Lemlem Yohannes
Lulet Aman Elias Habtamu
Endris Gashaw Edom Getu
Mulualem Astatikie Teferi Gizaw
Salualem Kasahun Sisay Gedamu
Ayinabeba Achamie Alemayehu Etana
Mulugeta Melese Getaw Kume
Abreham Shawul Maserasha Desalegn
Elsabet Ayele Daniel Bekele
Tadesse Yirga Ephrem Tedla
Taye Anbessie Sintayehu Mekuriaw
Dechassa Bekele Birtukan Debebe
Endale Dereje Elias Addis
Tesfalem Habtmariam Amarech Geremew
Amsalu Jembere Reditu Zerfu
Dessie Kebede Habib Sabir
Dawit Belay Hanna Aderaw
Chala Dibaba Agazie Alemu
Firehiwot Temesgen Kenenisa Tegenu
Marshet Nigussie Kaleb Kanito
138 • Appendix D
Kebebe Adugna Zegeye Gelan
Nigatu Nasir Sanbato Tamiru
Seid Mohammed Kibrom Habtu
Kaba Firdisa Aster Yaregal
Getnet Yalew Solomon Adissie
Sewunet Abayneh Mohamed Tefera
Diro Tolesa Sewunet Abayneh
Iranfechisa Lechisa
Listing Supervisors
Abraham Irena Chale Yilemen
Hana Solomon Belete Feyera
Cheru Korie Martha Alemu
Demeke Tarekegn
REPORT WRITING
Abebe Bekele Daniel Nigatu
Geremew Gonfa Asnakech Habtamu
Tefera Tadele Abate Sidelel
Girum Taye Dawit Tessentu
Theodros Getachew Wokgari Deresa
Gebeyaw Molla Firehiwot Mesfin
Misrak Getnet Yonas Regasa
Habtamu Teklie Jemal Ayalew
Atkure Defar Martha Kibur
Tsegaye Getachew Mekiya Feki
Ambaye Tadese Agazi Ameha
Ashenif Tadele Tadese Kebebe
Appendix D • 139
ICF
Christian Reed.............................. Survey Manager
Alemtsehay Beru.......................... South-to-South Consultant
Faye Chemeda.............................. Data Processing Specialist
Lady Ortiz-Parra .......................... Data Processing Specialist
Trevor Croft ................................. Senior Technical Director
Joy Fishel ..................................... Project Manager
Shonda Gaylord ........................... Biomarker Specialist
Mahmoud Elkasabi ...................... Senior Lead Sampling Statistician
Toni Jones .................................... Procurement Specialist
Elizabeth Britton .......................... Senior IT Asset Specialist
Gbaike Ajayi ................................ Technical Reviewer
Metahan Traore ............................ Technical Reviewer
Christina Whang .......................... Technical Reviewer
Greg Edmondson ......................... Editor
Chris Gramer................................ Production Specialist
Joan Wardell ................................ Production Specialist
Natalie Shattuck ........................... Production Specialist
Tom Fish ...................................... Geospatial Analyst
Sally Zweimueller ........................ Communications Specialist
Annette McFarland ...................... Communications Specialist
140 • Appendix D
QUESTIONNAIRES Appendix E
Appendix E • 141
FORMATTING DATE: 25 Feb 2019
ENGLISH LANGUAGE: 02 Jan 2019
ETHIOPIA MINI DEMOGRAPHIC AND HEALTH SURVEY 2019
HOUSEHOLD QUESTIONNAIRE
ETHIOPIA
ETHIOPIAN PUBLIC HEALTH INSTITUTE
IDENTIFICATION
PLACE NAME
INTERVIEWER VISITS
1 2 3 FINAL VISIT
DATE DAY
MONTH
YEAR
INTERVIEWER'S
NAME INT. NO.
RESULT* RESULT*
Appendix E • 143
THIS PAGE IS INTENTIONALLY BLANK
144 • Appendix E
INTRODUCTION AND CONSENT
Hello. My name is _______________________________________. I am working with the Ethiopian Public Health Institute.
We are conducting a survey about health and other topics all over Ethiopia. The information we collect will help the
government to plan health services. Your household was selected for the survey. I would like to ask you some questions about
your household. The questions usually take about 15 to 20 minutes. All of the answers you give will be confidential and will not
be shared with anyone other than members of our survey team. You don't have to be in the survey, but we hope you will agree
to answer the questions since your views are important. If I ask you any question you don't want to answer, just let me know
and I will go on to the next question or you can stop the interview at any time. In case you need more information about the
survey, you may contact the person listed on this card.
MINUTES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Appendix E • 145
HOUSEHOLD SCHEDULE
LINE USUAL RESIDENTS RELATIONSHIP SEX RESIDENCE AGE ELIGIBILITY EVER ATTENDED CURRENT/RECENT
NO. AND VISITORS TO HEAD OF SCHOOL SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
HOUSEHOLD
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 9 11 16 17 18 19
Please give me the names of What is the Is Does Did How old is CIRCLE CIRCLE Has What is the highest level Did During [this/that] school
the persons who usually live relationship of (NAME) (NAME) (NAME) (NAME)? LINE LINE (NAME) of school (NAME) has (NAME) year, what level and
in your household and guests (NAME) to the male or usually stay NUMBER NUMBER ever attended? attend grade or year [is/was]
of the household who stayed head of the female? live here OF ALL OF ALL attended school at (NAME) attending?
here last night, starting with household? here? last WOMEN CHILDREN school? What is the highest any time
the head of the household. night? AGE AGE 0-5 grade or year (NAME) during the
15-49 completed at that level? 2011 E.C.
school
year?
01 1 2 1 2 1 2 01 01 1 2 1 2
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
02 02 02
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
03 03 03
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
04 04 04
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
05 05 05
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
06 06 06
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
07 07 07
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
08 08 08
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
09 09 09
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
10 10 10
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
2A) Just to make sure that I have a complete listing: are there CODES FOR Q. 3: RELATIONSHIP TO HEAD OF HH CODES FOR Qs. 17 AND 19: EDUCATION
any other people such as small children or infants that we ADD TO NO 01 = HEAD 08 = BROTHER OR SISTER LEVEL GRADE
YES
have not listed? TABLE 02 = WIFE OR HUSBAND09 = NIECE/NEPHEW 0 = PRESCHOOL 00 = LESS THAN 1 YEAR
2B) Are there any other people who may not be members of 03 = SON OR DAUGHTER10 = OTHER RELATIVE 1 = PRIMARY COMPLETED
your family, such as domestic servants, lodgers, or friends ADD TO NO 04 = SON-IN-LAW OR 11 = ADOPTED/FOSTER/ 2 = SECONDARY (USE '00' FOR Q. 17 ONLY.
YES
who usually live here? TABLE DAUGHTER-IN_LAW STEPCHILD 3 = TECHNICAL/ THIS CODE IS NOT ALLOWED
2C) Are there any guests or temporary visitors staying here, or 05 = GRANDCHILD 12 = NOT RELATED VOCATIONAL FOR Q. 19.)
anyone else who stayed here last night, who have not been ADD TO NO 06 = PARENT 98 = DON'T KNOW 4 = HIGHER 98 = DON'T KNOW
YES
listed? TABLE 07 = PARENT-IN-LAW 8 = DON'T KNOW
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
12 12 12
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
13 13 13
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
14 14 14
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
15 15 15
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
16 16 16
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
17 17 17
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
18 18 18
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
19 19 19
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2 1 2
20 20 20
NEXT LINE NEXT LINE
CODES FOR Q. 3: RELATIONSHIP TO HEAD OF HH CODES FOR Qs. 17 AND 19: EDUCATION
01 = HEAD 08 = BROTHER OR SISTER LEVEL GRADE
02 = WIFE OR HUSBAND09 = NIECE/NEPHEW 0 = PRESCHOOL 00 = LESS THAN 1 YEAR
03 = SON OR DAUGHTER10 = OTHER RELATIVE 1 = PRIMARY COMPLETED
04 = SON-IN-LAW OR 11 = ADOPTED/FOSTER/ 2 = SECONDARY (USE '00' FOR Q. 17 ONLY.
DAUGHTER-IN_LAW STEPCHILD 3 = TECHNICAL/ THIS CODE IS NOT ALLOWED
05 = GRANDCHILD 12 = NOT RELATED VOCATIONAL FOR Q. 19.)
06 = PARENT 98 = DON'T KNOW 4 = HIGHER 98 = DON'T KNOW
07 = PARENT-IN-LAW 8 = DON'T KNOW
146 • Appendix E
HOUSEHOLD CHARACTERISTICS
101 What is the main source of drinking water for members of PIPED WATER
your household? PIPED INTO DWELLING ................ 11
PIPED TO YARD/PLOT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 109
PIPED TO NEIGHBOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
PUBLIC TAP/STANDPIPE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
RAINWATER ........................... 51
TANKER TRUCK ........................ 61
CART WITH SMALL TANK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
SURFACE WATER (RIVER/DAM/
LAKE/POND/STREAM/CANAL/
IRRIGATION CHANNEL) ................ 81
BOTTLED WATER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91 109
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
104 How long does it take to go there, get water, and come
back? MINUTES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
109 What kind of toilet facility do members of your household FLUSH OR POUR FLUSH TOILET
usually use? FLUSH TO PIPED SEWER SYSTEM . . . . . . . . 11
FLUSH TO SEPTIC TANK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
FLUSH TO PIT LATRINE ................ 13
FLUSH TO SOMEWHERE ELSE . . . . . . . . . . 14
IF NOT POSSIBLE TO DETERMINE, ASK FLUSH, DON'T KNOW WHERE .......... 15
PERMISSION TO OBSERVE THE FACILITY. PIT LATRINE
VENTILATED IMPROVED PIT LATRINE . . . . . 21
PIT LATRINE WITH SLAB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
PIT LATRINE WITHOUT SLAB/OPEN PIT . . . . . 23
COMPOSTING TOILET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
BUCKET TOILET ........................ 41
HANGING TOILET/HANGING LATRINE . . . . . . . . 51
NO FACILITY/BUSH/FIELD ................ 61 113
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
110 Do you share this toilet facility with other households? YES .................................... 1
NO .................................... 2 112
111 Including your own household, how many households NO. OF HOUSEHOLDS
use this toilet facility? IF LESS THAN 10 . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0
10 OR MORE HOUSEHOLDS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
DON'T KNOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
113 What type of fuel does your household mainly use for ELECTRICITY ........................... 01
cooking? LPG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 02
NATURAL GAS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 03
BIOGAS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 04
KEROSENE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 05
CHARCOAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 06
WOOD ................................. 07
STRAW/SHRUBS/GRASS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 08
AGRICULTURAL CROP ................... 09
ANIMAL DUNG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
114 Is the cooking usually done in the house, in a separate IN THE HOUSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
building, or outdoors? IN A SEPARATE BUILDING ................ 2
OUTDOORS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
116
OTHER 6
(SPECIFY)
117 Does this household own any livestock, herds, other farm YES .................................... 1
animals, or poultry? NO .................................... 2 119
d) Camels? d) CAMELS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
119 Does any member of this household own any agricultural YES .................................... 1
land? NO .................................... 2 121
123 Does any member of this household have a bank YES .................................... 1
account or microfinance savings account? NO .................................... 2
124 Is your household receiving cash or food from the Safety YES .................................... 1
Net Program? NO .................................... 2
126 Does your household own this dwelling, occupy this OWNED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
dwelling free of charge (or subsidized ????), or rent this FREE OF CHARGE OR SUBSIDIZED . . . . . . . . . . 2
dwelling from the kebele, an agency, an employer, or RENTED FROM KEBELE/AGENCY/EMPLOYER/
from individuals? INDIVIDUALS ........................ 3
OTHER 6
(SPECIFY)
Appendix E • 147
ADDITIONAL HOUSEHOLD CHARACTERISTICS
NO. QUESTIONS AND FILTERS CODING CATEGORIES SKIP
142 OBSERVE MAIN MATERIAL OF THE FLOOR OF THE NATURAL FLOOR
DWELLING. EARTH/SAND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
DUNG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
RECORD OBSERVATION. RUDIMENTARY FLOOR
WOOD PLANKS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
PALM/BAMBOO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
FINISHED FLOOR
PARQUET OR POLISHED WOOD ....... 31
VINYL OR ASPHALT STRIPS . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
CERAMIC TILES ..................... 33
CEMENT . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
CARPET . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
MINUTES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
148 • Appendix E
INTERVIEWER'S OBSERVATIONS
TO BE FILLED IN AFTER COMPLETING INTERVIEW
SUPERVISOR'S OBSERVATIONS
EDITOR'S OBSERVATIONS
Appendix E • 149
150 • Appendix E
FORMATTING DATE: 19 Mar 2019
ENGLISH LANGUAGE: 04 Jan 2019
ETHIOPIA MINI DEMOGRAPHIC AND HEALTH SURVEY 2019
WOMAN'S QUESTIONNAIRE
ETHIOPIA
ETHIOPIAN PUBLIC HEALTH INSTITUTE
IDENTIFICATION
PLACE NAME
CLUSTER NUMBER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
INTERVIEWER VISITS
1 2 3 FINAL VISIT
DATE DAY
MONTH
YEAR
INTERVIEWER'S
NAME INT. NO.
RESULT* RESULT*
LANGUAGE OF
QUESTIONNAIRE** 0 4 LANGUAGE OF
INTERVIEW**
NATIVE LANGUAGE
OF RESPONDENT**
TRANSLATOR USED
(YES = 1, NO = 2)
LANGUAGE OF
QUESTIONNAIRE** ENGLISH **LANGUAGE CODES:
01 AMARIGNA 03 TIGRIGNA 06 OTHER
02 OROMIGNA 04 ENGLISH
Appendix E • 151
INTRODUCTION AND CONSENT
Hello. My name is _______________________________________. I am working with the Ethiopian Public Health Institute. We are
conducting a survey about health and other topics all over Ethiopia. The information we collect will help the government to plan health
services. Your household was selected for the survey. The questions usually take about 30 to 60 minutes. All of the answers you give will be
confidential and will not be shared with anyone other than members of our survey team. You don't have to be in the survey, but we hope you
will agree to answer the questions since your views are important. If I ask you any question you don't want to answer, just let me know and I
will go on to the next question or you can stop the interview at any time.
In case you need more information about the survey, you may contact the person listed on the card that has already been given to your
household.
MINUTES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
101A Before I begin the interview, could you please bring your and your children’s Birth Certificate, Maternal and Child
Immunisation Card, and any immunisation record from a private health provider, or any other document where the
date of birth is officially registered for your self or your children? We will need to refer to those documents.
YEAR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
108 What is the highest level of school you attended: PRIMARY ............................. 1
primary, secondary, or higher? SECONDARY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
TECHNICAL/VOCATIONAL. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
HIGHER ............................. 4
111 Now I would like you to read this sentence to me. CANNOT READ AT ALL .................. 1
ABLE TO READ ONLY PART OF
SHOW CARD TO RESPONDENT. THE SENTENCE. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
ABLE TO READ WHOLE SENTENCE . . . . . . . . . . 3
IF RESPONDENT CANNOT READ WHOLE NO CARD WITH REQUIRED
SENTENCE, LANGUAGE 4
PROBE: Can you read any part of the sentence to me? (SPECIFY LANGUAGE)
BLIND/VISUALLY IMPAIRED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
152 • Appendix E
SECTION 2. REPRODUCTION
NO. QUESTIONS AND FILTERS CODING CATEGORIES SKIP
201 Now I would like to ask about all the births you have YES ................................... 1
had during your life. Have you ever given birth? NO ................................... 2 206
202 Do you have any sons or daughters to whom you have YES ................................... 1
given birth who are now living with you? NO ................................... 2 204
204 Do you have any sons or daughters to whom you have YES ................................... 1
given birth who are alive but do not live with you? NO ................................... 2 206
205 a) How many sons are alive but do not live with you?
a) SONS ELSEWHERE ..........
b) And how many daughters are alive but do not live
with you? b) DAUGHTERS ELSEWHERE .....
IF NONE, RECORD '00'.
206 Have you ever given birth to a boy or girl who was born
alive but later died?
YES ................................... 1
IF NO, PROBE: Any baby who cried, who made any NO ................................... 2 208
movement, sound, or effort to breathe, or who showed
any other signs of life even if for a very short time?
YES NO
PROBE AND
CORRECT 201-208
AS NECESSARY.
Appendix E • 153
SECTION 2. REPRODUCTION
211 Now I would like to record the names of all your births, whether still alive or not, starting with the first one you had.
RECORD NAMES OF ALL THE BIRTHS IN 212. RECORD TWINS AND TRIPLETS ON SEPARATE ROWS. IF THERE ARE MORE THAN 10
BIRTHS, USE AN ADDITIONAL QUESTIONNAIRE, STARTING WITH THE SECOND ROW.
212 213 214 215 216 217 218 219 220 221
IF ALIVE: IF ALIVE: IF ALIVE: IF DEAD:
What Is Were On what day, Is How old Is RECORD How old was (NAME) Were there
name was (NAME) any of month, and year (NAME) was (NAME) HOUSEHOLD when (he/she) died? any other
given to a boy or these was (NAME) still (NAME) at living LINE live births
your (first/ a girl? births born? alive? (NAME)'s with NUMBER OF IF '12 MONTHS' OR between
next) twins? last you? CHILD. '1 YR', ASK: Did (NAME OF
baby? birthday? RECORD '00' (NAME) have PREVIOUS
IF CHILD NOT (his/her) first BIRTH) and
LISTED IN birthday? (NAME),
HOUSEHOLD. including
THEN ASK: Exactly any children
how many months old who died
was (NAME) when after birth?
RECORD (he/she) died?
NAME. RECORD RECORD DAYS IF
AGE IN LESS THAN 1
BIRTH COMP- MONTH; MONTHS IF
HISTORY LETED LESS THAN TWO
NUMBER. YEARS. YEARS; OR YEARS.
01 AGE IN HOUSEHOLD
DAY DAYS 1
BOY 1 SING 1 YES 1 YEARS YES 1 LINE NUMBER
MONTH MONTHS 2
GIRL 2 MULT 2 NO 2 NO 2
YEARS 3
(SKIP (NEXT BIRTH)
YEAR TO 220)
154 • Appendix E
SECTION 2. REPRODUCTION
NO. QUESTIONS AND FILTERS CODING CATEGORIES SKIP
222 Have you had any live births since the birth of (NAME YES ................................... 1
OF LAST BIRTH)? (RECORD BIRTH(S) IN TABLE)
NO ................................... 2
NONE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0
Appendix E • 155
SECTION 3. CONTRACEPTION
301 Now I would like to talk about family planning - the various ways or methods that a couple can use to delay or avoid a
pregnancy. Have you ever heard of (METHOD)?
14 Have you heard of any other ways or methods that women or men YES, MODERN METHOD
can use to avoid pregnancy?
A
(SPECIFY)
YES, TRADITIONAL METHOD
B
(SPECIFY)
NO ................................ Y
156 • Appendix E
SECTION 3. CONTRACEPTION
303 Are you or your partner currently doing something or YES ................................... 1
using any method to delay or avoid getting pregnant? NO ................................... 2 305
304A Where did you obtain (METHOD FROM Q.304) the last PUBLIC SECTOR
time? GOVERNMENT HOSPITAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
GOVERNMENT HEALTH CENTER . . . . . . . 12
IF MORE THAN ONE METHOD CIRCLED IN Q.304 GOVERNMENT HEALTH POST . . . . . . . . . . 13
ASK ABOUT THE METHOD THAT IS HIGHEST IN PUBLIC PHARMACY. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
OTHER PUBLIC SECTOR
PROBE TO IDENTIFY THE TYPE OF SOURCE. 16
(SPECIFY)
IF UNABLE TO DETERMINE IF PUBLIC OR PRIVATE NGO
SECTOR, WRITE THE NAME OF THE PLACE. NGO HEALTH FACILITY . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
OTHER NGO
26
(NAME OF PLACE) (SPECIFY)
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
305 Are you currently married or living together with a man YES, CURRENTLY MARRIED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
401
as if married? YES, LIVING WITH A MAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
NO, NOT IN UNION . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
306 Have you ever been married or lived together with a YES, FORMERLY MARRIED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
man as if married? YES, LIVED WITH A MAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
NO ................................... 3 401
307 What is your marital status now: are you widowed, WIDOWED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
divorced, or separated? DIVORCED . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
SEPARATED ........................... 3
Appendix E • 157
SECTION 4. PREGNANCY AND POSTNATAL CARE
402 CHECK 215. RECORD THE BIRTH HISTORY NUMBER IN 403 AND THE NAME AND SURVIVAL STATUS IN 404 FOR EACH
BIRTH IN 2006-2011 E.C. ASK THE QUESTIONS ABOUT ALL OF THESE BIRTHS. BEGIN WITH THE LAST BIRTH.
IF THERE ARE MORE THAN 2 BIRTHS, USE LAST COLUMN OF ADDITIONAL QUESTIONNAIRE(S).
Now I would like to ask some questions about your children born in the last five years. (We will talk about each separately.)
403 BIRTH HISTORY NUMBER FROM 212 LAST BIRTH NEXT-TO-LAST BIRTH
IN BIRTH HISTORY. BIRTH BIRTH
HISTORY HISTORY
NUMBER . . . . . . . . . . NUMBER . . . . . . . . . .
408 Did you see anyone for antenatal care for YES ..................... 1
this pregnancy? NO ..................... 2
(SKIP TO 420)
OTHER PERSON
PROBE TO IDENTIFY EACH TYPE OF TRADITIONAL BIRTH
PERSON AND RECORD ALL ATTENDANT . . . . . . . . . . F
MENTIONED.
OTHER X
(SPECIFY)
158 • Appendix E
SECTION 4. PREGNANCY AND POSTNATAL CARE
DON'T KNOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
OTHER X
(SPECIFY)
420 During this pregnancy, were you given or
did you buy any iron tablets? YES ..................... 1
NO ..................... 2
(SKIP TO 429)
SHOW TABLETS. DON'T KNOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
421 During the whole pregnancy, for how
many days did you take the tablets? DAYS .....
Appendix E • 159
SECTION 4. PREGNANCY AND POSTNATAL CARE
429 Who assisted with the delivery of HEALTH PERSONNEL HEALTH PERSONNEL
(NAME)? DOCTOR ............. A DOCTOR ............. A
NURSE . . . . . . . . . . . . B NURSE . . . . . . . . . . . . B
Anyone else? MIDWIFE ............. C MIDWIFE ............. C
HEALTH OFFICER . . . . . . . D HEALTH OFFICER . . . . . . . D
PROBE FOR THE TYPE(S) OF HEALTH EXTENSION HEALTH EXTENSION
PERSON(S) AND RECORD ALL WORKER .......... E WORKER .......... E
MENTIONED.
OTHER PERSON OTHER PERSON
TRADITIONAL BIRTH TRADITIONAL BIRTH
IF RESPONDENT SAYS NO ONE ATTENDANT . . . . . . . . . . F ATTENDANT . . . . . . . . . . F
ASSISTED, PROBE TO DETERMINE
WHETHER ANY ADULTS WERE OTHER OTHER
PRESENT AT THE DELIVERY. X X
(SPECIFY) (SPECIFY)
NO ONE ASSISTED . . . . . . . . . . Y NO ONE ASSISTED . . . . . . . . . . Y
26 26
(NAME OF PLACE) (SPECIFY) (SPECIFY)
NGO NGO
HEALTH FACILITY . . . . . . . 31 HEALTH FACILITY . . . . . . . 31
OTHER NGO HEALTH OTHER NGO HEALTH
FACILITY FACILITY
36 36
(SPECIFY) (SPECIFY)
46 46
(SPECIFY) (SPECIFY)
OTHER 96 OTHER 96
(SPECIFY) (SPECIFY)
(SKIP TO 449) (SKIP TO 464)
160 • Appendix E
SECTION 4. PREGNANCY AND POSTNATAL CARE
DAYS . . . . . . . . . . 2
IF LESS THAN ONE DAY,
RECORD HOURS; WEEKS ....... 3
IF LESS THAN ONE WEEK,
RECORD DAYS. DON'T KNOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . 998
OTHER PERSON
TRADITIONAL BIRTH
ATTENDANT . . . . . . . . . . 21
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
DAYS . . . . . . . . . . 2
IF LESS THAN ONE DAY,
RECORD HOURS; WEEKS ....... 3
IF LESS THAN ONE WEEK,
RECORD DAYS. DON'T KNOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . 998
Appendix E • 161
SECTION 4. PREGNANCY AND POSTNATAL CARE
OTHER PERSON
TRADITIONAL BIRTH
ATTENDANT . . . . . . . . . . 21
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
DAYS . . . . . . . . . . 2
IF LESS THAN ONE DAY,
RECORD HOURS; WEEKS ....... 3
IF LESS THAN ONE WEEK,
RECORD DAYS. DON'T KNOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . 998
162 • Appendix E
SECTION 4. PREGNANCY AND POSTNATAL CARE
OTHER PERSON
TRADITIONAL BIRTH
ATTENDANT . . . . . . . . . . 21
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
46
(SPECIFY)
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
Appendix E • 163
SECTION 4. PREGNANCY AND POSTNATAL CARE
OTHER PERSON
TRADITIONAL BIRTH
ATTENDANT . . . . . . . . . . 21
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
164 • Appendix E
SECTION 4. PREGNANCY AND POSTNATAL CARE
(NAME OF PLACE) 26
(SPECIFY)
NGO
HEALTH FACILITY . . . . . . . 31
OTHER NGO HEALTH
FACILITY
36
(SPECIFY)
46
(SPECIFY)
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
(SKIP TO 457)
DAYS . . . . . . . . . . 2
IF LESS THAN ONE DAY,
RECORD HOURS; WEEKS ....... 3
IF LESS THAN ONE WEEK,
RECORD DAYS. DON'T KNOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . 998
Appendix E • 165
SECTION 4. PREGNANCY AND POSTNATAL CARE
OTHER PERSON
TRADITIONAL BIRTH
ATTENDANT . . . . . . . . . . 21
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
(NAME OF PLACE) 26
(SPECIFY)
NGO
HEALTH FACILITY . . . . . . . 31
OTHER NGO HEALTH
FACILITY
36
(SPECIFY)
46
(SPECIFY)
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
166 • Appendix E
SECTION 4. PREGNANCY AND POSTNATAL CARE
454 How many hours, days or weeks after the HOURS AFTER
birth of (NAME) did the first check take BIRTH ..... 1
place? DAYS AFTER
BIRTH ..... 2
IF LESS THAN ONE DAY, WEEKS AFTER
RECORD HOURS; BIRTH ..... 3
IF LESS THAN ONE WEEK,
RECORD DAYS. DON'T KNOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . 998
OTHER PERSON
TRADITIONAL BIRTH
ATTENDANT . . . . . . . . . . 21
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
Appendix E • 167
SECTION 4. PREGNANCY AND POSTNATAL CARE
(NAME OF PLACE) 26
(SPECIFY)
NGO
HEALTH FACILITY . . . . . . . 31
OTHER NGO HEALTH
FACILITY
36
(SPECIFY)
46
(SPECIFY)
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
464 Did you ever breastfeed (NAME)? YES ..................... 1 YES ..................... 1
(SKIP TO 466)
NO ..................... 2 NO ..................... 2
168 • Appendix E
SECTION 4. PREGNANCY AND POSTNATAL CARE
467 In the first three days after delivery, was YES ..................... 1
(NAME) given anything to drink other NO ..................... 2
than breast milk?
Appendix E • 169
SECTION 4. CHILD NUTRITION
479 CHECK 215 AND 218, ALL ROWS: NUMBER OF CHILDREN BORN IN 2009-2011 E.C. LIVING WITH THE
RESPONDENT
ONE OR MORE NONE
501A
480 Now I would like to ask you about liquids or foods that
(NAME FROM 479) had yesterday during the day or at
night. I am interested in whether your child had the item
I mention even if it was combined with other foods.
Did (NAME FROM 479) drink or eat: YES NO DK
a) Plain water? a) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 2 8
c) Clear broth? c) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 2 8
g) Yogurt? g) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 2 8
IF YES: How many times did (NAME) eat yogurt?
NUMBER OF
IF 7 OR MORE TIMES, RECORD '7'. TIMES ATE
q) Eggs? q) . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 2 8
482 Did (NAME FROM 479) eat any solid, semi-solid, or YES .................................... 1
soft foods yesterday during the day or at night? (GO BACK TO 480 TO RECORD
FOOD EATEN YESTERDAY)
IF ‘YES’ PROBE: What kind of solid, semi-solid or soft
foods did (NAME) eat? (THEN CONTINUE TO 483)
NO .................................... 2 501A
483 How many times did (NAME FROM 479) eat solid, semi-
solid, or soft foods yesterday during the day or at night? NUMBER OF TIMES ...................
170 • Appendix E
SECTION 5A. CHILD IMMUNIZATION (LAST BIRTH)
NO. QUESTIONS AND FILTERS CODING CATEGORIES SKIP
501A CHECK 215 IN THE BIRTH HISTORY: ANY BIRTHS IN 2008-2011 E.C.?
ONE OR MORE BIRTHS NO BIRTHS IN 2008-2011 E.C.
616
IN 2008-2011 E.C.
502A RECORD THE NAME AND BIRTH HISTORY NUMBER FROM 212 OF THE LAST CHILD BORN IN 2008-2011
E.C.
504A Do you have a card, mother and child book, or other YES, HAS ONLY A CARD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 507A
document where (NAME)'s vaccinations are written YES, HAS ONLY AN OTHER DOCUMENT . . . . 2
down? YES, HAS CARD AND OTHER DOCUMENT . . . . 3 507A
NO, NO CARD AND NO OTHER DOCUMENT . . 4
505A Did you ever have a vaccination card or mother and YES .................................. 1
child book for (NAME)? NO .................................. 2
507A May I see the card, mother and child book or other YES, ONLY CARD SEEN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
document where (NAME)'s vaccinations are written YES, ONLY OTHER DOCUMENT SEEN . . . . . . . 2
down? YES, CARD AND OTHER DOCUMENT SEEN . . 3
NO CARD AND NO OTHER DOCUMENT SEEN . . 4 511A
DPT-HEP.B-HIB/Pentavalent 1
DPT-HEP.B-HIB/Pentavalent 2
DPT-HEP.B-HIB/Pentavalent 3
PCV/Pneumoccal 1
PCV/Pneumoccal 2
PCV/Pneumoccal 3
ROTAVIRUS 1
ROTAVIRUS 2
MEASLES 1
MEASLES 2
514A Has (NAME) ever received oral polio vaccine, that is, YES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
about two drops in the mouth to prevent polio? NO .................................. 2
517A
DON'T KNOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
515A Did (NAME) receive the first oral polio vaccine in the FIRST TWO WEEKS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
first two weeks after birth or later? LATER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
516A How many times did (NAME) receive the oral polio
vaccine? NUMBER OF TIMES ..................
516A1 The last time (NAME) received the polio drops, did YES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
(NAME) also get an IPV injection in the right thigh to NO .................................. 2
protect against polio? DON'T KNOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
525A In the last six months, was (NAME) given a vitamin A YES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
dose like [this/any of these]? NO .................................. 2
DON'T KNOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Appendix E • 171
SECTION 5B. CHILD IMMUNIZATION (NEXT-TO-LAST BIRTH)
NO. QUESTIONS AND FILTERS CODING CATEGORIES SKIP
501B CHECK 215 IN THE BIRTH HISTORY: ANY MORE BIRTHS IN 2008-2011 E.C.?
MORE BIRTHS IN 2008-2011 E.C. NO MORE BIRTHS IN
600
2008-2011 E.C.
502B RECORD THE NAME AND BIRTH HISTORY NUMBER FROM 212 OF THE NEXT-TO-LAST CHILD BORN IN
2008-2011 E.C.
NAME OF NEXT-TO-
LAST BIRTH BIRTH HISTORY NUMBER . . . . . . . . . .
504B Do you have a card, mother and child book, or other YES, HAS ONLY A CARD . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 507B
document where (NAME)'s vaccinations are written YES, HAS ONLY AN OTHER DOCUMENT . . . . . 2
down? YES, HAS CARD AND OTHER DOCUMENT . . . . . 3 507B
NO, NO CARD AND NO OTHER DOCUMENT . . 4
505B Did you ever have a vaccination card or mother and YES .................................... 1
child book for (NAME)? NO .................................... 2
507B May I see the card, mother and child book, or other YES, ONLY CARD SEEN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
document where (NAME)'s vaccinations are written YES, ONLY OTHER DOCUMENT SEEN . . . . . . . . 2
down? YES, CARD AND OTHER DOCUMENT SEEN . . 3
NO CARD AND NO OTHER DOCUMENT SEEN. . 4 511B
NAME OF NEXT-TO-
LAST BIRTH BIRTH HISTORY NUMBER . . . . . . . . . .
DPT-HEP.B-HIB/Pentavalent 1
DPT-HEP.B-HIB/Pentavalent 2
DPT-HEP.B-HIB/Pentavalent 3
PCV/Pneumoccal 1
PCV/Pneumoccal 2
PCV/Pneumoccal 3
ROTAVIRUS 1
ROTAVIRUS 2
MEASLES 1
MEASLES 2
514B Has (NAME) ever received oral polio vaccine, that is, YES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
about two drops in the mouth to prevent polio? NO .................................... 2
517B
DON'T KNOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
515B Did (NAME) receive the first oral polio vaccine in the FIRST TWO WEEKS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
first two weeks after birth or later? LATER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
516B How many times did (NAME) receive the oral polio
vaccine? NUMBER OF TIMES ...................
516B1 The last time (NAME) received the polio drops, did YES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
(NAME) also get an IPV injection in the right thigh to NO .................................... 2
protect against polio? DON'T KNOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
525B In the last six months, was (NAME) given a vitamin A YES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
dose like [this/any of these]? NO .................................... 2
DON'T KNOW . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
526B CHECK 215 IN BIRTH HISTORY: ANY MORE BIRTHS IN 2008-2011 E.C.?
172 • Appendix E
SECTION 6. INFORMATION ABOUT HEALTH FACILITY WHERE VACCINATION CARDS ARE KEPT
NO. QUESTIONS AND FILTERS CODING CATEGORIES SKIP
600 CHECK 504A, 507A, 504B AND 507B: VACCINATION CARD SEEN?
NO CARD AND NO OTHER CARD OR OTHER
616
DOCUMENT SEEN DOCUMENT SEEN
601 Did any of your children born in 2008 E.C. or later ever YES .................. 1
receive any vaccination at a health faciltiy (including NO ............................. 2
616
governement hospitals, health centers/posts, NGO DON'T KNOW ............... 8
facilities, or private hospitals/clinics)?
ASK RESPONDENT FOR CONSENT TO COPY VACCINATION DATES FROM THE CHILDREN'S HEALTH CARDS OR
FAMILY FOLDER OR IMMUNISATION REGISTRATION BOOK KEPT IN A HEALTH FACILITY
602 As part of this survey, we would like to visit the health facility in which your children got vaccinated. With your permission, our
health facility team will visit the health center and copy the vaccination records from the health cards, family folder or
immunisation registration book directly to the same questionnaire I am using right now for our interview. The information will be
kept confidential and will not be shared with anyone other than members of our survey team. We hope you will allow access to
the health card, family folder or immunisation registration book because information about your children's vaccinations is very
important. The information will complement the information that we obtained from you in this interview. Many dangerous
childhood illnesses such as measles or tetanus can be prevented through timely and effective vaccination. The information from
the cards will assist the government to develop programs to protect children from vaccine preventable diseases and reduce
childhood mortality and morbidity in Ethiopia.
Will you allow (NAME OF CHILD) to have his/her vaccination records copied from his/her health card, family folder or
immunisation registration book kept at the health facility?
(SIGN) (SIGN)
REFUSED 2 REFUSED 2
(THEN SKIP TO 615) (THEN SKIP TO 615)
RECORD CHILD'S FULL NAME, MOTHER'S FULL NAME, FATHER'S FULL NAME, CHILD'S KEBELE, TOWN, AND REGION, AND
NAME OF HEALTH FACILITY WHERE CHILD'S LAST VACCINATION WAS ADMINISTERED. BE SURE TO TAKE ADDRESS AND
LOCATION DESCRIPTION OF HEALTH FACILITY.
MONTH . . . . . . . . . MONTH . . . . . . . . . .
YEAR YEAR . .
WOREDA WOREDA
MINUTES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Appendix E • 173
INTERVIEWER'S OBSERVATIONS
TO BE FILLED IN AFTER COMPLETING INTERVIEW
SUPERVISOR'S OBSERVATIONS
EDITOR'S OBSERVATIONS
174 • Appendix E
FORMATTING DATE: 19 Mar 2019
ENGLISH LANGUAGE: 02 Jan 2019
ETHIOPIA MINI DEMOGRAPHIC AND HEALTH SURVEYS 2019
ANTHROPOMETRY QUESTIONNAIRE
ETHIOPIA
ETHIOPIAN PUBLIC HEALTH INSTITUTE
IDENTIFICATION
PLACE NAME
FIELDWORKER VISITS
1 2 3 FINAL VISIT
DATE DAY
FIELDWORKER'S MONTH
NAME
YEAR
NOTES:
TOTAL ELIGIBLE
CHILDREN
LANGUAGE OF
QUESTIONNAIRE** 0 4 LANGUAGE OF
INTERVIEW**
NATIVE LANGUAGE
OF RESPONDENT**
TRANSLATOR
(YES = 1, NO = 2)
LANGUAGE OF
QUESTIONNAIRE** ENGLISH **LANGUAGE CODES:
01 AMARIGNA 03 TIGRIGNA 06 OTHER
02 OROMIGNA 04 ENGLISH
Appendix E • 175
WEIGHT AND HEIGHT MEASUREMENT FOR CHILDREN AGE 0-5
101 CHECK COLUMN 11 IN HOUSEHOLD QUESTIONNAIRE. RECORD THE LINE NUMBER AND NAME FOR ALL ELIGIBLE CHILDREN 0-5
YEARS IN QUESTION 102; IF MORE THAN SIX CHILDREN, USE ADDITIONAL QUESTIONNAIRE(S).
104 CHECK 103: CHILD BORN IN 2006- YES ............... 1 YES ............... 1 YES ............... 1
2011 E.C.? NO ............... 2 NO ............... 2 NO ............... 2
(SKIP TO 114) (SKIP TO 114) (SKIP TO 114)
107 MEASURED LYING DOWN OR LYING DOWN ...... 1 LYING DOWN ...... 1 LYING DOWN ...... 1
STANDING UP? STANDING UP ...... 2 STANDING UP ...... 2 STANDING UP ...... 2
114 GO BACK TO 103 IN NEXT COLUMN OF THIS QUESTIONNAIRE OR IN THE FIRST COLUMN OF THE NEXT PAGE;
IF NO MORE CHILDREN, END INTERFVIEW.
176 • Appendix E
WEIGHT AND HEIGHT MEASUREMENT FOR CHILDREN AGE 0-5
104 CHECK 103: CHILD BORN IN 2006- YES ............... 1 YES ............... 1 YES ............... 1
2011 E.C.? NO ............... 2 NO ............... 2 NO ............... 2
(SKIP TO 114) (SKIP TO 114) (SKIP TO 114)
107 MEASURED LYING DOWN OR LYING DOWN ...... 1 LYING DOWN ...... 1 LYING DOWN ...... 1
STANDING UP? STANDING UP ...... 2 STANDING UP ...... 2 STANDING UP ...... 2
114 GO BACK TO 103 IN NEXT COLUMN OF THIS QUESTIONNAIRE OR IN THE FIRST COLUMN OF AN ADDITIONAL QUESTIONNAIRE;
IF NO MORE CHILDREN, END INTERVIEW.
Appendix E • 177
FIELDWORKER'S OBSERVATIONS
TO BE FILLED IN AFTER COMPLETING BIOMARKERS
SUPERVISOR'S OBSERVATIONS
EDITOR'S OBSERVATIONS
178 • Appendix E
ENGLISH FORMATTING DATE: 19 Mar 2019
ENGLISH LANGUAGE: 02 Jan 2019
ETHIOPIA MINI DEMOGRAPHIC AND HEALTH SURVEY 2019
HEALTH FACILITY QUESTIONNAIRE
ETHIOPIA
ETHIOPIAN PUBLIC HEALTH INSTITUTE
IDENTIFICATION
KEBELE
TOWN
WOREDA
ZONE
REGION
LOCATION DESCRIPTION
CLUSTER NUMBER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
HOUSEHOLD NUMBER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
MONTH
YEAR
NAME OF MOTHER
NAME OF FATHER
1 2 3 FINAL VISIT
DATE DAY
MONTH
YEAR
INTERVIEWER'S
NAME INT. NO.
RESULT* RESULT*
Appendix E • 179
INTRODUCTION AND CONSENT
Hello. My name is _______________________________________. I am working with the Ethiopian Public Health Institute. We are
conducting a survey about health and other topics all over Ethiopia. As part of this survey, we would like to visit health facilities in which
children born in 2008 E.C. or later were vaccinated. We have already recieved consent from the parent of the child, and with your
permission, we would like to copy the vaccination records from the health card, family folder or immunization registration book to the
questionnaire for the following child.
In case you need more information about the survey, you may contact the person listed on the letter that has already been shown to you.
MINUTES ......................
102 Have you located the vaccination records of (NAME OF YES CHILD'S INFORMATION SEEN . . . . . . . . . . 1 103
CHILD)? YES VACCINATION RECORDS LOCATED ,
BUT NO RECORD OF CHILD'S INFORMATION. . 2
NO, VACCINATION RECORDS NOT FOUND . . . . . 3 105
OTHER 6
(SPECIFY)
103 COPY CHILD’S DATE OF BIRTH (DAY, MONTH, AND DAY .......................................................
YEAR) FROM HEALTH FACILITY RECORD.
MONTH ............................................ ....
YEAR ................................
DPT-HEP.B-HIB (PENTAVALENT) 1
DPT-HEP.B-HIB (PENTAVALENT) 2
DPT-HEP.B-HIB (PENTAVALENT) 3
PNEUMOCOCCAL 1
PNEUMOCOCCAL 2
PNEUMOCOCCAL 3
ROTAVIRUS 1
ROTAVIRUS 2
MEASLES 1
MEASLES 2
105 In what type of facility did the visit take place? PUBLIC SECTOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
NGO . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
IF UNABLE TO DETERMINE IF PUBLIC OR PRIVATE PRIVATE SECTOR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
SECTOR, WRITE THE NAME OF THE PLACE.
OTHER 6
(SPECIFY)
MINUTES ......................
180 • Appendix E
02 Jan 2019
ETHIOPIA MINI DEMOGRAPHIC AND HEALTH SURVEY 2019
FIELDWORKER QUESTIONNAIRE
ETHIOPIA LANGUAGE OF
ETHIOPIAN PUBLIC HEALTH INSTITUTE QUESTIONNAIRE ENGLISH
NO. QUESTIONS AND FILTERS CODING CATEGORIES SKIP
100 What is your name?
NAME
INSTRUCTIONS
Information on all EMDHS field workers is collected as part of the EMDHS survey. Please fill out the questions below. The information you
provide will be part of the survey data file; however, your name will be removed and will not be part of the data file. Thank you for providing
the information needed.
ZONE CODE
108 Have you ever had a child who died? YES ................................... 1
NO ................................... 2
NO RELIGION .......................... 95
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
OTHER X
(SPECIFY)
OTHER 96
(SPECIFY)
115 Have you ever worked on a DHS survey prior to this YES ................................... 1
one? NO ................................... 2
116 Have you ever worked on any other survey prior to this YES ................................... 1
one (not a DHS)? NO ................................... 2
117 Were you already working for EPHI or CSA at the time YES, EPHI .......... 1
you were employed to work on this DHS? YES, CSA .......... 2
NO ................................... 3 119
Appendix E • 181
ADDITIONAL DHS PROGRAM RESOURCES
DHS Program Mobile App – Access key DHS Search DHS Program in your
indicators for 90 countries on your mobile device iTunes or Google Play store
(Apple, Android, or Windows).
Social Media – Follow The DHS Program and join the conversation. Stay up to date through:
Facebook LinkedIn
www.facebook.com/DHSprogram www.linkedin.com/
company/dhs-program
YouTube Blog
www.youtube.com/DHSprogram Blog.DHSprogram.com
Twitter
www.twitter.com/
DHSprogram