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Women's personal networks and recourse to prenatal care in Bamako
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 March 2022
Abstract
This study aims to determine the role played by the personal networks of mothers aged 25–40 in Bamako (Mali) in their recourse to prenatal care. Although education and household's economic situation remain important, our research shows that personal network matters in two ways. Prenatal follow-up is more adequate in small, dense, less centralized networks, a structure known to generating a higher level of bonding social capital and mutual support. Yet, the composition of networks is also important: those comprising the husband and neighbors/friends—without other family members—are associated with better prenatal care. In these more open networks, women are probably less subject to traditional social control. An unexpected outcome is that material support does not play a significative role; this may indicate that more specific measures are needed to identify the type of support useful, or that, in this context, normative aspects are more important.
- Type
- Research Paper
- Information
- Journal of Demographic Economics , Volume 88 , Special Issue 2: Exchanges in Family and Personal Configurations Beyond the Household , June 2022 , pp. 195 - 216
- Copyright
- Copyright © Université catholique de Louvain 2022
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