Yemen Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2006
General Info
Coverage type
Country
Time period covered
September, 2006 - September, 2006
Series or system
Data type
Survey:
Cross-sectional - Household - Individual - Interview - Nationally representative - Urban-rural representative
Summary
The Yemen Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS) 2006 is part of MICS3, an international survey initiative to monitor the situation of children and women. Topics commonly covered in MICS are maternal and child health, education, child protection and knowledge of HIV/AIDS. The 2006 Yemen MICS also covers child vaccinations, contraceptive use, and health symptoms such as diarrhea, cough and fever.
Keywords
Adult mortality, Agriculture, Analgesics, Antenatal care, Antibiotics, Assets, BCG vaccines, Birth certificates, Birth control pills, Birth weight, Breastfeeding, Breathing difficulty, Child care, Child health care, Child labor, Child mortality, Complete birth history, Condoms, Congestion, Contraceptive implants, Contraceptives, Cooking fuels, DTP vaccines, Diaphragms, Diarrhea, Diarrheal diseases, Disability, Domestic violence, Education, Electricity, Family composition, Family planning, Family size, Female infertility, Health care access, Health care services, Health care use, Health literacy, Health promotion, Health status, Hearing aids, Hearing loss, Hepatitis B vaccines, Hours worked, Household air pollution, Household deaths, Household water treatment, Housing materials, IUDs, Immunization, Infant mortality, Injectable contraceptives, Land ownership, Limited mobility, Literacy, Live births, Lower respiratory infections, Marital status, Marriage age, Measles vaccines, Medicines, Mortality, Multiple births, Oral rehydration therapy, PMTCT, Parental survival, Pentavalent vaccines, Pharmacies, Place of delivery, Polio vaccines, Pregnancy, Private health facilities, Public health facilities, Refrigeration, Sanitation, School enrollment, Seizures, Sexual abstinence, Sexual sterilization, Skilled birth attendants, Spermicides, Summary birth history, Telephones, Tetanus toxoid vaccines, Traditional birth control, Traditional medicine, Transportation, Upper respiratory infections, VCT, Vision loss, Vitamin A supplements, Water supply
Citation
Contributors
Publisher
Suggested citation
Ministry of Health (Yemen) and United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF). Yemen Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2006. New York, United States: United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF).