Uzbekistan Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2000
General Info
Coverage type
Country
Time period covered
July, 2000 - August, 2000
Series or system
Data type
Survey:
Cross-sectional - Household - Individual - Interview - Nationally representative - Urban-rural representative
Summary
Part of MICS2, an international survey initiative to monitor the situation of children and women, covering health, education, child protection and HIV/AIDS; it includes vaccination, contraceptive use and symptoms like diarrhea, cough and fever. The Uzbekistan MICS used a sample of 5,478 households of which 5,313 were interviewed. In those households, 7,959 eligible women ages 15-49 were identified; the response rate was 99.1%. Questionnaires were completed for 3,349 children; the response rate for children was 100%.
Keywords
Analgesics, Antenatal care, Antimalarials, Assets, BCG vaccines, Birth certificates, Birth control pills, Birth weight, Breastfeeding, Breathing difficulty, Child anthropometry, Child labor, Condoms, Congestion, Contraceptive implants, Contraceptives, Cough, DTP vaccines, Diaphragms, Diarrhea, Diarrheal diseases, Education, Employment, Family composition, Family size, Fever, Health care use, Health literacy, Hours worked, Household water treatment, IUDs, Immunization, Infant mortality, Injectable contraceptives, Insecticide-treated bednets, Iodine supplements, Literacy, Living conditions, Lower respiratory infections, Malaria, Malnutrition, Marital status, Measles vaccines, Mortality, Oral rehydration therapy, Parental survival, Polio vaccines, Postpartum amenorrhea, Poverty, Respiratory infections, Sanitation, School enrollment, Sexual abstinence, Sexual sterilization, Skilled birth attendants, Spermicides, Summary birth history, Tetanus toxoid vaccines, Traditional birth control, VCT, Vaccination cards, Vitamin A supplements, Waste disposal, Water supply
Citation
Contributors
Publisher
Suggested citation
United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), Ministry of Macroeconomics and Statistics (Uzbekistan). Uzbekistan Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2000. New York, United States: United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF).