Mongolia Reproductive Health Survey 2003
General Info
Coverage type
Country
Time period covered
September, 2003 - December, 2003
Data type
Survey:
Household - Individual - Interview - Nationally representative
Summary
The 2003 Mongolian Reproductive Health Survey (RHS) is a nationally representative population and health survey. The sample included 8,399 households. 9,314 women ages 15-49 were interviewed, as well as a subsample of 4,212 husbands.
The questionnaire covered fertility, infant mortality, family planning, antenatal care, pregnancy complications, and knowledge and attitudes of topics such as HIV/AIDS, STDs and family planning.
Keywords
Abortion, Adult mortality, Adverse effects of medical treatments, Age at first sex, Antenatal care, Antibiotics, Birth control pills, Birth weight, Blood transfusions, Breastfeeding, Breathing difficulty, Caesarean section, Child mortality, Chronic kidney diseases, Complete birth history, Condoms, Contraceptive implants, Contraceptives, Cough, Diarrhea, Digestive diseases, Drug consumption, Education, Education access, Electricity, Emergency care, Employment, Family composition, Family planning, Fever, Gall bladder and bile duct disease, Health care access, Health care use, Health literacy, Health promotion, Health status, Heart disease, Hospitals, Housing conditions, IUDs, Income, Infant mortality, Injectable contraceptives, Injections, Interstitial lung diseases, Iron supplements, Summary birth history, Literacy, Live births, Loans, Marital status, Mass media, Maternal age, Maternal conditions, Maternal health, Medicines, Menstruation, Mortality, Multiple births, Occupations, Oral rehydration therapy, Personal health expenditures, Pharmacies, Place of delivery, Postnatal care, Postpartum amenorrhea, Poverty, Pregnancy, Pregnancy complications, Preterm birth, Private health facilities, Public health facilities, Religion, Sanitation, School enrollment, Seizures, Sexual abstinence, Sexual behavior, Sexual sterilization, Skilled birth attendants, Stillbirths, Tobacco smoking, Traditional birth control, Traditional medicine, Water supply, Abortive outcome
Citation
Contributors
Publisher
Publication year
2004
Suggested citation
Ministry of Health (Mongolia), National Statistical Office of Mongolia, United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA). Mongolia Reproductive Health Survey 2003. Ulaanbaatar, Mongolia: National Statistical Office of Mongolia, 2004.