Mongolia Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2000
General Info
Coverage type
Country
Time period covered
May, 2000 - August, 2000
Series or system
Data type
Survey:
Household - Nationally representative - Urban-rural representative
Summary
The Mongolia Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2000 is part of MICS2, an international survey initiative to monitor the situation of children and women. The survey covers health, education, child protection, immunization, contraceptive use, and symptoms such as diarrhea, cough, and fever.
Keywords
Antenatal care, Ascariasis, Assets, BCG vaccines, Birth certificates, Body mass index, Breastfeeding, Breathing difficulty, Child anthropometry, Children, Community health clinics, Condoms, Congestion, Cooking fuels, Cough, DTP vaccines, Diarrhea, Diarrheal diseases, Disability, Education, Electricity, Employment, Family size, Fever, Health care use, Health literacy, Health promotion, Hearing loss, Height, Hepatitis vaccines, Hookworm disease, Hospitals, Hours worked, Household air pollution, Household heat, Household water treatment, Housing conditions, Housing materials, Idiopathic intellectual disability, Immunization, Iodine supplements, Livestock, Living conditions, Lower respiratory infections, Malnutrition, Marital status, Mass media, Maternal mortality, Measles vaccines, Mortality, Night blindness, Occupation codes, Occupations, Oral rehydration therapy, Parental survival, Pervasive developmental disorders, Pharmacies, Physicians, Polio vaccines, Poverty, Private health facilities, Public health facilities, Refrigeration, Respiratory infections, Sanitation, School enrollment, Seizures, Self-treatment, Sexual abstinence, Skilled birth attendants, Summary birth history, Summary sibling history, Tetanus toxoid vaccines, Traditional healers, Transportation, Trichuriasis, Vaccination cards, Vision loss, Vitamin A supplements, Waste disposal, Water supply, Weight
Citation
Contributors
Publisher
Suggested citation
National Statistical Office of Mongolia. Mongolia Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2000. New York, United States of America: United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF).