Ghana - Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey 2011, Fourth round
Reference ID | GHA-GSS-MICS-2011-v1.1 |
Year | 2011 |
Country | Ghana |
Producer(s) | Ghana Statistical Service - Autonomous |
Sponsor(s) | United Nations Children's Fund - UNICEF - Funding agency United States Agency for International Development - USAID - Funding agency US) President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief - - Provided funding ICF Macro - - Provided funding |
Metadata | Documentation in PDF |
Created on
Sep 15, 2014
Last modified
Jun 03, 2015
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1301294
Overview
Identification
GHA-GSS-MICS-2011-v1.1 |
Version
Version 1.1 Edited 2014-09-10
There was a module on National Health Insurance to find out if households members had subscribed to the scheme and if not, why they were not holding a health insurance card to enable them access health facilities when ill.
Overview
The Ghana Statistical Service, in collaboration with the National Malaria Control Programme (NMCP) and the Navrongo Health Research Centre of the Ghana Health Service, conducted the fourth round of the Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS 2011), with funding and technical support from UNICEF, USAID, US President’s Malaria Initiative (PMI) and ICF Macro in Calverton, Maryland, USA. The main objective of the survey was to provide up-to-date information for assessing the health situation of the population, particularly women and children in Ghana. MICS 2011 is a nationally representative household sample survey of 12,150 households in 810 enumeration areas (EAs). The survey is expected to provide estimates of all key health indicators at the national and regional levels, as well as for urban and rural areas. Moreover, four of the 10 regions that are of particular importance for UNICEF’s programmes will be disproportionally oversampled so as to provide some data at the district level. The four oversampled regions are Central, Northern, Upper East, and Upper West.
MICS 2011 uses four main questionnaires: a Household Questionnaire, a Woman’s Questionnaire for women age 15-49, a Man’s Questionnaire for men age 15-59, and a Child’s Questionnaire for children under five year (with questions posed to the child’s primary caretaker). Major topics covered in these questionnaires include household characteristics, characteristics of respondents, child mortality, child nutritional status, breastfeeding, Vitamin A supplementation, birth registration, birth weight, immunization, salt iodization, oral rehydration treatment, care seeking and antibiotic treatment of pneumonia, , the proportion of households with insecticide treated nets (ITNs), the proportion of the population that sleep under ITNs, solid fuel use, water and sanitation, contraception, antenatal care, delivery and postnatal care, child ,school attendance, literacy, child discipline, female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C), domestic violence (DV), sexual behaviour, HIV/AIDS and the prevalence of malaria parasites and anaemia among children aged 6-59 months. Consequently, blood samples of all children age 6-59 months will be collected for the malaria and anaemia tests. Although malaria indicators (e.g., bednet ownership and use, coverage of intermittent preventive treatment and treatment of childhood fever) will be collected in all households, the malaria and anaemia testing components will be implemented in all households in six regions, but confined to every second household in the four over-sampled regions.
It is hoped that the findings from MICS 2011 would provide up-to-date information on progress made towards targets set by the Ghana Poverty Reduction Strategy (GPRS II), the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and other national and international programmes aimed at promoting the welfare of women and children. The results are also expected to help policy planners improve on access and quality of health-related services in the country.
The MICS 2011 data collection was carried out over a period of three months (September 15 -December 14, 2011) by 20 field teams spread across the country. In order to help achieve the objectives of the survey, enumeration areas (EAs) were selected in some towns and communities within the various districts. In each of these EAs, 15 households were visited and interviewed by a field team comprising of a Supervisor (team leader), 1 Field Editor, 3 Interviewers, 1 Biomarker Technician, and a driver.
Sample survey data [ssd]
Households and Individuals
Scope
The survey collected a wide range of information about households and the individual members of the household. These information include:1. Household information: Individual members, head of household, sex, age, marital status, relation to head of household, education, water and sanitation, working children, child discipline,
disability and salt iodization
2. Children under 5 years: breastfeeding, care of illness, malaria, immunization, anthropometry, test for anaemia and malaria
3. Women 15-49 years: infant/child mortality, tetanus toxoid, maternal and newborn health, marriage/union, contraception, female genital mutilation, attitude towards domestic violence, sexual
behavior, and HIV/AIDS
4. Men 15-49 years: reproduction, marriage, sexual behavior, HIV/AIDS, sexually transmitted infections and attitudes toward domestic violence
Topic | Vocabulary | URI |
---|---|---|
DEMOGRAPHY AND POPULATION [14] | ||
HEALTH [8] | ||
SOCIETY AND CULTURE [13] | ||
EDUCATION [6] | ||
employment [3.1] | ||
fertility [14.2] | ||
censuses [14.1] | ||
morbidity and mortality [14.4] | ||
PSYCHOLOGY [17] | ||
LABOUR AND EMPLOYMENT [3] |
Coverage
NationalRegional
The survey covered 810 enumeration areas and 12,150 households across the country. In terms of eligibility, it covered the following households members:
1. All women age 15-49 years
2. All men age 15-49 years
3. All children under 5 years
4. All household members
Producers and Sponsors
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Ghana Statistical Service | Autonomous |
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Ministry of Health | Govermnent of Ghana | Collaborating institution |
Name | Abbreviation | Role |
---|---|---|
United Nations Children's Fund | UNICEF | Funding agency |
United States Agency for International Development | USAID | Funding agency |
US) President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief | Provided funding | |
ICF Macro | Provided funding |
Metadata Production
Name | Abbreviation | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|---|
Ghana Statiscal Service | GSS | Office of the President | Lead documenting institution |
DDI-GHA-GSS-MICS-2011-v1.1