Introduction

Natural hazards are common throughout Asia and result in harmful and damaging consequences for people and property (CRED & UNDRR, 2020). Floods are the most common natural hazard-related disaster globally and a warmer climate is likely to increase the frequency, magnitude and extent of flooding (CRED & UNDRR, 2020; Mirza, 2011; Parvin et al., 2016). With a population of almost 165 million, densely populated Bangladesh is frequently affected by floods, and as much as 30 to 70% of the total land surface can be flooded in an average year (Dewan, 2015; Islam, 2013; Parvin et al., 2016; Rahman & Salehin, 2013). The impacts of flooding include loss of life, crops, properties, livelihoods, and infrastructure (Ahmed et al., 2019; Dewan, 2015; Islam, 2013; Parvin et al., 2016; Rahman & Salehin, 2013; Rentschler & Salhab, 2020).

Women and children can be especially vulnerable in disasters (Cutter, 2017; Juran & Trivedi, 2015; Sadia et al., 2016) and literature reviews have concluded that flooding is associated with compromised maternal and child health (Alderman et al., 2012; Mallett & Etzel, 2018; Partash et al., 2022). Despite some studies from low income country settings such as Bangladesh (Azad et al., 2013; Mallett & Etzel, 2018; Ahmed et al., 2019; Pinchoff et al., 2019), most research on the maternal and child health consequences of exposure to flooding has focused on contexts in wealthier countries, which are typically better prepared than poorer countries to face the consequences of flooding. Because of the high incidence of floods and disastrous events related to natural hazards in many low-income countries, which often are more vulnerable to their consequences, further research on their effects in these contexts remains a priority.

In this study, we analyse how flood exposure is associated with maternal healthcare utilisation in Bangladesh. We analyse both short-term (floods that took place during pregnancy) and long-term (up to five years) associations between floods and maternal healthcare usage, and distinguish between exposure to any floods and to severe ones. Maternal healthcare is critical for the health of pregnant women (Nove et al., 2021), and floods and related disasters can seriously disrupt access to and provision of antenatal, labour and post-partum care provided by midwives, nurses or physicians (Mallett & Etzel, 2018; Zahran et al., 2013). Disruptions to maternal healthcare usage may thus help us to understand the health consequences of flood exposure. Flooding can thus make Bangladeshi women, and especially pregnant women and their newborns, increasingly vulnerable (Islam, 2020; Naz & Saqib, 2021; Parvin et al., 2016; Pinchoff et al., 2019; Reggers, 2019) and create additional challenges in reaching the Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 3 on health, and specifically a reduction in the maternal mortality to fewer than 70 per 100,000 by 2030 (WHO, 2019; UNFPA Bangladesh, 2020).

Previous studies from Bangladesh have highlighted worse maternal health outcomes and lower use of maternal healthcare services among women exposed to floods (Abdullah et al., 2019; Pinchoff et al., 2019; Baten et al., 2020; Haque et al., 2020). However, these studies have had their respective methodological limitations, and we aim to advance on this literature by using a multilevel design to analyse the effects of exposure to flooding on antenatal care (ANC) visits, births assisted by a skilled birth attendant (SBA) such as midwives, nurses and physicians, and giving birth in a health facility, both immediately after the flooding and in the following years. This design allows us to control for compositional differences between populations living in areas that differ by flooding exposure, as well as to make statistical inferences at the appropriate level of analysis. We use data on more than 19,000 births from the 2007, 2011, 2014 and 2017–18 Bangladesh Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) combined with district-level data on floods from the Emergency Events Database (EM-DAT) and the Geocoded Disasters Dataset (GDIS).

Background

Women residing in areas exposed to flooding may show lower utilisation of maternal healthcare services due to immediate or mid-term consequences of the flooding, or because of the stable characteristics of areas prone to flooding and their populations.

As an immediate consequence, flooding can hamper access to maternal healthcare (Abdullah et al., 2019; Ray-Bennett et al., 2019; Baten et al., 2020; Haque et al., 2020; Loewen et al., 2021). Flooding can lead to restricted access to qualified healthcare professionals, to broken referral networks due to damaged transport infrastructures, as well as to limited access to adequate water and nutrition (Abdullah et al., 2019; Bukhari & Rizvi, 2015; Mallett & Etzel, 2018). The healthcare infrastructure may be flooded or damaged, health practitioners might struggle to access their workplaces, and necessary medical supply deliveries may be hindered or delayed due to damaged transport infrastructures. Households affected by flooding may also prioritise ensuring sufficient water and food supplies, and consequently have fewer resources to draw on in order to access and use recommended maternal healthcare.

Flooding can also have mid-term effects that persist after the immediate flooding. For example, Baten and colleagues (2020) concluded that women exposed to Bangladeshi floods between 2011 and 2014 displayed lower usage of maternal healthcare beyond the immediate period after the floods, and another report (NAWG Bangladesh, 2020) described normal recovery cycles of three to five years. Flood damage contributes to disruption of agriculture, infrastructure, employment, and food distribution systems (Islam, 2013; Parvin et al., 2016), and people whose lives and livelihoods depend directly or indirectly on land and water are especially vulnerable in these situations (Parvin et al., 2016). Living in affected areas can result in hunger and food crises, loss of income and occupation, and loss of productive assets (Parvin et al., 2016; Rosales-Rueda, 2018; Winsemius et al., 2018). Poor people are more likely to be negatively affected by disasters, and they often lose a larger proportion of their wealth, which consequently leads to poor people being less able to cope with and recover from disaster impacts (Hallegatte et al., 2020; Rahman & Salehin, 2013; Sengupta & Manik, 2020). Pregnant women suffering from poverty are less likely to utilise maternal healthcare services (Pathak et al., 2010; Nguyen et al., 2012; Pulok et al., 2018), and would consequently have even higher risk of maternal morbidity and mortality (Nove et al., 2021).

Finally, women residing in flood-prone areas may also utilise maternal healthcare less for reasons that do not result from the immediate or mid-term effects of floods on healthcare facilities and personnel, or livelihoods. Populations residing in flood-prone areas may differ from those in less flooded areas in their sociodemographic profiles, and families with more resources may locate to areas where the risk of flooding is lower (Rahman & Salehin, 2013; Hallegatte et al., 2018). Riverine flooding is the most common flood type in Bangladesh, which contributes to an increased vulnerability for rural populations in the agricultural sector (Rahman & Salehin, 2013; Huq et al., 2019). Also pointing to such stable features of some flood-prone areas, Abdullah and colleagues (2019) concluded in their qualitative investigation that a reason for the low level of maternal healthcare usage in Netrokona district in northern Bangladesh, which is flooded every year, was the lack of education and knowledge about maternal healthcare. As importantly, flood-prone areas often suffer from restricted accessibility and provision of maternal healthcare, such as transport difficulties (often by boat and/or food), longer distance to local healthcare facilities (increased travel costs), challenges to cover the cost for healthcare (especially for displaced populations), damaged and destroyed local health facilities, and lack of skilled healthcare professionals (Abdullah et al., 2019; Haque et al., 2019, 2020). In support of this proposition, there are reports of poor geographic targeting of public health resources in Bangladesh (Mani & Wang, 2014). Although access can be further limited during disaster periods, flood-prone areas may receive less investment in maternal healthcare facilities partly as a consequence of an underlying expectation that flooding will damage or disrupt such services.

Previous research on the effects of exposure to floods in the Bangladeshi context has been limited to a few studies, which have concluded that pregnant women exposed to flooding show lower usage of maternal healthcare (Abdullah et al., 2019; Baten et al., 2020; Haque et al., 2020). Abdullah and colleagues (2019), who conducted a qualitative study in Netrokona district, reported in-depth results of perceived reasons behind flood-related, low maternal healthcare usage in this district. Haque and colleagues (2020) focused on an important group of women impacted by climate related hazards such as floods, namely those who have been displaced as a consequence, and found lower levels of maternal healthcare usage among women recurrently displaced. While providing important results, their population-level generalisability may be limited due to a focus on a specific mechanism linking floods and maternal healthcare use (Haque et al., 2020) and a lack of a comparison group (Abdullah et al., 2019). Overcoming these limitations, Baten and colleagues (2020) estimated logistic regression models on maternal and newborn healthcare with 2014 Bangladeshi DHS which was matched to information on floods from the EM-DAT, thus with very similar data to ours, and reported associations between flood exposure — both in the short- and medium-term — and a range of maternal healthcare use outcomes. However, because they did not use multilevel models to estimate the association between (area-level) flooding and (individual-level) healthcare usage, their results may be subject to erroneous (Type I error) statistical inference. These results, and their potential limitations, warrant further analysis of whether flooding exposure impacts maternal healthcare usage in Bangladesh.

The setting: Bangladesh

Bangladesh is divided into eight divisions and 64 districts. The flat topography, heavy rainfall, geographical location, transboundary flows, and global warming, combined with the socioeconomic conditions, make the country and its population especially vulnerable to floods (Islam, 2013). The Bengal river delta combines waters of several rivers, primarily from the major rivers the Brahmaputra (known as the Jamuna in Bangladesh), the Ganges (known as the Padma in Bangladesh) and the Meghna (Rahman & Salehin, 2013). These rivers pass through multiple countries affected by southwest monsoon precipitation, which accounts for the majority of annual rainfall in the region (Mirza, 2011; Rahman & Salehin, 2013). With precipitation as an important contributor to floods in this region (Mirza, 2011; Rahman & Salehin, 2013), instances of excessive rainfall in these three river basins lead to riverine flooding when their capacity is exceeded (Rahman & Salehin, 2013). Riverine flooding is therefore the most common flood-type (Rahman & Salehin, 2013), and a possible change in monsoon precipitation, as a consequence of climate change, can therefore lead to increased flood-related disasters in Bangladesh (Mirza, 2011).

In addition to riverine flooding, manmade and natural features of Bangladesh’s topography contribute to flood risk in certain other areas of the country. This includes the seasonally flooded, bowl-shaped floodplain depressions (so-called haors) located in the wetlands in the north-eastern part of the country (Rahman et al., 2018; Hoq et al., 2021), the hilly districts in the southeast where smaller streams flash flood during intense rainfall events (Adnan et al., 2019a; Sarker & Rashid, 2013), and the southwestern districts of Jessore and Sathkira, where damage to protective embankments has led to sustained water-logging of polders (low-lying land inside the embankment) (Nowreen et al., 2014; Adnan et al., 2019b).

Maternal healthcare is provided both by public and private actors. In the most recent DHS report (2020), 44% of the clusters had a government facility within their village and 9% had a private facility. Individual patients are often charged a small user fee to access public healthcare facilities, while relatively large costs are required to access maternal healthcare services from any private actor (Mahmood et al., 2019; Sarker et al., 2021). In 2016, a total of 43% of women received the complete continuum of maternal care (ANC, childbirth, and postnatal care from medically trained professionals) (NIPORT & ICF, 2019). Normal childbirth services are offered by 6 in 10 healthcare facilities, which is assessed according to a less restrictive and Bangladesh-context-appropriate version of the World Health Organization (WHO) measure of childbirth services, which include, e.g. trained staff and availability of medicines and commodities. Almost all Bangladeshi healthcare facilities offer ANC services. However, the quality of these services differs between the centres, with only 4% covering all six services recommended by the WHO (NIPORT & ICF, 2019). These maternal healthcare services are more likely to be given in urban than rural areas (NIPORT & ICF, 2020), whereas the most flood-vulnerable populations live in rural areas.

Data and analysis

Demographic and health surveys

We used nationally representative data from Bangladesh DHS conducted in 2007, 2011, 2014, and 2017–18 to analyse maternal healthcare utilisation. DHS are cross-sectional household surveys, which collect accurate data on various indicators related to maternal and child health, among other information. The data used in this paper consist of information from ever-married women of reproductive age ranging from 15 to 49 years. Non-marital childbearing is rare in Bangladesh (DaVanzo et al., 2013), and is not likely to bias our results. The DHS provide information on ANC for women who had a live birth three years before the survey interview, while the variables on births assisted by SBA and births taking place in healthcare facilities include all births in the three years prior to the interview. We limited the sample to respondents with a valid response to all questions of the dependent variables, and in addition we excluded 87 respondents who did not provide information on the husband’s occupation. Our sample covers 19,519 pregnancies/births occurring from 2004 to 2018.

DHS are collected using a two-stage cluster sampling procedure, whereby enumeration areas (EAs) (survey clusters) are selected in the first stage and a systematic sample of an average of 25–30 households per cluster is selected in the second stage (NIPORT & ICF, 2020). All ever-married women age 15–49 who are usual members of the selected households or who spent the night before the survey in the selected household are eligible to be interviewed. EAs cover the entire country and are based on a list prepared by the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics from the 2001 and 2011 population censuses of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh. In a rural area, a cluster can be an entire village, a part of a village or a group of small villages, while in urban areas a cluster is usually a city block (ICF International, 2012). The DHS datasets also contain geographic data on the clusters (Croft et al., 2018). Clusters are geomasked to protect the respondents’ confidentiality. This implies that urban clusters are displaced by a distance of up to two kilometres and rural clusters are displaced by a distance of up to five kilometres, and additionally a randomly selected 1% of rural clusters are displaced by a distance of up to 10 km (Burgert et al., 2013). The file with the geocoded DHS clusters is prepared with the software QGIS and GADM maps (https://gadm.org/) to identify the 2,229 clusters according to the 64 districts in Bangladesh.

The emergency events database

Data on floods in Bangladesh were prepared with data from the EM-DAT (https://www.emdat.be/) and the GDIS (https://sedac.ciesin.columbia.edu/data/set/pend-gdis-1960-2018) (Rosvold & Buhaug, 2021). EM-DAT is a database on mass disasters from 1900 to the present, while GDIS is a geocoded extension of a selection of EM-DAT these disasters between 1960 and 2018. For disasters to be included in the EM-DAT database, at least one of the following criteria needs to be fulfilled: (1) death of 10 or more people, (2) 100 or more people affected/injured/homeless, or (3) declaration by the country of a state of emergency and/or an appeal for international assistance. The dataset, therefore, entails floods that have had a major impact on the population living in the affected districts.

A total of 233 district level floods between 1999 and 2018 were identified. Missing information on district level for floods already listed at the division level was identified in the dataset. The missing information was imputed based on information from secondary sources for floods in 2002, 2007 (June), 2007 (July), 2009, 2012, and 2015 (Appendix, Table 5). This resulted in 41 additional district flood specifications. A total of 274 district level floods were included in the analyses. Additionally, to assess the severity of each flood, we used estimates provided by EM-DAT of the number of people affected by each flood provided. In supplementary analyses, we also used estimates of the number of people who lost their lives due to the flood.

Figure 1 shows the number of floods for each district between 1999 and 2018.

Fig. 1
figure 1

Floods per district in Bangladesh 1999–2018

Variables

We used four binary variables of maternal healthcare utilisation as our dependent variables. The first two dependent variables measured whether the woman had at least one ANC visit and four ANC visits, respectively. Attending ANC visits as recommended reduces maternal and perinatal morbidity and mortality through detection and treatment of pregnancy related complications, as well as through the promotion of health-seeking behaviour and birth preparedness (Nove et al., 2021; WHO, 2016). Four or more ANC visits were chosen based on the focused ANC model from the 1990s, despite the current recommendation of at least eight visits (WHO, 2016). Uptake of four ANC visits in Bangladesh has improved from 6% in 1993–94 to 47% in 2017–18, and the aim is to reach 50% coverage of at least four ANC visits by 2022 (NIPORT & ICF, 2020). Women receive most ANC visits (2017–18) from the private sector (64%), followed by public sector healthcare facilities or at home (36% each) and by nongovernmental organisations (9%) (women may visit more than one type of facility for ANC during the same pregnancy, so the facility categories are not mutually exclusive and do not total 100%) (NIPORT & ICF, 2020). There has been a 20% increase from 2014 (16%) to 2017–18 (36%) in the proportion of women receiving ANC at home (NIPORT & ICF, 2020). The other two dependent variables measured conditions around childbirth. We measured whether the birth was assisted by an SBA — a qualified doctor, nurse, midwife or paramedic (NIPORT & ICF, 2020) — and whether the birth took place in a healthcare facility. ParamedicsFootnote 1 in the Bangladesh DHS dataset include family welfare visitors (FWVs), community skilled birth attendants (CSBAs), and sub-assistant community medical officers (SACMOs). Birth assistance by SBA in healthcare facilities reduces the risk of neonatal and maternal morbidity and mortality (Nove et al., 2021). The presence of an SBA during childbirth is crucial in reducing maternal and child deaths.

We combined the DHS data with the disaster data to identify women’s exposure to flooding. We constructed two main measures. The first one measured exposure to all floods at the district level, using information on the year and month of childbirth reported by the women, as well as on her cluster and respective district of residence during the interview, and the year and month of each flood in each district. With this information, we created four dummy variables that measure flood exposure (a) during pregnancy (0–9 months prior to childbirth), (b) 10 to 24 months prior to childbirth, (c) 25 to 36 months prior to childbirth and (d) 37 to 60 months prior to childbirth (Fig. 2). These time periods are intended to capture the potential time-varying effects of floods on maternal healthcare utilisation. The second measure assessed exposure to severe floods, which we defined as floods that were estimated in the EM-DAT database to have affected over one million people. The database identified 11 such floods at country level. The severe flood measure was otherwise constructed in the same way as the first measure, with four dummy variables across the same time periods. As supplementary measures, we identified severe floods as four floods (occurring in 2004, 2007, 2012 and 2017) that were estimated to have affected five million people or more, and floods due to which over 100 people died (N = 7).

Fig. 2
figure 2

Illustration of the time periods of flooding ranging from 60 months prior to childbirth to month of childbirth

Control variables included the year of childbirth, age of the woman at childbirth, birth order, the place of residence (rural or urban), maternal education, and husband’s occupation (agriculture/farming or other). These variables vary between the pregnancies of mothers living in the same cluster and district and with the exception of the three last ones, between pregnancies of the same mother. These variables were adjusted in order to control for different exposure to flooding as well as resources that may affect the responses to flooding. The variables were measured at time of interview and are used in the cross-sectional analyses. Descriptive information on the variables is shown in Table 1.

Table 1 Descriptive statistics of variables used in the analysis based on sample of children born 2004–2018 where a response to all survey questions on ANC visits, birth assisted by SBA and birth in a healthcare facility was given. Weights applied

Statistical analysis

We estimated four-level multilevel linear probability models, in which pregnancies were nested within households, households within survey clusters, and survey clusters within districts. Linear probability models are linear regression models estimated on binary outcome variables, which estimate the effects of an independent variable on the outcome on the percentage point scale. We estimated linear probability rather than logistic regression models, because the former allows us to estimate marginal effects whereas estimates of the latter are group-specific and have a more complex interpretation (Rabe-Hesketh & Skrondal, 2012). Not accounting for the multilevel structure may lead to biased standard errors and erroneous inference. We estimated cluster robust standard errors at the district level. The random effects multilevel model is written as

$${y}_{ijkl}=\alpha +{\beta }_{1}{\mathrm{flooding}}_{l}+{\beta }_{2}{X}_{ijk}+{\pi }_{l}+{\omega }_{kl}+{\nu }_{jkl}+{\varepsilon }_{ijkl}$$
(1)

\({y}_{ijkl}\) is the outcome for birth i in household j, cluster k and district l. \({\mathrm{flooding}}_{l}\) is the main independent variable (either measures as all floods or severe floods, as specified above), and \({X}_{ijk}\) are the control variables. Finally, \({\pi }_{l}\) captures the district level error term, \({\omega }_{kl}\) captures the cluster level error term, \({\nu }_{jkl}\) captures the household level error, and \({\varepsilon }_{ijkl}\) is the pregnancy level (residual) error term.

We also estimated models with fixed effects at the district level, to account for any unmeasured district level features (such as in economic development and government investment in maternal health care) that may also correlate with flooding exposure. Hausman tests, which compared estimates between the fixed and the random effects models, rejected for each outcome the hypothesis that the random effects estimates would have been biased due to unmeasured district level confounding. We therefore present results from the random effects models, which are statistically more efficient. Likewise, the results remained robust when including fixed effects at the survey cluster or household levels, as well as when using the number of floods experienced within the time unit. All analyses were conducted with the software Stata 16.1.

Sensitivity analysis

We performed four sensitivity analyses. First, we estimated the multilevel models on the original EM-DAT dataset without the imputed floods. Second, we estimated models which, instead of measuring exposure to floods at different time points prior to delivery, measured the cumulative number of floods during the five years preceding delivery. Third, we estimated the number of ANC visits as a count variable, using multilevel Poisson regression analysis. Finally, we investigated the possibility of biased results due to migration and displacement due to the flood exposure (e.g. Mallett & Etzel, 2018) by analysing the 2007 and 2017–18 survey data which contain questions about migration. In this sensitivity analysis, we included women from the 2007 survey and the 2017–18 survey who had lived eight years or more in the same place of residence, here understood as same division. A time period of eight years was chosen since maternal healthcare variables are asked for up to three years prior to interview, and the longest time period at flood exposure considered is five years prior to childbirth.

Ethical considerations

In this study, we analyse secondary data from DHS and EM-DAT. The data use is in line with the rules and regulations of the databases. Data from EM-DAT include aggregated data from country reports and do not contain any data on individuals. Questionnaires and procedures for the DHS surveys are reviewed and approved by the ICF Institutional Review Board (IRB) and a host country IRB. Informed consent is given by all participating respondents.

Results

Descriptive results

As Fig. 3 suggests, women living in areas that were flooded at least once use maternal healthcare less than women in non-flooded areas. The 95% confidence intervals do not overlap in any of the comparisons, indicating that these differences are statistically significant at the 5% level.

Fig. 3
figure 3

Living in a flood exposed area and maternal healthcare use among Bangladeshi pregnant women

Maternal healthcare usage is clearly lower in areas that were exposed to floods compared to those that were not. Yet areas exposed to flooding differ also in other respects from non-exposed areas. Before we turn to our regression analysis, we provide descriptive information on the characteristics of areas by flood exposure in Table 2. The data show that flooded areas are likely to be rural with a large proportion of mothers with no education, husband’s occupation in farming and agriculture, and households in the lowest wealth quintile.

Table 2 Descriptive statistics of population which had none and one or more floods during the time periods at interest

Regression analysis

Table 3 shows results from multilevel linear probability models — where pregnancies/births are clustered within households, survey clusters and districts — on the conditional associations between flood exposure and maternal healthcare utilisation. Only one of the estimates of flood exposure is statistically significant at the 5% level: having been exposed to flooding 25–36 months prior to birth is associated with a 2.1 percentage point reduction in the probability of having any ANC visits. This effect is small in size, given that 75% of the overall population was estimated to have at least one visit, as shown in Table 1. None of the other estimates are statistically significant, and they too are small in size, varying between 0 and 0.02 (i.e. 2 percentage points) in absolute value. As mentioned above, the results were robust when we controlled for district level fixed effects (which additionally control for unobserved district level variation) as well as a continuous measure of the number of floods during each pre-pregnancy time period.

Table 3 Multilevel linear probability regression results for maternal health indicators according to no floods or one or more floods 0–9, 10–24, 25–36, 37–60 months prior to childbirth

Table 4 presents estimates when using exposure to a severe flood — defined as a flood that affected at least one million people — as the main independent variable. None of the estimates are statistically significant and they are close to zero. We found similar results when using at least five million affected, or at least 100 deaths as indicators of severe floods. We thus conclude based on these analyses that exposure to flooding does not predict maternal healthcare usage in Bangladesh.

Table 4 Multilevel linear probability regression results for maternal health indicators according to flood severity with one million or more affected in the time periods 0–9, 10–24, 25–36, 37–60 months prior to childbirth

Sensitivity analysis

In the first sensitivity analysis, we estimated the multilevel models on the dataset without the imputed district-level flood data (Appendix, Table 6). Contrary to expectations, we find a positive relationship between flood exposure 10–24 months before delivery and births assisted by SBA as well as births in a healthcare facility. This result may reflect selective missingness of information of the flood data based on characteristics of the districts which correlate with maternal healthcare usage.

The next sensitivity analyses use continuous measures of flood exposure (Appendix, Table 7). Appendix Table 7 shows that our results remained robust when we used a single indicator of the number of floods during the 60-month window before birth. Table 8 (Appendix) presents results from a Poisson model, where the two binary indicators of the number of ANC visits were replaced by a count measure of the number of visits as the dependent variable and the exposure variables are continuous measures of the number of incidents of flood exposure in each of the periods. We find that women who were exposed to flooding 25 to 36 months prior to delivery had fewer ANC visits than non-exposed women. We likewise find a negative estimate of being exposed 10–24 months before pregnancy, but the estimate is not statistically significant.

Finally, we investigated whether migration could affect our results by estimating the random effects models for women who had lived eight years or more in the same place of residence using data from 2007 (84.7% of original sample included) and 2017–18 (82.0% of original sample included) DHS (Appendix, Table 9). This analysis produced more significant estimates. Women who had stably lived in the same place of residence and were exposed to floods 10–24 and 25–36 months before pregnancy were less likely to have any or the recommended four ANC visits. Furthermore, women exposed to flooding 25–36 months before birth were less likely to have assistance by a skilled birth attendant or to give birth at a healthcare facility. The point estimates suggest a four to six percentage point reduction in the respective maternal healthcare usages, which correspond up to a 10–15% reduction when compared to the average levels (Table 1). However, since information on migration was only included in two of the four DHS waves, we estimated the same models with all women — including those who relocated — from the two DHS waves with migration data (Appendix, Table 10). The estimates remained significant, although often weaker. Overall, this suggests that the results were specific to certain waves and possibly, specific floods such as the major flood in 2004.

Discussion and conclusion

We analysed the effects of flood exposure on maternal healthcare utilisation in Bangladesh with multilevel linear probability models. Previous research has found a negative association between flooding and healthcare usage in Bangladesh (Adnan et al., 2019a; Baten et al., 2020; Haque et al., 2020). This research has highlighted the challenges faced by pregnant women exposed to flooding and that flooding can affect their access to and use of maternal healthcare, but by focusing on specific groups (Haque et al., 2020), not including control groups (Abdullah et al., 2019), or not considering the multilevel structure of the data (Baten et al., 2020), which leads to uncertainties whether the findings can be generalised to the population level. Our study, which used data from four waves of the DHS covering the whole of Bangladesh over 1999–2018 and used multilevel techniques, has addressed these limitations.

Our findings concur with previous research in indicating that maternal healthcare usage is clearly lower among pregnant women who live in areas that are exposed to flooding. However, our multilevel models that controlled for a range of measured variables find no average effect of exposure to floods during pregnancy or the years prior to it. This result was robust to using severe floods (defined as floods that affected at least one million people) rather than all floods as the indicator of flood exposure. These results suggest that the generally lower usage of maternal healthcare in areas exposed to flooding is not caused by the women’s exposure to the flooding itself, but rather relates to the compositional characteristics of the flood-prone areas which also relate to lower maternal healthcare use. Yet, despite not finding an average effect of flood exposure, we did find statistically significant associations between flood exposure and maternal healthcare usage in some of the models and in particular, in data from the 2007 and 2017/18 waves which we used to assess whether migration patterns may have affected our findings. These findings may point to negative effects in the case of specific floods, even if the average flood — even when severe — does not have major effects.

Not finding an average effect of exposure to flooding — even to severe flooding — on maternal healthcare use in Bangladesh may seem surprising, given the clearly documented negative repercussions it has on health, infrastructure and livelihood (Mallett & Etzel, 2018). The result may reflect adaptation to recurrent floods, which characterise the area we study. Recurrent flooding, or the risk thereof, may encourage households and communities to build dwellings in locations that are secured from the most damage, and communities which have experienced flooding may develop mitigation measures to protect health and livelihood against future flooding (Rahman & Salehin, 2013). Public authorities may also plan health infrastructures in ways that make them less exposed in the occurrence of flooding. Yet the findings that we interpreted as potentially reflecting the effects of some specific floods suggest that, despite the apparent success in adaptation, floods may at least under certain circumstances have negative effects which disrupt pregnant women’s access to maternal healthcare services and that these effects may be long-lasting. Further examination of these circumstances was beyond the scope of this study and we encourage future research to look into the conditions which increase vulnerability to floods, as well as resilience in the face of them.

Despite not finding average effects of exposure to floods in themselves, we did find bivariate associations between flooding exposure and maternal healthcare use. Together these results suggest that the bivariate differences in maternal healthcare use between women living in areas that were exposed to floods and those in areas not experiencing flooding therefore reflect other characteristics of the populations in these areas. Populations with and without exposure to flooding have different socioeconomic profiles, such as lower maternal education and a higher proportion of poverty among flood exposed populations, as indicated in our descriptive analysis. Poor populations, which often live in areas more exposed to natural hazards (Rahman & Salehin, 2013; Hallegatte et al., 2018), have fewer resources to reduce risk or cope with the lasting consequences of disasters (Hallegatte et al., 2020). Repeated flooding could lead to poverty traps, whereby especially poor households have difficulties in sustaining their pre-disaster income levels and are locked into poverty in the long term (Guha-Sapir et al., 2013; Rentschler, 2013). Households located in areas with frequent flooding might therefore have limited financial resources, leading to constraints on spending priorities with potentially less money to use on healthcare not considered to be essential. These populations may also have, partly reflecting their lower socioeconomic positioning, less knowledge of maternal healthcare and its importance (Abdullah et al., 2019). Pregnant women in these areas may therefore be less likely to utilise maternal healthcare services due to their more limited resources. Our multilevel linear probability models controlled for a range of sociodemographic variables that can be related to lower access to and use of maternal healthcare, and the results from these models, which mostly showed no statistically significant effects of exposure to floods, suggest that the sociodemographic profiles of populations in flood-affected areas largely explain the lower use of these services.

An additional, area-level, difference between areas affected by flooding and those that are not affected may be the provision of healthcare services in these areas. Disadvantaged populations may lack understanding and knowledge of their rights to public services and be less able to exert pressure on governments to invest in extensive healthcare infrastructures in areas that are at risk of flood damage (Paul & Islam, 2015). Limited or no availability of medical doctors in areas vulnerable to flooding has been reported in previous studies (Haque et al., 2020). Some of the free public health facilities close to flood prone areas do not provide antenatal care in line with WHO recommendations, while private-sector providers of ANC services are less likely to be present in such areas due to disaster risk and poverty among local populations (Haque et al., 2020). Limited access to maternal healthcare services may therefore additionally contribute to women not being able to utilise such services in flood exposed areas. If this is the case, this lack of access affects populations with lower socioeconomic status, who are also disadvantaged by exposure to flooding. We are not aware of detailed data on access to quality maternal healthcare services by proximity to flood-prone areas, and analysing its potential implications is an important task for future research.

We acknowledge that our study has limitations. Firstly, our study is based on floods listed at district level in EM-DAT. This means that we have not accounted for differences between the sub-districts, which may lead to measurement error in flood exposure. Secondly, our measures of the severity of the flooding were arguably crude and future research should attempt to develop and use more precise measures. Thirdly, Bangladesh is frequently affected by other natural hazards, which could affect our results. If more than one disaster strikes an area in the same time period, a more severe impact on the utilisation of maternal healthcare services would be expected. Addressing these limitations is a task for future research. Finally, the maternal healthcare data are based on self-reporting, which could create recall bias. However, we have no reason to believe that such recall bias will differ by flood exposure. It is therefore unlikely to have had an impact on our results. Future research should extend into analyses on flooding and maternal morbidity and mortality, since there is currently limited knowledge on this association in the Bangladeshi context. Finally, future research should aim to better understand which characteristics of flood prone areas specifically lead to lower use of maternal healthcare services in them.

As climate change proceeds, the flooding in Bangladesh is likely to worsen and an expansion of the currently known flood-prone areas is likely. Consideration of access to and provision of maternal healthcare services should be incorporated into climate change adaptation policies and programmes, to ensure safe pregnancies and births for all women, regardless of their geographical location.