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. 2022 Jul 8;3:838961. doi: 10.3389/fgwh.2022.838961

Table 3.

AWH-E Impacts on female menstrual health practices and knowledge.

(1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7)
Indic talks to mother about menstruation Indic activ not affected by menst Indic impr menst mgmt Indic approp disposal Knowledge - indic girls reach puberty first Knowledge - indic menstruation frequency Knowledge - indic menarche allows pregnancy
Panel A: East Hararghe sample
=1 if in AWH-E community 0.046* 0.102 0.262** 0.042 0.002 0.102** 0.090**
(0.023) (0.075) (0.100) (0.086) (0.040) (0.044) (0.037)
Control mean 0.079 0.785 0.195 0.361 0.725 0.351 0.586
Observations 493 112 112 92 607 605 607
Panel B: South Gondar sample
=1 if in AWH-E community 0.222*** −0.060 0.180 −0.104 0.016 0.158*** −0.052*
(0.042) (0.154) (0.166) (0.184) (0.035) (0.038) (0.027)
Control mean 0.145 0.952 0.466 0.463 0.287 0.584 0.810
Observations 602 50 49 47 645 644 645

This table presents results from regressions for adolescent female outcomes, including coefficient estimates and standard errors (in parentheses). All regressions include as covariates adolescent age at the time of recruitment, an indicator for households that had multiple adolescents eligible for the study, sampling block and survey month fixed effects. In additional, all regressions control for household size, a household asset index, an indicator for the household head being literate, an indicator for the household head being female, and an indicator for the household having ever received PSNP benefits. Regressions are weighted to maintain initial population proportions, and standard errors are clustered by kebele. * denotes statistical significance at p < 0.1, ** at p < 0.05, *** at p < 0.01.