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1.
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1258422

ABSTRACT

A qualitative study was conducted in Agincourt, a rural area of South Africa, to document the perceptions and attitudes towards premarital fertility and late marriage among young adults of both sexes. Two focus groups and 35 individual interviews were conducted among 17-30 year olds, randomly selected. Most interviewees perceived premarital fertility as undesirable, and a new phenomenon in a context of major social changes, in particular loss of authority of parents and increasing freedom of the youth. In contrast, late marriage was perceived as positive, by both sexes, primarily for economic reasons. Much stigma was associated with premarital fertility, from friends, institutions and families who occasionally apply mild or severe sanctions. Consequences of premarital fertility were numerous: school abandonment, economic adversity, health risks, stigmatization. In extreme cases, premarital fertility might lead to exclusion and deviant behavior. Premarital fertility was ultimately due to a lack of contraception among young women, and to refusal of abortion for religious reasons, and is associated with the risk of contracting STD's. (Afr J Reprod Health 2008; 12[2]:98-110)


Subject(s)
Fertility , Marriage , Premarital Examinations , Rural Population
2.
African Journal of Reproductive Health ; 12(2): 64-74, 2008. ilus
Article in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1258419

ABSTRACT

The paper investigates the complex relationships between premarital fertility and HIV/AIDS in sub-Saharan African countries. The DHS surveys provided data to compute the prevalence of premarital fertility, defined as any birth before the first marriage. The UNAIDS database provided data to compute the prevalence of HIV infection among pregnant women. Results indicate a moderate association between the prevalence of premarital fertility and the prevalence of HIV infection (correlation coefficient = 0.64, P< 0.0001), and similar geographical patterns. Compared with the average pattern, outlier countries had either high levels of premarital fertility and relatively low HIV prevalence (Liberia, Madagascar, Gabon, Congo), or high levels of HIV prevalence despite low levels of premarital fertility (Lesotho, Malawi, Zambia, Zimbabwe). The overall relationship is discussed in light of the relationships between age at marriage, permissiveness and lack of protection during intercourse and their impact on premarital fertility and HIV infection among women. (Afr J Reprod Health 2008; 12[2]:64-74)


Subject(s)
Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome , Fertility , HIV Infections , Marriage , Premarital Examinations
3.
Monography in English | AIM | ID: biblio-1275023

ABSTRACT

The study presents a reconstruction of under-five mortality trends derived from data provided by the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) and World Fertility Surveys (WFS) in sub-Saharan Africa from 1950 to 2000. Death rates were first calculated by single years for each of the 64 surveys available. When several surveys were available for the same country; they were combined for each of the overlapping years. Then the series was analyzed to identify periods of monotonic trends; whether they were declining; steady; or increasing. Changes in trends were tested using a linear logistic model. All calculations were done at the national level and by urban-rural residence. Among the 33 countries studied; which account for some 80 percent of the sub-Saharan population; only eight had monotonic or quasimonotonic mortality trends; which indicate a smooth health transition. Another eight countries had periods when mortality rose significantly for a variety of reasons. In at least eight other countries mortality increased through 1985-90-the most recent period covered in the study as a result of increasing levels of AIDS mortality. Reconstructed levels and trends are compared with other estimates made by international organizations. These estimates are usually based on indirect methods. Results indicate that in sub-Saharan Africa; progress was made in the health transition during the second half of the twentieth century. However; improvement was slower than expected; with an average decline in mortality of -1.7 percent per year. The transition was not smooth in more than half of the countries; and cases of reversals in mortality trends occur that appear to be linked to political; economic; and epidemiological crises; particularly the HIV/AIDS pandemic


Subject(s)
HIV , Child Mortality , Health Transition , Mortality/trends
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