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1.
Sex Reprod Health Matters ; 29(2): 2097044, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35939308

ABSTRACT

Bangladesh is one of the major labour-exporting countries in the world, with large-scale labour migration flows occurring both internationally and domestically. Spousal separation due to migration has the potential to disrupt women's ability to use contraception in line with their reproductive goals. This qualitative study complements the 2014 Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey (BDHS) data; we conducted in-depth interviews with a sub-sample of 23 BDHS respondents whose husbands stayed elsewhere but returned at least once a year to Barisal Division, Bangladesh. The study explores how husbands' migration patterns influence couples' fertility intentions, contraceptive decision-making and behaviour, and unintended pregnancies. Results showed that contraceptive use was high among the study participants, with nearly all couples using some method to avoid pregnancy - usually pills and condoms. However, the use was episodic and inconsistent, reducing effectiveness. Experiences of side effects were commonplace, which contributed to this pattern of inconsistent use: women used pills only during the duration of their husband's visits. Half of the informants experienced unintended pregnancies either due to the inconsistent use of pills or other method failures. The study findings indicate that women with migrant husbands need family planning education related to their particular circumstances and access to a wider range of family planning choices. Quality counselling should respect women's experiences with side effects and include thorough discussion of viable alternatives.


Subject(s)
Family Planning Services , Transients and Migrants , Bangladesh , Contraceptive Agents , Family Planning Services/methods , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Sex Education , Spouses
2.
PLoS One ; 17(7): e0271944, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35895735

ABSTRACT

Reproductive health program managers seek information about existing and potential clients' motivations, behaviors, and barriers to services. Using sequence and cluster analysis of contraceptive calendar data from the 2016-17 Burundi Demographic and Health Survey, we identified discrete clusters characterizing patterns in women's contraceptive and pregnancy behaviors over the previous 5 years. This study pairs these clusters with data on factors typically targeted in social behavior change interventions: knowledge, attitudes, and women's interactions with media and health services, to create composite profiles of women in these clusters. Of six clusters, three are characterized by contraceptive use and three are characterized by its absence. Media exposure and attitudes regarding sex preference, wife beating, and self-efficacy largely do not explain cluster membership. Contraceptive knowledge is positively associated with two clusters (Family Builder 1 and Traditional Mother) and negatively associated with a third (Quiet Calendar). Clusters also differ in their members' fertility desires, contraceptive intentions, and interactions with health services. Two "Family Builder" clusters are both characterized by the presence (but not timing) of multiple pregnancies in their calendar histories, but differ in that women with high contraceptive knowledge, intentions to use contraception, and well-articulated family size ideals are characteristic of one cluster (Family Builder 1), and low contraceptive knowledge, no use of contraception, and vague family size preferences are characteristic of the other (Family Builder 2). These results can guide reproductive health programs as they target social and behavioral change and other interventions to the unique subpopulations they seek to serve.


Subject(s)
Contraceptive Agents , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Burundi , Contraception , Contraception Behavior , Family Planning Services , Female , Health Services , Humans , Pregnancy
3.
J Adolesc Health ; 70(3S): S54-S56, 2022 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35184832

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: Relatively little is known about the factors associated with child, early, and forced marriage (CEFM) for boys. This brief explores potential economic, social, and demographic drivers of CEFM for boys, highlighting the role of gendered social norms. METHODS: Forty-two indicators related to CEFM were drawn from a combination of Demographic and Health Survey and publicly available national-level data and associations with CEFM presented in scatterplots with a linear regression line. RESULTS: CEFM for boys is consistently associated with economic factors related to "readiness to marry," including overall labor force participation, the proportion of boys who are not in school, and youth unemployment. CONCLUSIONS: Patriarchal norms regulating sexual and reproductive behavior influence CEFM for boys through pressures to marry as soon as economic independence is achieved. This perpetuates cycles of poverty and locks boys into unfavorable life course pathways.


Subject(s)
Family , Social Norms , Adolescent , Child , Gender Identity , Humans , Male , Poverty , Sexual Behavior , Socioeconomic Factors
4.
Stud Fam Plann ; 52(4): 415-438, 2021 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34626481

ABSTRACT

Examining women's reproductive experiences over time reveals a more dynamic view of women's behaviors and needs than current status measures alone. This study uses sequence and cluster analyses, which are designed for identifying patterns and subgroups in longitudinal data. We apply these methods to contraceptive calendar data in Burundi to identify discrete clusters of women based on contraceptive and pregnancy behaviors over the past 5 years. We identify six unique clusters; three characterized by no use of contraception (85 percent of women) and three by use (16 percent). The Quiet Calendar cluster (42 percent) comprise women who neither experience pregnancy nor use contraception. Family Builder 1 (25 percent) and 2 (18 percent) both include women who experience two pregnancies, but differ in unmet need and lifetime experience with contraception. Modern Mother (8 percent), Consistently Covered Mother (6 percent), and Traditional Mother (2 percent) clusters differ by type of contraception used following pregnancy. Factors associated with cluster membership are need for family planning, lifetime experience with contraception, marital status, pregnancy intention, and age. This clustering approach provides a new, more holistic way to measure the diverse needs across unique subpopulations and can inform the development of multifaceted, adaptable strategies to meet women's dynamic fertility needs over the reproductive life course.


Subject(s)
Contraception Behavior , Contraceptive Agents , Burundi/epidemiology , Contraception , Demography , Family Planning Services , Female , Fertility , Humans , Pregnancy
5.
Sex Reprod Health Matters ; 29(2): 2020953, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35112657

ABSTRACT

This study examines the association of decision-making with contraceptive use along with other measures of women's empowerment and the gender context. We use data on currently married women from the Demographic and Health Survey conducted in Pakistan in 2017-2018. We contrast patterns in modern contraception with traditional contraception and examine specific modern methods. Husband's characteristics do not factor strongly in women's modern contraceptive use. Contraceptive decision-making is more pertinent to women's modern contraceptive use than household decision-making and is inhibited when husbands are the primary decision-makers of contraceptive decisions. In contrast, joint decision-making facilitates overall modern contraceptive use and the use of condoms in particular. Contraceptive use is reduced when the decision is made by someone other than the woman or her husband. Economic empowerment resources are weakly and inconsistently associated with modern contraceptive use. Furthermore, modern contraceptive use (particularly condoms and female sterilisation) is reduced when women live in an extended household. Region, education, and wealth remain important correlates of modern contraceptive use, even after controlling for other factors, as does the number of living children and, for female sterilisation and IUDs only, women's working status. This study finds support for expanding the range of available methods and combining service improvements with promoting women's empowerment, gender equity, and social behaviour change initiatives targeted to men and other family members.


Subject(s)
Contraception Behavior , Contraceptive Agents , Child , Decision Making , Family Characteristics , Female , Humans , Male , Pakistan
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