Literature DB >> 25320575

Community based study on married couples' family planning knowledge, attitude and practice in rural and urban Gambia.

Sulayman S S Jammeh1, Chieh-Yu Liu2, Su-Fen Cheng2, Jane Lee-Hsieh2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Family planning services have been free of charge and available in all the health facilities in the Gambia since 1975 yet contraceptive prevalence is only 17.5% and even 6% in some areas. Since the last census in 2003, there existed no available data on married couples' contraception status.
OBJECTIVES: To explore married couples' family planning knowledge, attitudes, and practices in rural and urban Gambia and to analyze what factors may affect such knowledge, attitudes and practices.
METHODS: Quantitative cross-sectional study design was used. Through convenience sampling, 176 men and 235 women representing a total of 176 couples participated. A structured questionnaire was used for data collection.
RESULTS: The mean scores of the married couples family planning knowledge, attitudes, and practices were 19.00 ± 6.11(ranging from 0 to 64), 6.90 ± 3.08 (0 to 14) and 4.69 ± 3.3 (0 to 19) respectively. Urban residents had higher scores on family planning practice than rural residents (p<.05). Attitude is the strongest predictor of practice (accounted for 34.6% of variance).
CONCLUSIONS: These findings offer a descriptive answer to "what are married couples' family planning knowledge, attitude and practice in Gambia", as well as suggesting broader health intervention programs in health education and promotion.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Family planning; The Gambia; attitude; knowledge; married couples; practice

Mesh:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25320575      PMCID: PMC4196399          DOI: 10.4314/ahs.v14i2.1

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Afr Health Sci        ISSN: 1680-6905            Impact factor:   0.927


  10 in total

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