| Literature DB >> 28228141 |
Araya Abrha Medhanyie1, Alem Desta2, Mussie Alemayehu2, Tesfay Gebrehiwot2, Tesfu Alemu Abraha3, Atakelti Abrha4, Hagos Godefay4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Family planning interventions are cost-effective and have several cross-cutting benefits. Despite these benefits of family planning, progress in ensuring universal access to family planning to women in developing countries has been slow. In light of this; this study investigated the prevalence and factors associated with contraceptive use in Tigray Region, Northern Ethiopia.Entities:
Keywords: Contraceptive use; Developing countries; Ethiopia; Family planning; Health extension workers; Long acting contraceptive methods
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28228141 PMCID: PMC5322676 DOI: 10.1186/s12978-017-0281-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Health ISSN: 1742-4755 Impact factor: 3.223
Socio demographic characteristics of the study participants in Tigray region, 2015 (N = 1966)
| Variables | N(%) |
|---|---|
| Zone | |
| Western | 150(7.6) |
| North West | 316(16.1) |
| Central | 585(29.8) |
| Eastern | 300(15.3) |
| South East | 151(7.7) |
| Mekelle | 150(7.6) |
| Southern | 314(16.0) |
| Residence | |
| Rural | 1516(77.1) |
| Urban | 450(22.9) |
| Distance to health facility | |
| Up to 30 minutes | 1490(75.8) |
| Greater than 30 minutes | 476(24.2) |
| Age category of women | N(%) |
| 15–19 | 212(10.8) |
| 20–24 | 456(23.2) |
| 25–29 | 487(24.8) |
| 30–34 | 370(18.8) |
| 35–39 | 263(13.4) |
| 40–49 | 178(9.1) |
| Women education | |
| No formal education | 849(43.2) |
| Primary education | 608(30.9) |
| Secondary education | 398(20.2) |
| More than secondary | 111(5.6) |
| Husband education ( | |
| No formal education | 579(38.6) |
| Primary education | 489(32.6) |
| Secondary education | 274(18.3) |
| More than secondary | 158(10.5) |
| Presence of electronic media ( | |
| Presence of radio or TV or mobile phone | 919(46.7) |
| No electronic media | 1047(53.3) |
| Participation in IGA( | |
| No participation | 1389(70.7) |
| Participation in one IGA activity | 308(15.7) |
| Participation in 2 and more IGA activities | 269(13.7) |
| Number of living children ( | |
| One and less | 393(23.7) |
| 2–5 | 774(39.4) |
| 3–4 | 496(25.2) |
| 5 and more | 378(19.2) |
FP methods known by women in Tigray region, 2015
| Type of family planning( | Yes |
|---|---|
| N(%) | |
| Pill | 1434(76.3) |
| IUCD | 635(33.8) |
| Injection | 1757(93.5) |
| Implanon | 1292(68.8) |
| Jaddle | 255(13.6) |
| Norplant | 961(51.1) |
| Male condom | 336(17.9) |
| Female condom | 31(1.6) |
| Male sterilization | 30(1.6) |
| Female sterilization | 178(9.5) |
| Periodic abstinence | 149(7.9) |
| Source of information about FP in the last 6 months ( | |
| Radio | 164(15.3) |
| Television | 262(24.4) |
| News paper | 41(3.8) |
| Health worker | 702(65.4) |
| Women development army | 215(20.0) |
| Friends | 260(24.2) |
| HEW | 590(55.0) |
| School | 121(11.3) |
| Perception of women on the benefit of FP ( | |
| To limit births | 1210(64.4) |
| To space births | 1682(89.5) |
| Prevent STI/HIV/AIDS | 203(10.8) |
| As therapy | 137(7.3) |
| To prevent unwanted pregnancy | 788(41.9) |
| Place for FP service known by women( | |
| Public hospital | 713(38.4) |
| Health center | 1676(90.2) |
| Health post | 746(40.2) |
| NGO health facilities | 75(4.0) |
| Private health facilities | 292(15.7) |
| Pharmacy | 375(20.2) |
| Drug vendor | 19(1.0) |
Contraceptive use among women in Tigray region, 2015
| Contraceptive use among all women by method ( | Yes |
|---|---|
| N(%) | |
| Contraceptive use by method among all women | |
| Pill | 28(4.5) |
| IUCD | 12(1.9) |
| Depo-Provera | 402(64.5) |
| Implanon | 158(25.4) |
| Jaddle | 2(0.3) |
| Norplant | 15(2.4) |
| Others a | 6(0.9) |
| Contraceptive use by method among married women ( | |
| Short acting | 379(70.2) |
| Long acting | 161(29.8) |
| Others b | 3(0.5) |
| Contraceptive use by category of method among all women | |
| Short acting | 430(69.0) |
| Long acting | 189(30.3) |
| Others b | 4(0.6) |
| Decision making on choice of methods ( | |
| Myself | 558(89.6) |
| husband | 13(2.1) |
| HEW | 50(8.0) |
| Other | 2(0.3) |
| Place where contraceptive received by all women ( | |
| Hospital | 28(4.5) |
| Health center | 471(75.6) |
| Health post | 124(19.9) |
| NGO health facilities | 11(1.8) |
| Private health facilities | 4(0.6) |
| Pharmacy | 3(0.5) |
| Place where contraceptive received by married women ( | |
| Hospital | 23(4.2) |
| Health center | 415(76.4) |
| Health post | 105(19.3) |
| NGO health facilities | 10(1.8) |
| Private health facilities | 3(0.6) |
| Getting adequate information on choice of method ( | 482(77.4) |
| Type of information received( | |
| Side effect | 128(26.6) |
| Duration of method | 302(62.7) |
| Available method | 38(7.9) |
| Place of service | 14(2.9) |
aMale condom, Female sterilization and Periodic abstinence
bTraditional and Permanent Contraceptive methods
Contraceptive discontinuation by women in Tigray region, 2015
| Contraceptive discontinuation by women | Yes |
|---|---|
| N(%) | |
| Had you ever discontinued contraceptive use ( | 833(65.1) |
| Type of contraceptive discontinued ( | |
| Pill | 83(10) |
| IUCD | 12(1.4) |
| Injection | 618(74.2) |
| Implanon | 99(11.9) |
| Norplant | 19(2.3) |
| Male condom | 2(0.2) |
| Reason for discontinuation | |
| Want to have more children | 593(71.2) |
| Side effect | 61(7.3) |
| Medical problem | 47(5.6) |
| Othersa | 10(1.3) |
| Partner objection | 2(0.2) |
| Moral | 1(0.1) |
| Fear of infertility | 5(0.6) |
| Switch method to others | 230(18.0) |
| Type of methods switched | |
| Pill | 59(25.7) |
| IUCD | 4(1.7) |
| Injection | 134(58.3) |
| Implanon | 26(11.3) |
| Norplant | 7(3) |
| For what method have you switched | |
| Pill | 21(9.1) |
| Injection | 84(36.5) |
| Implanon | 104(45.2) |
| Norplant | 10(4.3) |
| Othersb | 11(4.9) |
| Discussion with husband about contraceptive by women within six months prior to data collection ( | 804(56.5) |
| Husband support using family planning( | 1207(85) |
| Exclusive breastfeeding prevents pregnancy (1879) | 902(48) |
| Up to what time exclusive breastfeeding prevents pregnancy( | |
| Up to six months | 210(22.3) |
| Morethan six months | 553(61.3) |
| Don’t know | 139(15.4) |
| Approve couple using family planning ( | 1548(92.2) |
alack of methods, partner objection, fear of infertility
bFemale sterilization, Jaddle, IUCD, emergency contraceptive, male condom
Current contraceptive prevalence rate among married and non pregnant women by socio demographic variables (N = 1324)
| Variables | Noncurrent user N (%) | Current users N (%) | Total N (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Occupation status of women) | |||
| Housewife | 632(60.0) | 422(40.0) | 1054(100) |
| Othersa | 149(55.2) | 121(44.8) | 270(100) |
| Women education | |||
| No formal education | 388(65.9) | 201(34.1) | 589(100) |
| Primary education | 241(55) | 197(45) | 438(100) |
| Secondary education | 118(52.4) | 107(47.6) | 225(100) |
| More than secondary | 34(47.2) | 38(52.8) | 72(100) |
| Husband education | |||
| No formal education | 316(62.7) | 188(37.3) | 504(100) |
| Primary education | 266(61) | 170(39) | 436(100) |
| Secondary education | 125(52.7) | 112(47.3) | 237(100) |
| More than secondary | 74(50.3) | 73(49.7) | 147(100) |
| Presence of electronic media | |||
| Presence of radio or TV or mobile phone | 327(52.8) | 292(47.2) | 619(100) |
| No electronic media | 454(64.4) | 251(35.6) | 705(100) |
| Participation in IGA | |||
| No participation | 515(57) | 388(43) | 903(100) |
| Participation in one IGA activity | 124(57.4) | 92(42.6) | 216(100) |
| Participation in 2 and more IGA activities | 142(69.3) | 63(30.7) | 205(100) |
| Model family | |||
| Yes | 357(60.1) | 237(39.9) | 594(100) |
| No | 424(58.1) | 306(41.9) | 730(100) |
| Number of living children | |||
| One and less | 150(52.8) | 134(47.2) | 284(100) |
| 2–5 | 453(58.9) | 316(41.1) | 769(100) |
| Six and more | 143(69.1) | 64(30.9) | 1260(100) |
a(farmer, employee, merchant and student)
Predictors of Family planning use by women in Tigray region, 2015 (N = 1324)
| Variables | Family planning use | COR[95%] | AOR[95%] | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | No | |||
| N (%) | N (%) | |||
| Zone | ||||
| Western | 50(53.2) | 44(46.8) | 1 | 1 |
| North West | 106(46.1) | 124(53.9) | 0.7(0.46,1.21) | 0.4(0.27,0.81)* |
| Central | 149(37.8) | 245(62.2) | 0.5(0.34,0.84)* | 0.5(0.29,0.97)* |
| Eastern | 67(36.4) | 117(63.6) | 0.5(0.3,0.83)* | 0.5(0.27,0.99)* |
| South East | 39(33.1) | 79(66.9) | 0.4(0.24,0.75)* | 0.39(0.18,0.83)* |
| Mekelle | 53(51.5) | 50(48.5) | 0.9(0.53,1.62) | 0.8(0.49.1.57) |
| Southern | 79(39.3) | 122(60.7) | 0.5(0.34,0.93)* | 0.4(0.26,0.86)* |
| Residence | ||||
| Rural | 377(37.3) | 634(62.7) | 1 | 1 |
| Urban | 166(53.0) | 147(47.0) | 1.8(1.47,2.45) | 2.0(1.33,3.06)* |
| Women education | ||||
| No formal education | 201(34.1) | 388(65.9) | 1 | 1 |
| Primary education | 197(45) | 241(55) | 1.5(1.22,2.03) | 1.3(1.02,1.93)* |
| Secondary education | 107(47.6) | 118(52.4) | 1.7(1.28,2.39) | 1.0(0.70,1.64) |
| More than secondary | 38(52.8) | 34(47.2) | 2.1(1.31,3.53) | 1.0(0.54,1.97) |
| Number of living children | ||||
| One and less | 134(47.2) | 150(52.8) | 1 | 1 |
| 2–5 | 316(41.1) | 143(69.1) | 0.7(0.59,1.02) | 0.8(0.54,1.19) |
| Six and more | 64(30.9) | 453(58.9) | 0.5(0.34,072) | 0.8(0.45,1.56) |
| Number of family planning methods known by women | ||||
| Up to two | 106(29.9) | 248(70.1) | 1 | 1 |
| Three and above | 437(45.3) | 528(54.7) | 1.9(1.49,2.51)* | 1.6(1.21,2.27)* |
| Distance to health facility | ||||
| Up to 30 minutes | 433(42.3) | 591(57.7) | 1.2(0.97,1.65) | 2.6(0.21,2.37) |
| Greater than 30 minutes | 110(36.7) | 190(62.3) | 1 | 1 |
| Discuss with husband about family planning use | ||||
| No | 143(25.2) | 424(74.8) | 1 | 1 |
| Yes | 398(54.4) | 333(45.6) | 3.5(2.79,4.5)* | 2.9(2.20,3.85)* |
| Approve couples using family planning | ||||
| No | 20(27.4) | 53(72.6) | 1 | 1 |
| Yes | 475(44.3) | 597(55.7) | 2.1(1.24,3.57) | 1.4(0.78,2.7) |
*P <0.05 = Significant
Predictors of long acting family planning use in Tigray region, 2015 (N = 540)
| Variables | Family planning use | COR[95%] | AOR[95%] | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | No | |||
| N (%) | N (%) | |||
| Residence | 1 | 1 | ||
| Rural | 249(66.2) | 127(33.8) | 1 | 0 .5(0.30,0.88) |
| Urban | 130(79.3) | 34(20.7) | 0.5(0.33,0.79)* | |
| Women education | ||||
| No formal education | 144(71.6) | 57(28.4) | 1 | 1 |
| Primary education | 129(65.8) | 67(34.2) | 1.3(0.85,2.0) | 1.4(0.88,2.40) |
| Secondary education | 73(69.5) | 32(30.5) | 1.1(0.66,1.85) | 1.6(0.85,3.22) |
| More than secondary | 33(86.8) | 5(13.2) | 0.3(0.14,1.02) | 0.4(0.1,1.64) |
| Number of family planning methods known by women | ||||
| Up to 2 | 81(76.4) | 25(23.6) | 1 | 1 |
| Three and more | 298(68.7) | 136(31.3) | 1.4(0.9,2.4) | 1.3(0.82,2.34) |
| Approve couples using family planning | ||||
| No | 10(50) | 10(50) | 1 | 1 |
| Yes | 338(71.5) | 135(28.5) | 0.3(0.16,0.98) | 0.4(0.17,1.10 |
| Presence of electronic media ( | ||||
| No electronic media | 166(66.1) | 85(33.9) | 1 | 1 |
| Presence of radio or TV or mobile phone | 213(66.1) | 85(33.9) | 0.6(0.48,1.0) | 0.8(0.52,1.33) |
| Husband education | ||||
| No formal education | 132(70.2) | 56(29.8) | 1 | |
| Primary education | 107(63.3) | 62(36.7) | 1.3(0.87,2.12) | 1.3(0.8,20) |
| Secondary education | 84(75.7) | 27(24.3) | 0.7(0.44,1.29) | 0.9(0.48,1.72) |
| More than secondary | 56(77.8) | 16(22.2) | 0.6(0.35,1.27) | 0.9(0.40,2.20) |
*P <0.05 = Significant