| Literature DB >> 30909942 |
Mohamad I Brooks1, Nicole E Johns2, Anne K Quinn2, Sabrina C Boyce2, Ibrahima A Fatouma3, Alhassane O Oumarou3, Aliou Sani3, Jay G Silverman2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Republic of Niger has the highest rate of early marriage and adolescent fertility in the world. Recent global health initiatives, such as Family Planning 2020, have reinvigorated investments in family planning in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). As part of this initiative, Niger has implemented ambitious plans to increase contraceptive prevalence through policies designed to increase coverage and access to family planning services. One strategy involves the deployment of volunteer community health workers (relais communautaires) in rural settings to improve access to family planning services, especially among adolescents and youth. The objective of this article is to determine if visits by relais are associated with increased use of modern contraception among young married women in rural Niger.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30909942 PMCID: PMC6434879 DOI: 10.1186/s12978-019-0701-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Health ISSN: 1742-4755 Impact factor: 3.223
Characteristics of relais visits in the past three months and current use of modern contraceptive methods among young married women in Dosso region, Niger 2016
| Sociodemographic covariatesa | Overall | Visited by | Current use of modern contraceptive methods | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| (%) |
| (%) |
| (%) | |
| 956 | (100) | 89 | (9.3) | 109 | (11.4) | |
| Age | ||||||
| 13 to 15 (very young) | 162 | (16.9) | 8 | (9.0) | 10 | (9.2) |
| 16 and 17 (younger adolescent) | 284 | (29.7) | 19 | (21.4) | 22 | (20.2) |
| 18 and 19 (older adolescent) | 510 | (53.4) | 62 | (69.7) | 77 | (70.6) |
| Husband’s age | ||||||
| Under 25 | 445 | (48.1) | 25 | (29.8) | 39 | (36.4) |
| 25 and older | 481 | (51.9) | 59 | (70.2) | 68 | (63.6) |
| Husband’s number of wives | ||||||
| 1 | 803 | (86.7) | 74 | (88.1) | 94 | (87.9) |
| 2 | 111 | (12.0) | 8 | (9.5) | 12 | (11.2) |
| 3 or more | 12 | (1.3) | 2 | (2.4) | 1 | (0.9) |
| Education level | ||||||
| No school | 464 | (49.0) | 33 | (37.5) | 47 | (43.9) |
| Quranic school | 166 | (17.5) | 19 | (21.6) | 26 | (24.3) |
| Government school | 318 | (33.5) | 36 | (40.9) | 34 | (31.8) |
| Husband’s education level | ||||||
| No school | 291 | (31.6) | 23 | (27.7) | 26 | (24.3) |
| Quranic school | 193 | (20.9) | 19 | (22.9) | 33 | (30.8) |
| Government school | 438 | (47.5) | 41 | (49.4) | 48 | (44.9) |
| Parity | ||||||
| None | 360 | (37.7) | 9 | (10.1) | 4 | (3.7) |
| 1 child | 321 | (33.6) | 29 | (32.6) | 44 | (40.4) |
| 2 children | 206 | (21.5) | 37 | (41.6) | 46 | (42.2) |
| 3 or more children | 69 | (7.2) | 14 | (15.7) | 15 | (13.7) |
| Worked in last 12 months | ||||||
| Yes | 407 | (42.8) | 30 | (33.7) | 39 | (35.8) |
| Husband sleeps most nights in the same compound | ||||||
| Yes | 856 | (90.0) | 82 | (92.1) | 102 | (93.6) |
| Husband spent a period longer than three months away from village | ||||||
| Yes | 644 | (69.8) | 49 | (58.3) | 76 | (71.0) |
| Household Assets | ||||||
| Less than median household asset score | 304 | (32.9) | 34 | (40.5) | 36 | (33.6) |
| Median or above household asset score | 619 | (67.1) | 50 | (59.5) | 71 | (66.4) |
| Food insecurity | ||||||
| Yes | 214 | (22.5) | 25 | (28.1) | 30 | (27.5) |
| Tribe | ||||||
| Zarma | 650 | (68.9) | 51 | (58.6) | 59 | (55.1) |
| Hausa | 294 | (31.1) | 36 | (41.4) | 48 | (44.9) |
| District | ||||||
| Dosso | 310 | (32.4) | 37 | (41.6) | 21 | (19.3) |
| Doutchi | 316 | (33.1) | 35 | (39.3) | 52 | (47.7) |
| Loga | 330 | (34.5) | 17 | (19.1) | 36 | (33.0) |
a Missing data not reported
Description of relais visits among young married women visited by relais in past three months in Dosso region, Niger 2016
| Overall | ||
|---|---|---|
|
| (%) | |
| 89 | (100) | |
| Number of | ||
| 1 | 34 | (38.2) |
| 2 | 37 | (41.6) |
| 3 | 18 | (20.2) |
| Topics discussed during | ||
| Family Planning | 80 | (89.9) |
| Pregnancy Health | 52 | (58.4) |
| Nutrition | 51 | (57.3) |
| Gender | 11 | (12.4) |
| Yes | 68 | (76.4) |
| No | 21 | (23.6) |
| Type of family planning provided | ||
| Pill | 46 | (68.7) |
| Condom | 2 | (3.0) |
| Female Condom | 3 | (4.5) |
| Other | 23 | (33.8) |
| Yes | 46 | (51.7) |
| No | 43 | (48.3) |
| Type of FP provided at health center | ||
| Pill | 24 | (53.3) |
| Injectables | 21 | (45.7) |
| Implants | 1 | (2.2) |
| Other | 3 | (6.5) |
| Found | ||
| Yes | 84 | (94.4) |
| No | 5 | (5.6) |
| What | ||
| Helped me make choices about my life | 67 | (79.8) |
| Helped teach me how to healthily space my pregnancies | 54 | (64.3) |
| Helped me to speak to my husband about family planning | 47 | (56.0) |
| Helped to better understand how to keep me and my family healthy | 17 | (20.5) |
| Someone in household was disapproving of relais visit | ||
| Yes | 7 | (7.9) |
| No | 65 | (73.0) |
| Don’t know | 17 | (19.1) |
Adjusted odds ratios (AORs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs) for predictors of current use of modern contraceptive methods among young married women in Dosso region, Niger 2016
| AORs† | 95% CI | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Independent variable | |||
| Visited by | |||
| Yes | 1.94 | 1.07,3.51 | 0.03* |
| Sociodemographic variables | |||
| Parity (continuous) | |||
| 1.94 | 1.59,2.37 | < 0.001*** | |
| Husband’s education (ref = none) | |||
| Quranic school | 1.70 | 0.92,3.11 | 0.09 |
| Government school | 1.33 | 0.78,2.27 | 0.29 |
| Worked in the last 12 months (ref = no) | |||
| Yes | 0.62 | 0.39,0.98 | 0.04* |
| District (ref = Dosso) | |||
| Doutchi | 2.76 | 1.55,4.92 | 0.001** |
| Loga | 2.13 | 1.16,3.89 | 0.01* |
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001
†Adjusted for all other covariates in the model. Covariates removed based on p-value of > 0.20 in bivariate chi-square tests include: husband’s number of wives, husband spent a period longer than 3 months away from village, household assets. Tribe was excluded because of collinearity with district. Covariates removed based on backwards model selection from full adjusted model with p > 0.10 include: wife’s age, husband’s age, wife’s schooling, husband spends majority of nights at wife’s compound, and food insecurity