| Literature DB >> 32231356 |
Sara E Casey1, Meghan C Gallagher2, Jessica Kakesa3, Anushka Kalyanpur4, Jean-Baptiste Muselemu5, Raoza Vololona Rafanoharana6, Nathaly Spilotros7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Adolescent girls in humanitarian settings are especially vulnerable as their support systems are often disrupted. More than 20 years of violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has weakened the health system, resulting in poor sexual and reproductive health (SRH) outcomes for women. Little evidence on adolescent contraceptive use in humanitarian settings is available. CARE, International Rescue Committee (IRC), and Save the Children, in collaboration with the Reproductive Health Access, Information and Services in Emergencies (RAISE) Initiative, Columbia University, have supported the Ministry of Health (MOH) since 2011 to provide good quality contraceptive services in public health facilities in conflict-affected North and South Kivu. In this study, we analyzed contraceptive use among sexually active young women aged 15-24 in the health zones served by the partners' programs. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32231356 PMCID: PMC7108687 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1003086
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Sociodemographic characteristics.
| Characteristic | Total ( | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Mean age (standard deviation, SD), range, years | 16.4 (2.2), 8–24 | 15.4 (1.9), 8–19 | 16.9 (2.2), 9–24 |
| Under 15 years | 16.2% [14.4–18.1] (143) | 26.4% [22.9–30.3] (75) | 10.7% [8.9–12.8] (68) |
| 15–17 years | 52.7% [50.2–55.1] (532) | 61.1% [56.9–65.1] (207) | 48.2% [45.1–51.3] (325) |
| 18–24 years | 31.2% [28.9–33.5] (339) | 12.5% [10.0–15.5] (42) | 41.1% [38.1–44.2] (297) |
| Mean age (SD), range, years | 17.3 (2.1), 10–24 | 16.2 (1.6), 10–19 | 17.8 (2.2), 12–24 |
| Under 15 | 6.6% [5.3–8.3] (44) | 12.6% [9.3–16.8] (21) | 4.3% [3.1–6.0] (23) |
| 15–17 years | 45.5% [42.6–48.6] (359) | 66.2% [60.7–71.3] (142) | 37.4% [34.1–40.9] (217) |
| 18–24 years | 47.9% [44.8–50.8] (367) | 21.2% [17.0–26.2] (42) | 58.3% [54.8–61.7] (325) |
| None | 23.2% [21.1–25.4] (268) | 20.8% [17.6–24.5] (72) | 24.5% [22.0–27.3] (196) |
| Some or completed primary school | 33.7% [31.4–36.1] (352) | 36.6% [32.7–40.8] (124) | 32.2% [29.4–35.2] (228) |
| Some or completed secondary school or higher | 43.0% [40.6–45.5] (398) | 42.6% [38.5–46.8] (129) | 43.3% [40.2–46.3] (269) |
| 14.4% [12.6–16.5] (78) | 20.2% [16.7–24.3] (35) | 11.2% [9.2–13.6] (43) | |
| 31.7% [29.5–34.1] (350) | 31.2% [27.4–35.2] (112) | 32.1% [29.3–35.0] (238) | |
| Displaced now | 16.1% [14.3–18.0] (208) | 15.2% [12.4–18.5] (80) | 16.5% [14.4–19.0] (128) |
| Married or cohabiting | 61.2% [58.8–63.6] (716) | 47.1% [43.0–51.4] (186) | 68.8% [65.9–71.6] (530) |
| Not married or cohabiting | 38.8% [36.4–41.2] (621) | 52.9% [48.7–57.0] (404) | 31.2% [28.5–34.2] (217) |
| 84.8% [83.0–86.5] (910) | 75.7% [71.9–79.1] (263) | 89.7% [87.7–91.4] (647) | |
| 20.3% [18.4–22.4] (221) | 22.3% [19.0–26.0] (83) | 19.3% [17.0–21.8] (138) | |
| 45.1% [42.7–47.6] (469) | 41.1% [37.1–45.3] (136) | 47.3% [44.2–50.4] (333) | |
| None | 15.2% [13.5–17.1] (112) | 24.3% [20.9–28.1] (63) | 10.3% [8.6–12.3] (49) |
| 1–3 | 72.3% [70.0–74.4] (756) | 72.6% [68.7–76.1] (251) | 72.1% [69.3–74.8] (505) |
| 4 or more | 12.6% [11.0–14.3] (154) | 3.1% [2.0–5.0] (12) | 17.6% [15.4–20.0] (142) |
| Catholic | 44.9% [42.4–47.3] (423) | 45.2% [41.1–49.4] (130) | 44.7% [41.6–47.7] (293) |
| Protestant | 41.5% [39.1–44.0] (448) | 38.6% [34.6–42.7] (138) | 43.1% [40.1–46.2] (310) |
| Other or no religion | 13.6% [12.0–15.4] (147) | 16.2% [13.4–19.6] (57) | 12.3% [10.4–14.4] (90) |
1Values are weighted percentages, [95% CIs] (absolute counts). Chi-squared (categorical variables) and t tests (means) were used to compare results between age groups.
2N = weighted and unweighted base.
Abbreviation: CI, confidence interval
Contraceptive knowledge and attitudes.
| Knowledge or attitude | Total ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 95.3% [94.1–96.2] (977) | 94.3% [92.0–96.0] (307) | 95.8% [94.4–96.9] (670) | 0.19 | |
| 86.2% [84.4–87.8] (895) | 83.8% [80.5–86.7] (276) | 87.5% [85.3–89.4] (619) | 0.04 | |
| Health facility/health worker | 71.0% [68.7–73.2] (744) | 62.3% [58.1–66.3] (209) | 75.7% [72.9–78.2] (535) | <0.001 |
| Friend, family member | 54.1% [51.6–56.5] (530) | 56.6% [52.4–60.7] (183) | 52.7% [49.6–55.8] (347) | 0.66 |
| Radio | 30.8% [28.6–33.2] (287) | 31.8% [28.0–35.8] (91) | 30.3% [27.5–33.2] (196) | 0.99 |
| CHW | 27.2% [25.0–29.5] (279) | 22.4% [19.1–26.1] (74) | 29.8% [27.1–32.7] (205) | 0.005 |
| Other | 11.5% [10.0–13.2] (113) | 11.8% [9.4–14.8] (39) | 11.3% [9.5–13.4] (74) | 0.09 |
| Contraceptive use helps a couple take better care of their family. (Agreed) | 85.4% [83.5–87.0] (885) | 84.7% [81.4–87.5] (281) | 85.7% [83.5–87.8] (604) | 0.58 |
| A woman who uses contraception may have trouble getting pregnant again. (Disagreed) | 76.9% [74.7–78.9] (774) | 75.0% [71.2–78.5] (240) | 77.9% [75.2–80.4] (534) | 0.20 |
| Adolescent women need to know how to prevent pregnancies. (Agreed) | 69.0% [66.6–71.2] (672) | 66.9% [62.8–70.7] (209) | 70.1% [67.2–72.8] (463) | 0.19 |
| Adolescent women should be allowed to obtain contraception if they want. (Agreed) | 57.8% [55.4–60.3] (574) | 53.4% [49.2–57.6] (176) | 60.2% [57.2–63.2] (398) | 0.01 |
1Values are weighted percentages, [95% CIs] (absolute counts); chi-squared tests were used to compare results between age groups.
2N = weighted and unweighted base.
Abbreviation: CHW, community health worker
Modern contraceptive use.
| Outcome | Total ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 37.2% [34.8–39.6] (408) | 31.7% [27.9–35.7] (105) | 40.1% [37.1–43.1] (303) | 0.001 | |
| 32.2% [29.9–34.5] (311) | 28.9% [25.3–32.9] (85) | 33.9% [31.1–36.9] (226) | 0.05 | |
| 11.6% [10.1–13.3] (118) | 9.8% [7.5–12.6] (31) | 12.6% [10.7–14.8] (87) | 0.10 | |
| Modern method | 16.5% [14.7–18.4] (152) | 16.0% [13.2–19.3] (48) | 16.7% [14.5–19.1] (104) | 0.73 |
| LARC | 6.9% [5.7–8.2] (67) | 8.3% [6.3–10.9] (26) | 6.1% [4.8–7.7] (41) | 0.10 |
| | 0.07 | |||
| Tubal ligation | 0.8% [0.2–2.8] (1) | 0.0% [0–4.2] (0) | 1.2% [0.3–4.2] (1) | |
| IUD | 8.2% [5.4–12.2] (11) | 13.8% [8.1–22.6] (6) | 5.3% [2.8–9.8] (5) | |
| Implant | 32.7% [27.2–38.6] (55) | 37.9% [28.5–48.4] (20) | 30.0% [23.6–37.3] (35) | |
| Injectable | 15.2% [11.3–20.1] (25) | 10.3% [5.5–18.5] (4) | 17.6% [12.7–24.1] (21) | |
| Oral contraceptive pills | 11.3% [8.0–15.7] (19) | 9.2% [4.7–17.1] (5) | 12.4% [8.2–18.1] (14) | |
| Condom | 31.9% [26.5–37.8] (41) | 28.7% [20.3–39.0] (13) | 33.5% [26.9–40.9] (28) | |
| 0.70 | ||||
| Supported health facility | 64.3% [58.2–70.0] (103) | 67.8% [57.4–76.7] (33) | 62.4% [54.8–69.5] (70) | |
| Nonsupported health facility | 11.5% [8.1–16.0] (18) | 11.5% [6.4–19.9] (6) | 11.5% [7.5–17.3] (12) | |
| Pharmacy or boutique | 20.2% [15.7–25.6] (25) | 18.4% [11.7–27.8] (7) | 21.2% [15.7–28.1] (18) | |
| Other | 4.0% [2.2–7.2] (5) | 2.3% [0.6–8.0] (2) | 4.8% [2.5–9.3] (3) | |
| 95.3% [92.0–97.3] (146) | 95.4% [88.8–98.2] (46) | 95.3% [91.0–97.6] (100) | 0.97 | |
| 23.0% [18.2–28.5] (38) | 28.7% [20.3–39.0] (12) | 20.0% [14.7–26.7] (26) | 0.12 | |
| 91.4% [87.4–94.3] (139) | 95.4% [88.8–98.2] (46) | 89.4% [83.9–93.2] (93) | 0.10 | |
| 84.9% [80.0–88.8] (129) | 90.8% [82.9–95.3] (44) | 81.8% [75.2–87.0] (85) | 0.06 | |
| Less than 2 years | 1.4% [0.5–4.1] (3) | 1.3% [0.2–6.9] (1) | 1.5% [0.4–5.4] (2) | 0.92 |
| 2–4 years | 44.5% [37.9–51.3] (65) | 47.4% [36.7–58.4] (23) | 42.7% [34.6–51.3] (42) | |
| 5 years or more | 41.1% [34.7–47.9] (46) | 38.5% [28.5–49.6] (15) | 42.7% [34.6–51.3] (31) | |
| Unsure | 12.9% [9.0–18.1] (11) | 12.8% [7.1–22.0] (4) | 13.0% [8.3–19.8] (7) |
1Values are weighted percentages, [95% CIs] (absolute counts); chi-squared tests were used to compare results between age groups.
2N = weighted and unweighted base.
Abbreviations: LARC, long-acting reversible contraceptive; IUD, intrauterine device
Factors associated with current use of a modern contraceptive method.
| Characteristic | Unadjusted OR (95% CI) | AOR (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1.05 (0.99–1.11) | 1.11 (1.04–1.18) | 0.002 | |
| 0.89 (0.84–0.95) | 0.89 (0.83–0.95) | <0.001 | |
| None (reference) | 1.00 | ||
| Some or completed primary | 1.58 (1.05–2.36) | 1.337 (0.88–2.02) | 0.18 |
| Some or completed secondary or higher | 1.94 (1.33–2.84) | 1.77 (1.18–2.67) | 0.006 |
| 1.08 (0.81–1.44) | 1.30 (0.95–1.78) | 0.10 | |
| 0.47 (0.36–0.61) | 0.44 (0.32–0.60) | <0.001 | |
| 1.16 (0.79–1.71) | 1.73 (1.12–2.66) | 0.01 | |
| Catholic (reference) | 1.00 | ||
| Protestant | 1.06 (0.80–1.41) | 1.00 (0.73–1.36) | 1.0 |
| Other/none | 0.69 (0.44–1.09) | 0.73 (0.46–1.18) | 0.20 |
Abbreviations: AOR, adjusted odds ratio; OR, odds ratio
Barriers to contraceptive use reported by young women who are not currently using any contraception and are not currently pregnant.
| Barrier | Total ( | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Perceived low risk of or desire for pregnancy | 50.6% [47.5–53.8] (289) | 64.2% [58.9–69.1] (112) | 43.5% [39.7–47.4] (177) | <0.001 |
| Opposition to use | 31.6% [28.7–34.6] (227) | 20.8% [16.8–25.5] (48) | 37.2% [33.5–41.1] (179) | <0.001 |
| Lack of knowledge | 10.7% [8.9–12.8] (67) | 11.1% [8.2–15.0] (20) | 10.4% [8.3–13.0] (47) | 0.73 |
| Method-related reasons | 37.6% [34.6–40.7] (248) | 36.1% [31.2–41.4] (72) | 38.3% [34.6–42.2] (176) | 0.51 |
| Lack of access | 3.2% [2.3–4.5] (19) | 2.1% [1.0–4.3] (4) | 3.8% [2.6–5.6] (15) | 0.16 |
| Other | 4.0% [3.0–5.5] (31) | 2.1% [1.0–4.3] (6) | 5.0% [3.6–7.0] (25) | 0.03 |
1Values are weighted percentages, [95% CIs] (absolute counts); chi-squared tests were used to compare results between age groups.
2N = weighted and unweighted base.
3Perceived low risk of or desire for pregnancy includes those who want to become pregnant, are not married or whose husband is absent, are not having sex or infrequent sex, are (or her partner is) unable to get pregnant or having difficulty getting pregnant, had a hysterectomy, are postpartum or breastfeeding.
4Opposition to use includes those who oppose contraceptive use or do not want to use contraception, whose husband opposes or others oppose contraceptive use, report religious prohibition, heard or believe that contraception is bad for her.
5Lack of knowledge includes those who know no method, know no source of methods, lack information or do not have enough information about contraception, or say they have never heard of contraception.
6Method-related reasons includes those who fear side effects, say that the method is inconvenient or difficult to use, report health-related reasons, or say that contraception does not work.
7Lack of access includes those who say that services are too far, her preferred method is not available, it is too expensive, the services are not confidential, the providers have bad attitudes.
8Other includes those who want to wait for a particular number of births before using, have not yet discussed with husband, do not need contraception.