16 research outputs found

    What are the sources of contraceptives for married and unmarried adolescents: Health services or friends? Analysis of 59 low- and middle-income countries

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    BackgroundDespite the efforts to promote universal coverage for family planning, inequalities are still high in several countries. Our aim was to identify which sources of contraceptives women mostly rely on in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). We also explored the different sources according to age and marital status.MethodsWe used data from national health surveys carried out in 59 LMICs since 2010. Among all sexually active women at reproductive age, we explored inequalities in demand for family planning satisfied by modern methods (mDFPS) and in the source of modern contraceptives according to women's age, classified as: 15–19, 20–34, or 35–49 years of age. Among adolescents, mDFPS and source of method were explored by marital status, classified as married or in union and not married nor in a union.ResultsmDFPS was lower among adolescents than among adult women in 28 of the 59 countries. The lowest levels of mDFPS among adolescents were identified in Albania (6.1%) and Chad (8.2%). According to adolescents' marital status, the pattern of inequalities in mDFPS varied widely between regions, with married and unmarried adolescents showing similar levels of coverage in Latin America and the Caribbean, higher coverage among unmarried adolescents in Africa, and lower coverage among unmarried adolescents in Asia. Public and private health services were the main sources, with a lower share of the public sector among adolescents in almost all countries. The proportion of adolescents who obtained their contraceptives in the public sector was lower among unmarried girls than married ones in 31 of the 38 countries with data. Friends or relatives were a more significant source of contraceptives among unmarried compared to married adolescents in all regions.ConclusionsOur findings indicate lower levels of mDFPS and lower use of the public sector by adolescents, especially unmarried girls. More attention is needed to provide high-quality and affordable family planning services for adolescents, especially for those who are not married

    Learning from success cases: ecological analysis of potential pathways to universal access to family planning care in low- and middle-income countries. [version 3; peer review: 2 approved]

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    Background  Universal access to family planning services is a well-recognized human right and several countries and organizations are committed to this goal. Our objective was to identify countries who improved family planning coverage in the last 40 years and investigate which contexts enabled those advances.  Methods  Analyses were based on data from publicly available national health surveys carried out since 1986 in Egypt, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Afghanistan, Brazil, and Ecuador, selected based on previous evidence. We estimated demand for family planning satisfied with modern methods (mDFPS) for each country and explored inequalities in terms of wealth, women’s education, and women’s age. We also explored contextual differences in terms of women’s empowerment, percentage of population living in extreme poverty, and share of each type of contraceptive. To better understand political and sociocultural contexts, country case studies were included, based on literature review.  Results  Patterns of mDFPS increase were distinct in the selected countries. Current level of mDFPS coverage ranged between 94% in Brazil and 38% in Afghanistan. All countries experienced an important reduction in both gender inequality and extreme poverty. According to the share of each type of contraceptive, most countries presented higher use of short-acting reversible methods. Exceptions were Ecuador, where the most used method is sterilization, and Egypt, which presented higher use of long-acting reversible methods. In the first years analyzed, all countries presented huge gaps in coverage according to wealth, women’s education and women’s age. All countries managed to increase coverage over recent years, especially among women from the more disadvantaged groups.  Conclusions  Family planning coverage increased along with reductions in poverty and gender inequality, with substantial increases in coverage among the most disadvantaged in recent years. Policies involving primary health care services, provision of various methods, and high quality training of health providers are crucial to increase coverage

    Does women's age matter in the SDGs era: coverage of demand for family planning satisfied with modern methods and institutional delivery in 91 low- and middle-income countries.

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    BACKGROUND: The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) include specific targets for family planning (SDG 3.7) and birth attendance (SDG 3.1.2), and require analyses disaggregated by age and other dimensions of inequality (SDG 17.18). We aimed to describe coverage with demand for family planning satisfied with modern methods (DFPSm) and institutional delivery in low- and middle-income countries across the reproductive age spectrum. We attempted to identify a typology of patterns of coverage by age and compare their distribution according to geographic regions, World Bank income groups and intervention coverage levels. METHODS: We used Demographic and Health Survey and Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys. For DFPSm, we considered the woman's age at the time of the survey, whereas for institutional delivery we considered the woman's age at birth of the child. Both age variables were categorized into seven groups of 5 year-intervals, 15-19 up to 45-49. Five distinct patterns were identified: (a) increasing coverage with age; (b) similar coverage in all age groups; (c) U-shaped; (d) inverse U-shaped; and (e) declining coverage with age. The frequency of the five patterns was examined according to UNICEF regions, World Bank income groups, and coverage at national level of the given indicator. RESULTS: We analyzed 91 countries. For DFPSm, the most frequent age patterns were inverse U-shaped (53%, 47 countries) and increasing coverage with age (41%, 36 countries). Inverse-U shaped patterns for DFPSm was the commonest pattern among lower-middle income countries, while low- and upper middle-income countries showed a more balanced distribution between increasing with age and U-shaped patterns. In the first and second tertiles of national coverage of DFPSm, inverse U-shaped was observed in more than half of countries. For institutional delivery, declining coverage with age was the prevailing pattern (44%, 39 countries), followed by similar coverage across age groups (39%, 35 countries). Most (79%) upper-middle income countries showed no variation by age group while most low-income countries showed declining coverage with age (71%). CONCLUSION: Large inequalities in DFPSm and institutional delivery were identified by age, varying from one intervention to the other. Policy and programmatic approaches must be tailored to national patterns, and in most cases older women and adolescents will require special attention due to lower coverage and because they are at higher risk for maternal mortality and other poor obstetrical outcomes

    Measures of women's empowerment based on individual-level data: a literature review with a focus on the methodological approaches

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    BackgroundQuantifying women's empowerment has become the focus of attention of many international organizations and scholars. We aimed to describe quantitative indicators of women's empowerment that are based on individual-level data.MethodsIn this scoping review, we searched PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, Science Direct, Google, and Google Scholar for publications describing the operationalization of measures of women's empowerment.ResultsWe identified 36 studies published since 2004, half of them since 2019, and most from low- and middle-income countries. Twelve studies were based on data from the Demographic and Health Surveys and used 56 different variables from the questionnaires (ranging from one to 25 per study) to measure the overall empowerment of women 15–49 years. One study focused on rural women, two included married and unmarried women, and one analyzed the couple's responses. Factor analysis and principal component analysis were the most common approaches used. Among the 24 studies based on other surveys, ten analyzed overall empowerment, while the others addressed sexual and reproductive health (4 studies), agriculture (3) and livestock (1), water and sanitation (2), nutrition (2), agency (1), and psychological empowerment (1). These measures were mainly based on data from single countries and factor analysis was the most frequently analytical method used. We observed a diversity of indicator definitions and domains and a lack of consensus in terms of what the proposed indicators measure.ConclusionThe proposed women's empowerment indicators represent an advance in the field of gender and development monitoring. However, the empowerment definitions used vary widely in concept and in the domains/dimensions considered, which, in turn influence or are influenced by the adopted methodologies. It remains a challenge to find a balance between the need for a measure suitable for comparisons across populations and over time and the incorporation of country-specific elements

    Are children in female-headed households at a disadvantage? An analysis of immunization coverage and stunting prevalence : in 95 low- and middle-income countries

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    Studies of inequalities in child health have given limited attention to household structure and headship. The few existing reports on child outcomes in male and female-headed households have produced inconsistent results. The aim of our analyses was to provide a global view of the influence of sex of the household head on child health in cross-sectional surveys from up to 95 LMICs. Studied outcomes were full immunization coverage in children aged 12–23 months and stunting prevalence in under-five children. We analyzed the most recent nationally-representative surveys for each country (since 2010) with available data. After initial exploratory analyses, we focused on three types of households: a) male-headed household (MHH) comprised 73.1% of all households in the pooled analyses; b) female Headed Household (FHH) with at least one adult male represented 9.8% of households; and c) FHH without an adult male accounted for 15.0% of households. Our analyses also included the following covariates: wealth index, education of the child’s mother and urban/rural residence. Meta-analytic approaches were used to calculate pooled effects across the countries with MHH as the reference category. Regarding full immunization, the pooled prevalence ratio for FHH (any male) was 0.99 (0.97; 1.01) and that for FHH (no male) was 0.99 (0.97; 1.02). For stunting prevalence, the pooled prevalence ratio for FHH (any male) was 1.00 (0.98; 1.02) and for FHH (no male) was 1.00 (0.98; 1.02). Adjustment for covariates did not lead to any noteworthy change in the results. No particular patterns were found among different world regions. A few countries presented significant inequalities with different directions of association, indicating the diversity of FHH and how complex the meaning and measurement of household headship may be. Further research is warranted to understand context, examine mediating factors, and exploring alternative definitions of household headship in countries with some association.The International Development Research Centre, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Wellcome Trust and ABRASCO (Associacao Brasileira de Saude Coletiva).https://www.elsevier.com/locate/ssmphhj2021Sociolog

    The Role of Gender Inequality and Health Expenditure on the Coverage of Demand for Family Planning Satisfied by Modern Contraceptives: A Multilevel Analysis of Cross-Sectional Studies in 14 LAC Countries

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    BACKGROUND: Despite international efforts to improve reproductive health indicators, little attention is paid to the contributions of contextual factors to modern contraceptive coverage, especially in the Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) region. This study aimed to identify the association between country-level Gender Inequality and Health Expenditure with demand for family planning satisfied by modern contraceptive methods (DFPSm) in Latin American sexually active women. METHODS: Our analyses included data from the most recent (post-2010) Demographic and Health Survey or Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey from 14 LAC countries. Descriptive analyses and multilevel logistic regressions were performed. Six individual-level factors were included. The effect of the country-level factors Gender Inequality Index (GII) and Current Health Expenditure on DFPSm was investigated. FINDINGS: DFPSm ranged from 41.8% (95% CI: 40.2-43.5) in Haiti to 85.6% (95% CI: 84.9-86.3) in Colombia, with an overall median coverage of 77.8%. A direct association between the odds of DFPSm and woman\u27s education, wealth index, and the number of children was identified. Women from countries in the highest GII tertile were less likely (OR: 0.32, 95% CI: 0.13-0.76) to have DFPSm than those living in countries in the lowest tertile. INTERPRETATION: Understanding the contribution of country-level factors to modern contraception may allow macro-level actions focused on the population\u27s reproductive needs. In this sense, country-level gender inequalities play an important role, as well as individual factors such as wealth and education. FUNDING: Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and Associação Brasileira de SaĂșde Coletiva (ABRASCO)

    Trends in demand for Family planning satisfied with modern methods in low- and middle-income countries

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    Universal access to sexual and reproductive health is addressed on The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 3 and 5. Family planning provides many benefits to women, families and societies. Empowering women and enabling couples to time pregnancies, it also gave whole countries the opportunity to hit population targets and to benefit from the demographic dividend. We used data from Demographic and Health Surveys and Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys to track progress in the demand for family planning satisfied with modern methods (mDFPS) and its inequalities between 1993 and 2016 in 69 low- and middle-income countries. Average annual change in mDFPS and in wealth-based inequalities in mDFPS were estimated among married women aged 15-49 years by country and world region. Global analyses were disaggregated by wealth quintiles, area of residence and woman’s age. Considering SDGs targets, we also predicted country’s level of mDFPS in 2030 using a linear model. Although increases on mDFPS and reduction in wealth-based inequalities were observed for most regions, progress was uneven. The faster increase was observed in Eastern & Southern Africa, which showed an average increase of 1.7 percentage points (p.p.) a year, while West & Central Africa, which still with less than 40% of coverage, had an increase of 0.8 p.p. a year in mDFPS and almost no change in inequalities. At country level, fastest progress in national coverage was observed in Rwanda (mDFPS increased by 5 p.p.) and Lesotho was the country with the fastest reduction in inequalities in mDFPS (3.4 p.p. a year). Inequalities by area of residence were also reduced, but large gaps remain. Trends for young adolescents are not accompanying the other age groups, with inequalities increasing overtime. 42 countries will not achieve universal coverage by 2030 if the current trend is not accelerated. Our results suggest that countries where policies and programs were properly designed and implemented achieved great progress overtime and efforts to increase family planning coverage and reduce inequalities must be prioritized in countries where progress is slower or inexistent.O acesso universal a saĂșde sexual e reprodutiva Ă© objetivado pelos Objetivos de Desenvolvimento SustentĂĄvel (ODSs) 3 e 5. O planejamento familiar proporciona inĂșmeros benefĂ­cios para mulheres, famĂ­lias e comunidades, empoderando mulheres e permitindo casais a determinar o nĂșmero de filhos e momento oportuno de engravidar, fornece a paĂ­ses a oportunidade de atingir metas populacionais e de obter benefĂ­cios do dividendo demogrĂĄfico. NĂłs utilizamos dados de inquĂ©ritos DHS (Demographic and Health Surveys) e MICS (Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys) para monitorar a evolução na demanda por planejamento familiar satisfeita por mĂ©todos contraceptivos modernos (DPFSm) e desigualdades associadas entre 1993 e 2016 em 69 paĂ­ses de baixa e mĂ©dia renda. Mudanças anuais mĂ©dias em DPFSm e em desigualdades socioeconĂŽmicas em DPFSm foram estimadas para mulheres casadas ou em uniĂŁo entre 15 e 49 anos para cada paĂ­s e regiĂŁo do mundo. AnĂĄlises estratificadas de acordo com quintis de riqueza, ĂĄrea de residĂȘncia e idade da mulher foram realizadas a nĂ­vel global. Considerando as metas dos ODSs, o nĂ­vel esperado de cobertura em cada paĂ­s em 2030 foi projetado assumindo-se um modelo linear. A maior parte das regiĂ”es apresentaram aumento na DPFSm e redução nas desigualdades, no entanto, a evolução foi bastante heterogĂȘnea. O aumento mais rĂĄpido foi observado nas regiĂ”es leste e sul da África, onde a DPFSm aumentou em mĂ©dia 1,7 pontos percentuais (p.p.) por ano, enquanto que, na África Ocidental e Central, onde a cobertura ainda Ă© inferior a 40%, o aumento foi em mĂ©dia de 0,8 p.p. por ano e praticamente nenhuma mudança foi observada quanto a redução de desigualdades em DPFSm. O paĂ­s que apresentou aumento mais rĂĄpido na DPFSm foi Ruanda (aumento anual mĂ©dio de 5 p.p.) e Lesoto foi o paĂ­s com mais rĂĄpida redução em desigualdades em DPFSm (em mĂ©dia 3.4 p.p. por ano). Desigualdades quanto Ă  ĂĄrea de residĂȘncia tambĂ©m diminuĂ­ram, mas grandes diferenças permanecem. A evolução entre adolescentes foi mais lenta do que entre os demais grupos de idade, aumentando as desigualdades ao longo do tempo. 42 paĂ­ses nĂŁo atingirĂŁo cobertura universal de DPFSm atĂ© 2030 se a tendĂȘncia atual nĂŁo for acelerada. Nossos resultados indicam que paĂ­ses onde as polĂ­ticas e programas foram propriamente delineados e implementados lograram importante progresso ao longo do tempo. Esforços para aumentar cobertura e reduzir desigualdades em DPFSm devem ser priorizados em paĂ­ses onde o progresso foi lento ou inexistente

    The sociodemographic, behavioral, reproductive, and health factors associated with fertility in Brazil.

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    High fertility rates among disadvantaged subgroups are a public health problem because fertility levels significantly affect socioeconomic conditions and a population's welfare. This paper aims to analyze the sociodemographic, behavioral, and reproductive factors associated with fertility rates among Brazilian women aged between 15-49 years. A Poisson regression was used to analyze data from the 2006 PNDS (Pesquisa Nacional de Demografia e SaĂșde da Criança e da Mulher), which evaluates socioeconomic, demographic, geographic, reproductive, behavioral, and chronic disease variables. The results show that the following characteristics are positively associated with an increase in the number of children born: being aged 20-24, residing in the North, being nonwhite, not being in paid employment, having lower education levels, having lower socioeconomic status, being in a stable union, having the first sexual intercourse before the age of 16 and having the first child before the age of 20. Thus, it is important to implement efficient family planning policies targeting these subgroups in order to improve life conditions, reduce inequalities and avoid the adverse outcomes of high fertility

    Contraception in adolescence: the influence of parity and marital status on contraceptive use in 73 low-and middle-income countries

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    Abstract Background There is still a large gap in relation to effectively meet the contraceptive needs and family planning goals of adolescents. Our aim was to describe how having a partner and children impact on contraceptive behavior of sexually active female adolescents from low and middle-income countries (LMICs). Methods Analyses were based on the most recent Demographic and Health Surveys and Multiple Indicator Surveys carried out since 2005 in 73 LMICs with available data for sexually active women aged 15–19 years. Modern contraceptive prevalence and demand for family planning satisfied with modern methods of contraception (mDFPS) were estimated among three subgroups of adolescents considering their parity and marital status- not married, married without children, and married with children – at national and regional levels. Results Female adolescents who were married with no children presented the lowest median modern contraceptive prevalence in all world regions, ranging from 2.9% in West & Central Africa to 29.0% in Latin America & Caribbean. Regarding mDFPS, the lowest coverage for married adolescents without children was found in West & Central Africa (12.6%), whereas Latin America & Caribbean presented the highest (50.4%). In East Asia & Pacific, not married adolescents were the group with the lowest mDFPS (17.1%). In 12 countries, mDFPS was below 10% among married adolescents without children: Angola, Chad, Congo, Congo DR, Guinea, Mozambique, Niger, Nigeria, and Senegal in Africa, Philippines and Timor-Leste in Asia and Guyana in Latin America & Caribbean. Conclusions In most countries, modern contraceptive prevalence and mDFPS were particularly low among married female adolescents without children, which should be considered a priority group for intervention. The findings suggest that social norms regarding marriage and fertility expectations and other cultural barriers have a role at least as relevant as contraceptive availability. All these aspects need to be considered in the design of family planning strategies to effectively increase modern contraceptive use among adolescents everywhere, particularly in conservative contexts

    Demand for family planning satisfied with modern methods among sexually active women in low- and middle-income countries: who is lagging behind?

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    Abstract Background Family planning is key for reducing unintended pregnancies and their health consequences and is also associated with improvements in economic outcomes. Our objective was to identify groups of sexually active women with extremely low demand for family planning satisfied with modern methods (mDFPS) in low- and middle-income countries, at national and subnational levels to inform the improvement and expansion of programmatic efforts to narrow the gaps in mDFPS coverage. Methods Analyses were based on Demographic and Health Survey and Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey data. The most recent surveys carried out since 2000 in 77 countries were included in the analysis. We estimated mDFPS among women aged 15–49 years. Subgroups with low coverage (mDFPS below 20%) were identified according to marital status, wealth, age, education, literacy, area of residence (urban or rural), geographic region and religion. Results Overall, only 52.9% of the women with a demand for family planning were using a modern contraceptive method, but coverage varied greatly. West & Central Africa showed the lowest coverage (32.9% mean mDFPS), whereas South Asia and Latin America & the Caribbean had the highest coverage (approximately 70% mean mDFPS). Some countries showed high reliance on traditional contraceptive methods, markedly those from Central and Eastern Europe, and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CEE & CIS). Albania, Azerbaijan, Benin, Chad and Congo Democratic Republic presented low mDFPS coverage (< 20%). The other countries had mDFPS above 20% at country-level, yet in many of these countries mDFPS coverage was low among women in the poorest wealth quintiles, in the youngest age groups, with little education and living in rural areas. Coverage according to marital status varied greatly: in Asia & Pacific and Latin America & the Caribbean mDFPS was higher among married women; the opposite was found in West & Central Africa and CEE & CIS countries. Conclusions Almost half of the women in need were not using an effective family planning method. Subgroups requiring special attention include women who are poor, uneducated/illiterate, young, and living in rural areas. Efforts to increase mDFPS must address not only the supply side but also tackle the need to change social norms that might inhibit uptake of contraception
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