This paper analyses the regional variations in contraceptive use
between Central, Nyanza and Coast Provinces in Kenya among currently
married, fecund women drawn from the 2008-09 Kenya Demographic and
Health Survey (KDHS) data. Specifically the study examined the role of
socio-economic, cultural and demographic factors in explaining these
variations using both bivariate and logistic regression. The analysis
confirmed the higher use of contraception in Central compared to Nyanza
and Coast. Current use of modern contraceptive methods in Central is 70
percent compared with 39 percent and 37 percent for Nyanza and Coast
respectively. The higher contraceptive use in Central is attributed to
the better socio-economic and cultural environment compared with the
other two provinces. Central Province has very few cases of women with
no education, a much lower percentage in the poorest wealth (9.6)
category and the highest proportion in monogamous unions (97.1). The
higher socio-economic status and better cultural environment has in
turn created a favourable environment for the use of contraception
through the intervening variables of knowledge on family planning and
fertility preferences. The logistic regression results suggest that
differences in contraceptive use between the three provinces could be
narrowed by increasing the level of education in Coast and overcoming
traditional practices such as polygyny in both Nyanza and Coast.
Although mortality is still important, its effect has declined.
However, the unexpected finding that contraceptive use is higher in
rural areas of Central and Nyanza Provinces suggests further research
to understand what could be responsible for the reversal