Unwanted Family Planning: Prevalence Estimates for 56 Countries.

IF 1.9 3区 医学 Q2 DEMOGRAPHY
David Canning, Mahesh Karra
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

While there is a large literature on the prevalence of unmet need for family planning, there is no matching quantitative evidence on the prevalence of unwanted family planning; all contraceptive use is assumed to represent a "met need." This lack of evidence raises concerns that some observed contraceptive use may be undesired and coercive. We provide estimates of unwanted family planning using Demographic and Health Survey data collected from 1,546,987 women in 56 low- and middle-income countries between 2011 and 2019. We estimate the prevalence of unwanted family planning, defined as the proportion of women who report wanting a child in the next nine months but who are using contraception. We find that 12.2 percent of women have an unmet need for family planning, while 2.1 percent have unwanted family planning, with estimated prevalence rates ranging from 0.4 percent in Gambia to 7.1 percent in Jordan. About half of unwanted family planning use can be attributed to condoms, withdrawal, and abstinence. Estimating the prevalence of unwanted family planning is difficult given current data collection efforts, which are not designed for this purpose. We recommend that future surveys probe the reasons for the use of family planning.

不必要的计划生育:56个国家的流行情况估计。
虽然关于计划生育需要未得到满足的普遍情况有大量文献,但关于不想要的计划生育的普遍情况却没有相应的数量证据;所有避孕措施的使用都被认为是“满足了需求”。证据的缺乏引起了人们的关注,即一些观察到的避孕措施的使用可能是不希望的和强制性的。我们利用2011年至2019年期间从56个低收入和中等收入国家的1,546,987名妇女收集的人口与健康调查数据,提供了非自愿计划生育的估计数。我们估计了非自愿计划生育的流行程度,定义为报告在未来9个月内想要孩子但正在采取避孕措施的妇女的比例。我们发现,12.2%的妇女计划生育需求未得到满足,而2.1%的妇女有不想要的计划生育,估计患病率从冈比亚的0.4%到约旦的7.1%不等。大约一半的不必要的计划生育使用可归因于避孕套,戒断和禁欲。鉴于目前的数据收集工作并不是为此目的而设计的,因此很难估计不想要的计划生育的普遍程度。我们建议今后的调查探究使用计划生育的原因。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
9.50%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Studies in Family Planning publishes public health, social science, and biomedical research concerning sexual and reproductive health, fertility, and family planning, with a primary focus on developing countries. Each issue contains original research articles, reports, a commentary, book reviews, and a data section with findings for individual countries from the Demographic and Health Surveys.
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