尼泊尔的计划生育项目已经走过了漫长的道路:与巴德里·拉杰·潘德博士的对话

S. Thapa
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引用次数: 0

摘要

尼泊尔实行计划生育已经将近60年了。目前,尼泊尔妇女的平均子女数量仅为两个,这被定义为生育的“替代水平”(即两个子女取代夫妇自己)相比之下,大约50年前(20世纪70年代中期),尼泊尔已婚妇女平均生育6个以上的孩子。在尼泊尔这样一个基本上是父权和父权社会,这种生育行为的变化(肯定受到对小家庭规模的态度的影响)应该被视为一场“生殖革命”——近几十年来,其他几个国家也经历了这种转变。这场生殖革命主要是由采用现代避孕方法所推动的。1966年,尼泊尔成为正式将计划生育作为“基本人权和长期国家计划政策工具”的少数几个国家之一绝育(主要是女性绝育)一直是控制生育的主要方法。目前,尼泊尔50%以上的已婚妇女采取某种形式的避孕措施从各方面来看,中国的计划生育计划都是成功的。然而,近年来,其他因素,包括堕胎和结婚年龄提高,以及男性选择向外移徙,也导致生育率进一步下降
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Nepal’s Family Planning Program has Come a Long Way: A Conversation with Dr. Badri Raj Pande
It has been nearly six decades since Nepal introduced a family planning program.1,2 At present, the average number of children that a woman in Nepal has is just two, which is defined as a ‘replacement level’ of fertility (that is, two offspring to replace the couple themselves).3 In contrast, about fifty-years ago (in the mid-1970s), the average was more than six children for a married woman in Nepal.4,5 This change in reproductive behavior (certainly influenced by attitudes towards smaller family size) should be considered a ‘reproductive revolution’ in an essentially patriarchal and patrilocal society like Nepal – a transition several other countries have experienced in recent decades as well.6,7 This reproductive revolution is driven principally by the adaption of modern methods of contraception. In 1966, Nepal became one of only a handful of countries where family planning was officially adopted as a ‘fundamental human right and a policy tool in long-range national planning’.1 Sterilization (mainly female sterilization) has been the principal method of fertility control.8,9 At present, more than 50% of married women in Nepal use some form of contraception.8 By all measures, the country’s family planning program must be considered a success. In more recent years however, other factors including abortion and rising age of marriage, as well as male-selected out-migration, have also contributed to the further decline in fertility.10-14
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