Ferguson A G
GTZ Family Planning Support Unit, Ministry of Health, Nairobi, Kenya.
Stud Fam Plann. 1992 Jul-Aug;23(4):257-67.
After a long period of slow progress, the recent uptake of contraceptive use in Kenya has been dramatic. This report describes adoption of a method and method switching and discontinuation among a cohort of married women aged 25-34 in two contrasting rural areas. A retrospective "fertility diary" completed by each woman provided information on spousal separation, reproductive status, and contraceptive use over a period of 46-48 months. Contraceptive prevalence rose rapidly over the period in both areas, with significant net adoption of injectables in both areas and of IUDs in one only. Method discontinuation was concentrated among users of pills, barrier methods, and "natural" methods, and only one-third of all discontinuations were voluntary. The wide differences between the two rural areas in contraceptive prevalence were not totally reflected in recent fertility levels, and the contribution of other proximate determinants of fertility, particularly postpartum amenorrhea and spousal separation, are discussed.
在经历了长期的缓慢进展之后,肯尼亚近期的避孕措施采用情况出现了显著变化。本报告描述了两个形成对比的农村地区中,25至34岁已婚女性群体中避孕方法的采用、方法转换及停用情况。每位女性填写的一份回顾性“生育日记”提供了关于配偶分居、生殖状况以及46至48个月期间避孕措施使用情况的信息。在此期间,两个地区的避孕普及率均迅速上升,两个地区的注射用避孕药均有显著的净采用量,而宫内节育器仅在一个地区有显著净采用量。避孕方法的停用集中在口服避孕药、屏障法和“自然”避孕法的使用者中,且所有停用情况中只有三分之一是自愿的。两个农村地区在避孕普及率上的巨大差异并未完全反映在近期的生育率水平上,本文还讨论了生育的其他直接决定因素,特别是产后闭经和配偶分居的影响。