Duze Mustapha C, Mohammed Ismaila Z
Department of Sociology, Bayero University, Kano, Nigeria.
Afr J Reprod Health. 2006 Dec;10(3):53-65.
This paper examines the linkages between socioeconomic characteristics, attitudes, and familial contraceptive use. Past family planning programs in Nigeria have been mainly directed toward women. However, because northern Nigeria (and to a slightly lesser extent all of Nigeria) remains a patrilineal society characterised by early age at marriage for women, men at present continue to determine familial fertility and contraceptive decisions. Consequently, at least for the time period relevant for current policy planning purposes, the willingness of husbands to adopt or allow their spouses to use family planning practices will determine the pace of fertility reduction in Nigeria. The results suggest that there is high knowledge of contraceptives, a generally negative attitude towards limiting family size for economic reasons, and consequently low rates of contraceptive use. Respondents who were willing to use contraceptives were more willing to use them for child spacing purposes than explicitly for limiting family size. Path-analytic decompositions of the effects of predictor variables show that education has the largest direct and total effects on contraceptive use while specific knowledge of contraceptives has the smallest direct and total effect (as well as a paradoxical negative direct effect when education is included in the model). Most importantly, attitudes have the largest direct effect on contraceptive use with a standardized coefficient value of 781. Thus, since knowledge of contraceptive is already high among even those respondents who do not use contraceptives, the attitudes of males are especially important for decisions about contraceptive use. As a result, family planning programs that continue to focus solely on women will continue to achieve only limited successes in northern Nigeria (and likely in the many patrilineal societies where similar programs are pursued).
本文探讨了社会经济特征、态度与家庭避孕措施使用之间的联系。尼日利亚过去的计划生育项目主要针对女性。然而,由于尼日利亚北部(以及在稍小程度上整个尼日利亚)仍然是一个父系社会,其特点是女性早婚,目前男性继续决定家庭生育和避孕决策。因此,至少在与当前政策规划目的相关的时间段内,丈夫采用或允许其配偶使用计划生育措施的意愿将决定尼日利亚生育率下降的速度。结果表明,人们对避孕措施的知晓率很高,但出于经济原因对限制家庭规模普遍持消极态度,因此避孕措施的使用率较低。愿意使用避孕措施的受访者更愿意为了生育间隔而使用,而不是明确为了限制家庭规模。预测变量效应的路径分析分解表明,教育对避孕措施的使用具有最大的直接和总体影响,而对避孕措施的具体知晓对其直接和总体影响最小(当模型中纳入教育因素时,甚至存在矛盾的负向直接影响)。最重要的是,态度对避孕措施的使用具有最大的直接影响,标准化系数值为0.781。因此,由于即使在不使用避孕措施的受访者中,对避孕措施的知晓率也已经很高,男性的态度对于避孕措施使用的决策尤为重要。结果,继续仅关注女性的计划生育项目在尼日利亚北部(以及可能在许多推行类似项目的父系社会)将只能取得有限的成功。