University of Michigan Medical School, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, USA.
Stud Fam Plann. 2012 Sep;43(3):201-12. doi: 10.1111/j.1728-4465.2012.00318.x.
Pervasive gendered inequities and norms regarding the subordination of women give Ghanaian men disproportionately more power than women, particularly in relation to sex. We hypothesize that lack of sexual empowerment may pose an important barrier to reproductive health and adoption of family planning methods. Using the 2008 Ghana Demographic Health Survey, we examine the association between women's sexual empowerment and contraceptive use in Ghana among nonpregnant married and partnered women not desiring to conceive in the next three months. Increasing levels of sexual empowerment are found to be associated with use of contraceptives, even after adjusting for demographic predictors of contraceptive use. This association is moderated by wealth. Formal education, increasing wealth, and being in an unmarried partnership are associated with contraceptive use, whereas women who identify as being Muslim are less likely to use contraceptives than those who identify as being Christian. These findings suggest that to achieve universal access to reproductive health services, gendered disparities in sexual empowerment, particularly among economically disadvantaged women, need to be better addressed.
普遍存在的性别不平等和妇女从属地位的规范使加纳男性比女性拥有不成比例的更多权力,尤其是在性方面。我们假设,缺乏性赋权可能是生殖健康和计划生育方法采用的一个重要障碍。利用 2008 年加纳人口与健康调查,我们研究了加纳非妊娠已婚和有伴侣的、在未来三个月内不打算怀孕的女性中,女性性赋权与避孕措施使用之间的关系。即使在调整了避孕措施使用的人口预测因素后,性赋权程度的增加仍与避孕措施的使用相关。这种关联受到财富的调节。正规教育、财富增加和未婚伴侣关系与避孕措施的使用有关,而自认为是穆斯林的女性比自认为是基督教的女性更不可能使用避孕措施。这些发现表明,为了实现生殖健康服务的普及,需要更好地解决性赋权方面的性别差异,特别是在经济处于不利地位的妇女中。