de Oliveira Isabel Tiago, Dias José G, Padmadas Sabu S
Instituto Universitário de Lisboa (ISCTE-IUL), CIES-IUL, Lisboa, Portugal.
Centre for Global Health, Population, Poverty and Policy and Division of Social Statistics and Demography, University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2014 Jan 28;9(1):e86654. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0086654. eCollection 2014.
The recent decline in fertility in India has been unprecedented especially in southern India, where fertility is almost exclusively controlled by means of permanent contraceptive methods, mainly female sterilization, which constitutes about two-thirds of overall contraceptive use. Many Indian women undergo sterilization at relatively young ages as a consequence of early marriage and childbearing in short birth intervals. This research aims to investigate the socioeconomic factors determining the choices for alternative contraceptive choices against the dominant preference for sterilization among married women in India.
Data for this study are drawn from the 2005-06 National Family Health Surveys focusing on a sample of married women who reported having used a method of contraception in the five years preceding the survey. A multilevel multinomial logit regression is used to estimate the impact of socioeconomic factors on contraceptive choices, differentiating temporary modern or traditional methods versus sterilization.
Religious affiliation, women's education and occupation had overarching influence on method choices amongst recent users. Muslim women were at higher odds of choosing a traditional or modern temporary method than sterilization. Higher level of women's education increased the odds of modern temporary method choices but the education effect on traditional method choices was only marginally significant. Recent users belonging to wealthier households had higher odds of choosing modern methods over sterilization. Exposure to family planning messages through radio had a positive effect on modern and traditional method choices. Community variations in method choices were highly significant.
The persistent dominance of sterilization in the Indian family planning programme is largely determined by socioeconomic conditions. Reproductive health programmes should address the socioeconomic barriers and consider multiple cost-effective strategies such as mass media to promote awareness of modern temporary methods.
印度近期生育率的下降是前所未有的,尤其是在印度南部,那里的生育率几乎完全通过永久性避孕方法来控制,主要是女性绝育,这占到了总体避孕方式使用的约三分之二。由于早婚以及生育间隔短,许多印度女性在相对年轻的时候就接受了绝育手术。本研究旨在调查社会经济因素,这些因素决定了印度已婚女性在避孕选择上的偏好,她们在避孕选择上占主导地位的偏好是绝育。
本研究的数据来自2005 - 06年全国家庭健康调查,重点是在调查前五年报告使用过避孕方法的已婚女性样本。采用多层次多项逻辑回归来估计社会经济因素对避孕选择的影响,区分临时现代或传统方法与绝育。
宗教信仰、女性教育程度和职业对近期使用者的方法选择具有总体影响。穆斯林女性选择传统或现代临时方法而非绝育的几率更高。女性教育程度的提高增加了选择现代临时方法的几率,但教育对传统方法选择的影响仅略微显著。来自较富裕家庭的近期使用者选择现代方法而非绝育的几率更高。通过广播接触计划生育信息对现代和传统方法的选择有积极影响。方法选择上的社区差异非常显著。
绝育在印度计划生育项目中的持续主导地位在很大程度上由社会经济状况决定。生殖健康项目应解决社会经济障碍,并考虑多种具有成本效益的策略,如大众媒体,以提高对现代临时方法的认识。