ideas42, New York, USA.
IntraHealth International, Chapel Hill, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2020 Jun 29;20(1):1025. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-09131-4.
Many unmarried young people in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC) want to avoid pregnancy but do not use modern methods of contraception-as a result, half of teen births in these countries are unintended. Researchers have identified numerous barriers that prevent youth from using contraception. However, much of the research in West Africa is narrowly focused on married women, and relatively little research has been done to understand the needs, preferences, barriers, and solution set for sexually active unmarried young people who would like to avoid pregnancy. The purpose of this study was to gain insight into the behavioral barriers that prevent unmarried young people in eastern Senegal from using modern methods of contraception.
This qualitative study conducted in 2017 in the Tambacounda and Kedougou regions in Senegal explores attitudes and beliefs relating to sex and contraception among unmarried young women and men through 48 in-depth individual interviews with young people aged 15-24 and parents of youth and 5 sex-segregated focus groups with 6-9 young people per group. The research team conducted a thematic content analysis and synthesized the findings by major theme following the behavioral diagnosis methodology.
Drawing insights from behavioral science, the analysis yields five key findings: (1) unmarried young people avoid making a decision about contraception because thinking about contraceptive use provokes uncomfortable associations with a negative identity (i.e., being sexually active before marriage); (2) unmarried young people see modern methods as inappropriate for people like them; (3) unmarried young people are overconfident in their ability to prevent pregnancy through traditional and folk methods; (4) unmarried young people overestimate the social and health risks of modern contraceptive methods; and (5) unmarried young people fail to plan ahead and are not prepared to use modern contraceptive methods before every sexual encounter.
Interventions aimed at increasing uptake of contraceptives among unmarried young people in eastern Senegal must address several significant behavioral barriers in addition to structural, informational, and socio-cultural barriers in order to be successful.
许多中低收入国家(LMIC)的未婚年轻人希望避免怀孕,但他们不使用现代避孕方法——因此,这些国家有一半的青少年怀孕是意外的。研究人员已经确定了许多阻止年轻人使用避孕措施的障碍。然而,西非的大部分研究都狭隘地关注已婚妇女,相对较少的研究是为了了解有意愿避免怀孕的活跃未婚年轻人的需求、偏好、障碍和解决方案。本研究的目的是深入了解塞内加尔东部阻止未婚年轻人使用现代避孕方法的行为障碍。
本研究是 2017 年在塞内加尔的坦巴昆达和凯杜古地区进行的一项定性研究,通过对 15-24 岁的未婚青年及其父母进行 48 次深入的个人访谈,以及 5 次男女分开的焦点小组(每组 6-9 名年轻人),探讨了未婚青年对性和避孕的态度和信念。研究小组采用主题内容分析法,按照行为诊断方法的主要主题对研究结果进行了综合。
从行为科学中获得的见解表明,分析得出了五个关键发现:(1)未婚年轻人避免做出关于避孕的决定,因为思考避孕会引起与负面身份(即婚前性行为活跃)有关的不适联想;(2)未婚年轻人认为现代方法不适合他们这样的人;(3)未婚年轻人对自己通过传统和民间方法预防怀孕的能力过于自信;(4)未婚年轻人高估了现代避孕方法的社会和健康风险;(5)未婚年轻人没有提前计划,也没有准备好在每次性行为之前使用现代避孕方法。
要想在塞内加尔东部提高未婚年轻人对避孕措施的使用率,干预措施必须除了解决结构、信息和社会文化方面的障碍外,还要解决几个重大的行为障碍,才能取得成功。