India Habitat Centre, Population Council, India Office, Zone 5A, Ground Floor, Lodi Road, New Delhi, Delhi, 110003, India.
Former distinguished Scholar, Population Council, New York, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2020 Jun 30;20(1):1041. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-09061-1.
The influence of health workers on uptake of maternal healthcare services is well documented; however, their outreach for family planning (FP) services and influence on the intention to use contraceptives is less explored in the Indian context. This study examined the extent of health worker outreach for FP service and its effects on intention to use contraceptives among currently married women aged 15-49 years.
This study used data from two rounds of the National Family Health Survey (NFHS) of India, conducted during 2005-06 and 2015-16 respectively. Bivariate analysis and multivariate logistic regression were used to understand the level of and change in health worker outreach for FP services over time, and its association with intention to use contraceptives among currently married women.
In the past 10 years, health workers' outreach for FP service has significantly increased by about 10 percentage points, although the level is not optimal and only 28% of non-users were reached by health workers in 2015-16. Increase in the outreach to younger and low parity women was higher than their respective counterparts. Intention to use contraceptive among women who were not using any method was 41% when health workers contacted and discussed FP, compared to only 20% when there was no such contact with health workers. Multivariable analysis suggests that contact with health workers has significant positive effects on intention to use contraceptive (AOR = 3.05; p < 0.001; 95% CI 2.85-3.27).
Increased scope of outreach of frontline health workers to provide FP communication and services will not only help in building knowledge of contraceptive methods but will also increase women's intention to use a method. For India, this may be the most promising way to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals 3.7, which calls for universal access to reproductive health services.
卫生工作者对产妇医疗服务利用率的影响已有充分记录;然而,在印度背景下,他们对外展计划生育(FP)服务的程度以及对使用避孕措施的意愿的影响却鲜少被探究。本研究调查了卫生工作者对外展 FP 服务的程度及其对 15-49 岁已婚女性使用避孕措施意愿的影响。
本研究使用了印度两轮全国家庭健康调查(NFHS)的数据,分别于 2005-06 年和 2015-16 年进行。使用描述性分析和多变量逻辑回归来了解 FP 服务的卫生工作者外展水平及其随时间的变化,以及其与当前已婚妇女使用避孕措施意愿的关联。
在过去的 10 年中,卫生工作者的 FP 服务外展工作显著增加了约 10 个百分点,尽管水平并不理想,只有 2015-16 年的 28%的未使用者被卫生工作者接触到。对年轻和低胎次妇女的外展增加幅度高于其各自的对应幅度。未使用任何方法的妇女中,当卫生工作者接触并讨论 FP 时,使用避孕措施的意愿为 41%,而当与卫生工作者没有这种接触时,这一比例仅为 20%。多变量分析表明,与卫生工作者接触对使用避孕措施的意愿有显著的积极影响(AOR=3.05;p<0.001;95%CI 2.85-3.27)。
增加基层卫生工作者的外展范围,提供 FP 沟通和服务,不仅有助于建立对避孕方法的认识,还将提高妇女使用方法的意愿。对印度来说,这可能是实现可持续发展目标 3.7 的最有希望的途径,该目标呼吁普及生殖健康服务。