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EnCompass Ethiopia, Nifas Silk Lafto Sub City, Woreda 03, P.O. Box 16982, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Reprod Health. 2022 Jun 13;19(Suppl 1):86. doi: 10.1186/s12978-022-01384-z.
Evidence suggests that supportive male engagement in health care services, including family planning, remains low in many countries, despite known benefits for female partners. In 2017-2018, the United States Agency for International Development Transform: Primary Health Care Project conducted a participatory gender analysis, collecting relevant data to better understand Ethiopian men's lack of support for the uptake of family planning services.
Qualitative data were collected through 96 unique participatory group discussions with community members via a semistructured discussion guide and participatory activity; data were disaggregated by sex, age, and marital status. In-depth interviews (91) conducted with service providers, health system managers, and health extension workers used semistructured guides. Discussants and interviewees were selected purposefully, drawn from 16 rural woredas in four project regions: Amhara; Oromia; Tigray; and Southern Nations, Nationalities, and Peoples' Region. Data collectors took notes and transcribed audio recordings. The research team deductively and inductively coded transcripts to develop preliminary findings later validated by key technical project staff and stakeholders.
Findings reinforce existing knowledge on the dominant role of men in health care-related decision making in rural Ethiopia, although such decision making is not always unilateral in practice. Barriers at the societal level impede men's support for family planning; these include norms, values, and beliefs around childbearing; religious beliefs rooted in scriptural narratives; and perceived adverse health impacts of family planning. Lack of efforts to engage men in health care facilities, as well as the perception that health care facilities do not meet men's needs, highlight systems-level barriers to men's use of family planning services.
Findings indicate several opportunities for stakeholders to increase men's support for family planning in rural Ethiopia, including systems-wide approaches to shape decision making, social and behavior change communication efforts, and additional research and assessment of men's experiences in accessing health care services.
有证据表明,尽管支持男性参与医疗保健服务(包括计划生育)对女性伴侣有诸多益处,但在许多国家,这种支持仍然很低。2017-2018 年,美国国际开发署 Transform:初级卫生保健项目开展了一项参与式性别分析,收集相关数据,以更好地了解埃塞俄比亚男性对计划生育服务接受度低的原因。
通过半结构化讨论指南和参与式活动,对社区成员进行了 96 次独特的参与式小组讨论,收集定性数据;按性别、年龄和婚姻状况对数据进行分类。对服务提供者、卫生系统管理人员和卫生推广工作者进行了 91 次深入访谈,使用半结构化指南。讨论参与者和访谈对象是有目的地选择的,来自四个项目地区的 16 个农村沃里达:阿姆哈拉州;奥罗米亚州;提格雷州;以及南方各族人民州。数据收集员做了笔记并转录了音频记录。研究团队采用演绎和归纳法对记录进行编码,以形成初步发现,然后由项目的关键技术人员和利益相关者进行验证。
研究结果强化了现有知识,即男性在农村埃塞俄比亚的医疗保健相关决策中起着主导作用,尽管在实践中这种决策并不总是单方面的。社会层面的障碍阻碍了男性对计划生育的支持;这些障碍包括与生育有关的规范、价值观和信仰;基于圣经叙事的宗教信仰;以及对计划生育对健康产生不利影响的看法。缺乏在医疗机构吸引男性的努力,以及对医疗机构不能满足男性需求的看法,突出了系统层面的障碍,阻碍了男性使用计划生育服务。
研究结果表明,利益相关者有几个机会可以增加农村埃塞俄比亚男性对计划生育的支持,包括系统范围的方法来影响决策、社会和行为改变沟通的努力,以及对男性获取医疗保健服务的经验进行更多的研究和评估。