Department of Population Studies, University of Botswana, Gaborone, Botswana.
BMC Womens Health. 2022 Aug 15;22(1):342. doi: 10.1186/s12905-022-01926-4.
Power inequality within the household and sexual relationships is linked to poor reproductive health. Malawi Government through National Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights policy is committed to women empowerment as well fertility reduction. However, there is limited evidence in Malawi regarding whether women's autonomy in the household is an independent determinant of fertility. With this background, the aim of this study is to investigate whether women's autonomy in the household is a determinant of fertility in a poor socioeconomic and cultural setting.
This study used Malawi Demographic and Health Survey, 2015-2016. A multivariable Poisson regression model was used to investigate if women's autonomy in the household in Malawi determines fertility. The outcome measure, children ever born, was used as a measure of fertility. Women's autonomy was measured with two dimensions, such as women's household related decision makings and women's sexual autonomy. The individual recode and household recode were merged for the analysis. The final study sample was 15,952 women who were cohabiting or married at the time of the survey.
The level of autonomy among women in the household related decisions and sexual autonomy was 49.1% and 64.0% respectively. Controlling for covariates, the study found no significant association between women's autonomy dimensions in the household and number of children ever born. On the other hand, living in urban area (IRR = 0.91, CI 0.88-0.93); having less than tertiary education thus, no education (IRR = 1.83, CI 1.67-1.99) or primary education (IRR = 1.55, CI 1.42-1.69) or secondary education (IRR = 1.23, CI 1.13-1.33); poor households (IRR = 1.05, CI 1.01-1.09), starting cohabiting at the age of 19 years or less (AIRR = 1.15, CI 1.13-1.18) and not using modern contraceptive methods (AIRR = 1.17, CI 1.15-1.19) were significantly associated with fertility.
Though women's autonomy does not have independent effect on fertility, it may be interacting with other sociocultural norms prevailing in the society. The study recommends that the Government of Malawi should come up with economic hardship emancipation policy for poor households. The government should also come up with a girl-child secondary school completion policy. Furthermore, the government should accelerate the implementation, monitoring and evaluation of National Gender Policy to ensure the women empowerment/autonomy is having positive effect at all level including the household.
家庭内的权力不平等和性关系与不良生殖健康有关。马拉维政府通过国家性与生殖健康和权利政策,致力于增强妇女权能和减少生育率。然而,马拉维在家庭中妇女自主权是否是生育率的独立决定因素方面的证据有限。基于此背景,本研究旨在探讨家庭中妇女自主权是否是贫困社会经济和文化环境中生育率的决定因素。
本研究使用了 2015-2016 年马拉维人口与健康调查数据。采用多变量泊松回归模型,研究马拉维家庭中妇女自主权是否决定生育率。作为生育率的衡量标准,使用了“生育子女数”。妇女自主权用两个维度来衡量,即妇女对家庭事务的决策自主权和妇女的性自主权。对个人记录和家庭记录进行了合并分析。最终的研究样本包括 15952 名在调查时处于同居或已婚状态的妇女。
在家庭事务决策自主权和性自主权方面,妇女的自主权水平分别为 49.1%和 64.0%。在控制了混杂因素后,研究发现,妇女在家庭中的自主权维度与生育子女数之间没有显著关联。另一方面,居住在城市地区(IRR=0.91,95%CI 0.88-0.93);受教育程度低于高等教育,即没有教育(IRR=1.83,95%CI 1.67-1.99)或小学教育(IRR=1.55,95%CI 1.42-1.69)或中学教育(IRR=1.23,95%CI 1.13-1.33);贫困家庭(IRR=1.05,95%CI 1.01-1.09)、19 岁或以下开始同居(AIRR=1.15,95%CI 1.13-1.18)和不使用现代避孕方法(AIRR=1.17,95%CI 1.15-1.19)与生育率显著相关。
尽管妇女自主权对生育率没有独立影响,但它可能与社会中普遍存在的其他社会文化规范相互作用。本研究建议马拉维政府应为贫困家庭制定经济困难缓解政策。政府还应制定女童中学完成政策。此外,政府应加快实施、监测和评估国家性别政策,以确保妇女赋权/自主权在包括家庭在内的各个层面都产生积极影响。