Sedlander Erica, Turaga Nitya, Birabwa Catherine, Wasswa Ronald, Phillips Beth, Amongin Dinah, Challa Sneha, Nano Sylvie, Kyobe Betty, Kayego Agnes, Waiswa Peter, Holt Kelsey
University of California, San Francisco, Institute for Health and Aging, Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, 490 Illinois Street, San Francisco, CA, 94158, USA.
Makerere University, School of Public Health, College of Health Sciences, Kampala, Uganda.
BMC Womens Health. 2025 Jun 30;25(Suppl 1):288. doi: 10.1186/s12905-025-03878-x.
There is mounting evidence that social norms affect attitudes, decision-making, and behaviors related to contraceptive use. Integral to the self-care movement for women to have more control over their reproductive health, subcutaneous depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA-SC) is a contraceptive that can be safely administered by women themselves after training. DMPA-SC was introduced in Uganda in 2017 and is slowly gaining traction, especially among women who value a convenient and private method. However, only a small percentage of DMPA-SC users choose to self-inject, perhaps missing women who could benefit from its convenience and privacy. To date, no studies have tested if and how social norms are associated with interest and use of DMPA-SC self-injection.
We analyzed two waves of data from rural Uganda collected as part of the Innovations for Choice and Autonomy (ICAN) cohort study (n = 2,170 women of reproductive age who were not using self-injectable contraception at baseline). First, we used exploratory factor analysis to create a self-injection social norms scale. Next, we used unadjusted logistic regression models to examine the association between self-injection social norms scale scores at baseline and the two outcomes (interest in self-injection at baseline and self-injection use at six-month follow-up). Finally, we used multivariable logistic regression to examine the same associations controlling for confounding by sociodemographic characteristics.
Factor analysis showed a four item, one factor solution for the Self-injection Social Norms Scale (alpha = .78). After adjusting for confounding variables, Self-injection Social Norms Scale scores were associated with an increased odds of being interested in self-injecting at baseline (AOR: 1.92, CI: 1.66- 2.22) and increased odds of self-injecting at follow up (AOR: 1.55, CI: 1.19- 2.00).
The Self-injection Social Norms Scale is a new 4-item measure that can be used by researchers and program implementors. Our finding that social norms related to self-injection are associated with women's interest in, and subsequent use of, self-injectable contraception suggest that promoting supportive social norms around self-injection shows potential as one strategy to enhance programmatic work aimed at bolstering women's ability to choose this method if it aligns with their preferences.
越来越多的证据表明,社会规范会影响与避孕使用相关的态度、决策和行为。皮下注射醋酸甲羟孕酮(DMPA-SC)是一种避孕药,女性经过培训后可自行安全给药,这是女性自我护理运动的重要组成部分,该运动旨在让女性对自己的生殖健康有更多控制权。DMPA-SC于2017年在乌干达推出,目前正在慢慢获得认可,特别是在那些重视方便和私密避孕方法的女性中。然而,只有一小部分使用DMPA-SC的女性选择自行注射,这可能会使那些能从其便利性和隐私性中受益的女性错过这种避孕方式。迄今为止,尚无研究测试社会规范是否以及如何与DMPA-SC自行注射的兴趣和使用相关。
我们分析了乌干达农村地区作为“选择与自主创新”(ICAN)队列研究一部分收集的两波数据(n = 2170名基线时未使用可自行注射避孕方法的育龄妇女)。首先,我们使用探索性因素分析创建了一个自行注射社会规范量表。接下来,我们使用未调整的逻辑回归模型来检验基线时自行注射社会规范量表得分与两个结果(基线时对自行注射的兴趣和六个月随访时的自行注射使用情况)之间的关联。最后,我们使用多变量逻辑回归来检验在控制社会人口学特征混杂因素后的相同关联。
因素分析显示自行注射社会规范量表为一个包含四个条目的单因素解决方案(α = 0.78)。在调整混杂变量后,自行注射社会规范量表得分与基线时对自行注射感兴趣的几率增加(优势比:1.92,置信区间:1.66 - 2.22)以及随访时自行注射的几率增加(优势比:1.55,置信区间:1.19 - 2.00)相关。
自行注射社会规范量表是一种新的包含四个条目的测量工具,可供研究人员和项目实施者使用。我们的研究发现,与自行注射相关的社会规范与女性对可自行注射避孕方法的兴趣以及随后的使用情况相关,这表明围绕自行注射推广支持性社会规范显示出作为一种策略的潜力,该策略旨在加强旨在增强女性选择这种方法(如果符合她们的偏好)能力的项目工作。