Gorbach P M, Hoa D T, Tsui A, Nhan V Q
Department of Maternal and Child Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, USA.
J Biosoc Sci. 1998 Jul;30(3):393-409. doi: 10.1017/s0021932098003939.
In collaboration with the National Committee for Population and Family Planning, a study was conducted in 1994 in two Vietnamese communes to provide community level information on women's reproductive health and behaviors. A survey of 504 rural and 523 urban women collected five-year histories of reproduction, contraception, abortion and symptoms of Reproductive Tract Infections (RTI). This analysis focuses on the relationships between women's individual characteristics, use of family planning and abortion, and reported RTI symptoms. The findings reveal that IUDs do not raise women's likelihood of experiencing RTI symptoms in either commune. A recent abortion, however, strongly increases women's likelihood of having RTI symptoms in the rural commune, while low-socioeconomic status is associated with RTI symptoms in the urban commune.
1994年,与国家人口和计划生育委员会合作,在越南的两个公社开展了一项研究,以提供社区层面有关妇女生殖健康和行为的信息。对504名农村妇女和523名城市妇女进行了调查,收集了她们五年的生育、避孕、堕胎及生殖道感染(RTI)症状史。本分析聚焦于妇女的个人特征、计划生育和堕胎的使用情况与报告的RTI症状之间的关系。研究结果显示,在两个公社中,宫内节育器均未增加妇女出现RTI症状的可能性。然而,近期堕胎会显著增加农村公社妇女出现RTI症状的可能性,而低社会经济地位与城市公社的RTI症状相关。