Rahman M
International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Dhaka, Bangladesh.
Stud Fam Plann. 1998 Sep;29(3):268-81.
This study analyzes longitudinal data from Matlab, Bangladesh, to examine the impact of child mortality on subsequent contraceptive acceptance and continuation. The strong negative impact is found to attenuate with family size, indicating a "replacement effect". An "insurance effect" is observed as contraceptive acceptance and continuation were negatively associated with the number of previous deaths of children. Couples seem to find contraceptive use acceptable if the child who dies is one of a large family. Potentially, contraceptive use could be acceptable for spacing after a child in a small family dies. Family planning programs can help to reduce fertility and maternal and child health risks substantially by supplying appropriate methods to those couples who have experienced a young child's death; to be most effective, methods should be supplied immediately after the child's death.
本研究分析了来自孟加拉国Matlab的纵向数据,以检验儿童死亡率对后续避孕措施接受和持续使用情况的影响。研究发现,这种强烈的负面影响会随着家庭规模的增大而减弱,这表明存在一种“替代效应”。同时还观察到一种“保险效应”,即避孕措施的接受和持续使用与之前儿童死亡的数量呈负相关。如果夭折的孩子来自大家庭,夫妻似乎认为使用避孕措施是可以接受的。对于小家庭中孩子夭折后的生育间隔而言,使用避孕措施可能也是可以接受的。计划生育项目可以通过向那些经历过幼儿死亡的夫妇提供合适的避孕方法,来大幅降低生育率以及孕产妇和儿童健康风险;为了达到最佳效果,应在孩子死亡后立即提供避孕方法。