STUDIES IN FAMILY PLANNING, 2000, 2001

STUDIES IN FAMILY PLANNING, 2000, Vol. 31, No. 4

Bhatia, Jagdish; Cleland, John.

Methodological issues in community-based studies of gynecological morbidity.

This report describes the lessons learned from a series of community-based studies of gynecological morbidity among young married women in Karnataka State, India. Women's self-reports of symptoms of illness were found to be responsive to the context of the interview and the nature of questioning. In particular, women appeared much readier to report symptoms to lay interviewers after being invited to undergo a clinical examination in the near future than they were if no examination were offered. Little consistency was found in the results obtained from interviews, clinical examinations, and laboratory tests. Apparently, no alternative exists to the collection of biological specimens for laboratory analysis when estimates of disease prevalence are needed. Use of generic health-related quality-of-life assessments is recommended for future surveys. Prospective studies will yield more valuable data on these topics than will cross-sectional surveys.

(INDIA, MORBIDITY, GYNAECOLOGIC DISEASES, DISEASE PREVALENCE, BEHAVIOUR, METHODOLOGY, INTERVIEWS, DATA COLLECTION).

English - pp. 267-273.

J. Bhatia, Indian Institute of Management, Bangalore, India; J. Cleland, Department of Medical Demography, Centre for Population Studies, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, 50 Bedford Square, London WC1B 3DP, U.K.

j.cleland@lshtm.ac.uk.

***

Shiffman, Jeremy.

Can poor countries surmount high maternal mortality?

Does poverty bind developing countries to high levels of maternal death in childbirth? Or, as safe-motherhood advocates claim, do public health and social policy interventions have the potential to accelerate maternal mortality transitions? Globally, almost one in 200 live births leads to the death of the mother, making maternal mortality an issue of critical international import. This article presents an analysis of the determinants of national maternal mortality levels with a view to shedding light on these questions. A cross-national regression of 64 countries shows that wealth indicators explain only a portion of the variance in national maternal mortality levels. Other determinants, including women's educational levels and the proportion of deliveries attended by trained health personnel, are an are measures of wealth. The results offer grounds for optimism more clearly associated with national maternal mortality levels concerning the potential for global safe-motherhood efforts to induce maternal mortality transitions.

(DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, MATERNAL MORTALITY, MORTALITY DETERMINANTS, POVERTY, EDUCATION OF WOMEN, CHILDBIRTH, HEALTH SERVICES, HEALTH FACILITIES, REGRESSION ANALYSIS, COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS).

English - pp. 274-289.

J. Shiffman, Department of Public Administration, Maxwell School, Syracuse University, 306 Eggers Hall, Syracuse, NY 13244?1090, U.S.A.

jrshiffm@maxwell.syr.edu.

***

Yount, Kathryn M.; Langsten, Ray; Hill, Kenneth.

The effect of gender preference on contraceptive use and fertility in rural Egypt.

Data are used from two surveys of currently married women aged 15?44 conducted in 1979?80 and 1990?91 to explore the changing impact of gender preference on modern contraceptive use and on fertility in rural Menoufia, Egypt. The significantly positive effects on contraceptive use of having one or more sons in 1979 remained constant in 1990. Families without living sons had higher odds of having a birth than did families with two or more sons during 1979?80, and these relative odds were even higher in 1990?91 among families with three or more living children. The implications of these findings for subsequent declines in aggregate fertility are discussed.

(EGYPT, CITIES, RURAL AREAS, FERTILITY, FAMILY PLANNING, CONTRACEPTION, CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE, REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR, SEX PREFERENCE).

English - pp. 290-300.

K. M. Yount, Departments of International Health and Sociology, The Rollins School of Public Health, Emory University, 1518 Clifton Road, N.E., Atlanta, GA 30322, U.S.A.; R. Langsten, Social Research Center, American University in Cairo, Egypt; K. Hill, Department of Population and Family Health Sciences, The Johns Hopkins University School of Hygiene and Public Health, Baltimore, MD, U.S.A.

***

Goto, Aya; Fujiyama-Koriyama, Chihaya; Fukao, Akira; Reich, Michael R.

Abortion trends in Japan, 1975.

In this study, recent trends in the incidence of induced abortion are analyzed in order to identify the target population and its requirements for family planning policy in Japan. Abortion statistics from 1975 to 1995 from the Ministry of Health and Welfare are reviewed. The abortion rate (the number of cases of induced abortion per 1,000 women per year) for women younger than 20 increased during the study period. The abortion ratio (number of cases per 1,000 live births) remained the highest among women aged 40?44. An increase in the abortion ratio was seen in the two youngest groups (younger than 20 and 20?24), especially among those who were born after 1955. The proportion of abortions experienced by women younger than 25 increased from 18 percent between 1976 and 1980 to 30 percent between 1991 and 1995, and a slight increase was also observed among women aged 40?44. The proportion of abortions performed after eight weeks of a pregnancy for the two youngest groups remained higher than that for older age groups during 1975?95. The analysis demonstrates that women younger than 25 should be the principal concern of family planning policy in Japan. Further investigations on unintended pregnancy are recommended.

(JAPAN, FAMILY PLANNING, ABORTION, INDUCED ABORTION, POPULATION AT RISK, FAMILY PLANNING PROGRAMMES).

English - pp. 301-308.

A. Goto, Tu Du Obstetrical and Gynecological Hospital, 284 Cong Quynh Street, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam; A. Fukao, Yamagata University School of Medicine, Department of Public Health, Japan; C. Fujiyama-Koriyama, Kagoshima University School of Medicine, Department of Public Health, Japan; M. R. Reich, Harvard School of Public Health, Department of Population and International Health, U.S.A.

agoto@hcm.vnn.vn.

***

Filippi, V?ronique; Ronsmans, Carine; Gandaho, Timoth?e; Graham, Wendy; Alihonou, Eus?be; Santos, Paul.

Women's reports of evere (near-miss) obstetric complications in Benin.

This study examines the validity of a survey instrument on near-miss obstetric complications. Three groups of womenwith severe complications, with mild complications, and with a normal deliverywere identified retrospectively in three hospitals in South Benin and interviewed at home. The concept of "near-miss" was used to identify women with severe episodes of morbidity. The questionnaire was able to detect, with some accuracy, eclamptic fits, abnormal bleeding in the third trimester for a recall period of at least three to four years, and all episodes of bleeding independent of timing within a period of two years. Questions concerning dystocia and infections of the genital tract generated disappointing results except when information on treatment was included. Overall, better results were achieved for antepartum and acute events. Severity made a positive difference only in the case of eclampsia, with an increase in sensitivity. The implications of the results for using women's recall of obstetric complications in surveys are discussed.

(BENIN, MORBIDITY, OBSTETRICS, COMPLICATIONS, GYNAECOLOGY, DISEASES, GYNAECOLOGIC DISEASES, INTERVIEWS, DATA COLLECTION, METHODOLOGY).

English - pp. 309-324.

V. Filippi, C. Ronsmans, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Maternal Health Programme, Keppel Street, London, WC1E 7HT, U.K.; T. Gandaho, Regional Director for West and Central Africa, Population Council, Dakar, Senegal; W. Graham, Dugald Baird Centre for Research on Women's Health, Aberdeen, U.K.; E. Alihonou, Centre de Recherche en Reproduction Humaine et en D?mographie, Cotonou, Benin; P. Santos, Clinique Universitaire de Gyn?cologie et d'Obst?trique, Cotonou, Benin.

***

Luck, Margaret; Jarju, Ebrima; Nell, M. Diane; George, Melville O.

Mobilizing demand for contraception in rural Gambia.

A community trial was conducted in rural Gambia in order to determine whether a community-based intervention designed to mobilize latent demand for contraception would increase use of modern contraceptives, even in the absence of improved availability of family planning services. Analysis of trial data indicates that the demand-mobilization intervention had a statistically significant positive effect on nonusers' adoption of modern contraception and that coterminous implementation of an intervention designed to improve access to services offered no additional benefit. The program component found to have the greatest impact was the "kabilo approach," in which village women provide basic health and family planning counseling to other women in their extended families. These results suggest that the principal barriers to increased contraceptive use in rural Gambia are psychosocial and that these barriers can be overcome through village-based interventions designed to provide socially appropriate counseling to potential contraceptive users.

(GAMBIA, RURAL AREAS, FAMILY PLANNING, CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE, REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR, PSYCHOLOGICAL FACTORS, COMMUNITIES, COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION).

English - pp. 325-335.

M. Luck, Centro de Mal?ria e Outras Doen?as Tropicais and Health Systems Unit, Instituto de Higiene e Medicina Tropical, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, P-1300 Lisbon, Portugal; E. Jarju and M. D. Nell, The Gambia Field Office, Save the Children/US; M. O. George, Medical Services, Ministry of Health, The Gambia.

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STUDIES IN FAMILY PLANNING, 2001, Vol. 32, No. 1

Ellsberg, Mary; Winkvist, Anna; Heise, Lori; Pe?a, Rodolfo; Agurto, Sonia.

Researching domestic violence against women: Methodological and ethical considerations.

The results of three population-based studies on violence against women in Nicaragua are compared in this article. Two of the studies were regional in scope (Le?n and Managua) and focused specifically on women's experiences of violence, whereas the third study was a Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) conducted with a nationally representative sample of women. The lifetime prevalence estimates for women's undergoing physical violence from a partner were significantly higher in the Le?n study (52 percent) and Managua study (69 percent), compared with that given in the DHS (28 percent). Possible explanations for the differences are examined through pooled multivariate logistic regression analysis, as well as analysis of six focus-group discussions carried out with field-workers and staff from the three studies. The most important differences that were found concerned ethical and safety procedures and the interview setting. The results indicate that prevalence estimates for violence are highly sensitive to methodological factors, and that underreporting is a significant threat to validity.

(NICARAGUA, CITIES, VIOLENCE, SEX ROLES, WOMEN?S STATUS, SOCIAL PROBLEMS, ESTMATES, DATA COLLECTION, DEMOGRAPHIC AND HEALTH SURVEYS, QUALITY OF DATA, UNDERESTIMATION, UNDERREGISTRATION, REGRESSION ANALYSIS, METHODOLOGY).

English - pp. 1?16.

M. Ellsberg, 8909 Sudbury Road, Silver Spring, MD 20901, U.S.A.; A. Winkvist, Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Ume? University, Ume?, Sweden; L. Heise, Program for Appropriate Technology in Health (PATH), Washington, DC, U.S.A.; R. Pe?a, Department of Preventive Medicine, University of Le?n, Le?n, Nicaragua; S. Agurto, International Foundation for Global Challenges, Managua, Nicaragua.

mary.ellsberg@epiph.umu.se.

***

Eltigani, Eltigani E.

Childbearing in five Arab countries.

The life-table technique is used in this study to describe childbearing patterns in five Arab countries (Algeria, Egypt, Morocco, Sudan, and Yemen). Two summary measures are estimated: the cumulative proportion of women of a given parity having a subsequent birth within 60 months of the previous birth (quintum), and the median length of the interval between successive births. The analysis indicates that in Yemen (where the total fertility rate exceeds seven children per woman of reproductive age), women begin childbearing at a relatively early age and a large proportion of ever-married women reach high parity at a relatively fast pace. Morocco and Egypt (with TFRs of 3.3 and 3.8 children per woman, respectively) are characterized by delay in the onset of childbearing, a slow pace of childbearing, and a smaller proportion of ever-married women reaching high parity. In Algeria and Sudan (with TFRs of 4.4 and 4.6 children), delay in the onset of childbearing plays a larger role in fertility reduction than do the tempo or the quantum of childbearing.

(ALGERIA, EGYPT, MOROCCO, SUDAN, YEMEN, REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR, INDICATORS, FERTILITY MEASUREMENTS, FERTILITY DETERMINANTS, BIRTH SPACING, BIRTH INTERVALS, PARITY DISTRIBUTION).

English - pp. 17?24.

E. E. Eltigani, Social Research Center, American University in Cairo, 113 Kasr El Aini Street, Cairo, Egypt.

Tigani@aucegypt.edu.

***

Capo-chichi, Virgile; Juarez, Fatima.

Is fertility declining in Benin?

This study analyzes reproductive changes in Benin, a West African country with high fertility and low prevalence of use of modern contraceptive methods, using a combination of quantitative and qualitative approaches. Findings indicate that an irreversible fertility transition has started as the result of an emerging pattern of birth limitation and continued desire for the traditional long birth intervals. The data suggest that changes in childhood mortality in combination with an increase in women's education, although modest, have created a demand for fertility control among women; that induced abortion may be one of the means through which such demand is being met, particularly in urban areas; and that the economic crisis of the 1980s was the main catalyst that precipitated the onset of transition. Changes in reproductive preferences and practice suggest a diffusion process, from urban and more educated women to rural and less-educated ones.

(BENIN, FERTILITY DECLINE, FERTILITY TRENDS, FERTILITY DETERMINANTS, REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR, FAMILY PLANNING, CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE, ABORTION, CHILD MORTALITY, EDUCATION OF WOMEN, RURAL-URBAN DIFFERENTIALS).

English - pp. 25?40.

V. Capo-Chichi, Centre de Recherche en Reproduction Humaine et en D?mographie, Cotonou, Benin; F. Juarez, Center for Population Studies, Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, 49?51 Bedford Square, London WC1B 3DP, U.K.

f.juarez@lshtm.ac.uk.

***

Senlet, Pinar; Curtis, Si?n L.; Mathis, Jill; Raggers, Han

The role of changes in contraceptive use in the decline of induced abortion in Turkey.

The induced abortion rate in Turkey declined from a peak of 4.5 abortions per 100 women in 1988 to 2.4 in 1998. This study examines the extent to which the decline in abortion in Turkey can be attributed to increased use of modern contraceptives. Trends in induced abortion rates and in contraceptive use are examined among Turkish women together with fertility preferences, changes in the contraceptive behavior associated with abortion, and changes in the propensity to abort unwanted pregnancies. The analysis includes a number of simulations that examine what abortion levels might be in different contraceptive-use scenarios. Results indicate that the decline in abortion is due toa decrease in the number of abortions associated with traditional method failure. This decrease is related to three factors: a shift from traditional method use to modern method use, a decline in the traditional method failure rate, and a decline in the proportion of pregnancies resulting from traditional method failures that are aborted.

(TURKEY, FAMILY PLANNING, REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR, CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE, CONTRACEPTIVE METHODS, PREFERENCES, CONTRACEPTION FAILURES, INDUCED ABORTION, METHODOLOGY, MODELS, SIMULATION).

English - pp. 41?52.

P. Senlet, USAID/Turkey, United States Embassy, Ankara, Turkey; S. L. Curtis, MEASURE Evaluation Project, ORC Macro, Calverton, MD, U.S.A.; J. Mathis, Gates Foundation Liaison, Population, Health and Nutrition Center, USAID/Washington, DC, U.S.A.; H. Raggers, International Surveys and Data Processing, Balkbrug, Netherlands.

psenlet@usaid.gov.

***

Magnani, Robert J.; Seiber, Eric E.; Zielinski Gutierrez, Emily; Vereau, Dorina.

Correlates of sexual activity and condom use among secondary-school students in urban Peru.

Recent data indicate that adolescent fertility rates in Peru remain high and that Peruvian adolescents and young adults account for a disproportionate share of new HIV infections. The present study was undertaken to identify key risk and protective factors for early sexual activity and unprotected sex among secondary-school students in nine large cities in Peru. Survey data from 6,962 students aged 13?18 are consistent with existing research in indicating that behaviors of Peruvian youth are influenced in important ways by many factors. In the present study, these included region of residence, family economic position, family structure, working for pay, peer behaviors, and self-esteem. Knowledge of pregnancy and of the risks of acquiring sexually transmitted diseases and of the means of avoiding both did not, however, differentiate risk-takers from non-risk-takers. The study findings suggest a need for adolescent health programs to broaden their focus beyond the immediate proximate determinants of behavior, such as sexual and reproductive health knowledge and access to contraceptives, and also to target some of the key contextual factors influencing adolescent behavior.

(PERU, CITIES, URBAN AREAS, SECONDARY SCHOOLS, ADOLESCENT FERTILITY, REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR, SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR, AIDS, POPULATION AT RISK, CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE, CONDOM, KNOWLEDGE OF CONTRACEPTIVES, FAMILY COMPOSITION, SOCIO-ECONOMIC STATUS).

English - pp. 53?66.

R. J. Magnani, E. E. Seiber, E. Zielinski Gutierrez, Tulane University Health Sciences Center, School of Public Health & Tropical Medicine, Department of International Health & Development, 1440 Canal Street, Suite 2200, New Orleans, LA 70112, U.S.A.; D. Vereau, Adolescents of Projecto Alcance, Pathfinder International, Lima, Peru.

magnani@mailhost.tcs.tulane.edu .

***

Santana Cooney, Rosemary; Li, Jiali.

Sterilization and financial penalties imposed on registered peasant couples, Hebei Province, China.

Using fertility survey data from the 1980s for registered Han peasant couples in Hebei Province, this study examines whether China's family planning policy reflects couples' voluntary compliance with policy regulations, their coercion by means of government sanctions, or a combination of both. Three family planning regulations are considered: birth-quota status, contraceptive use, and length of prior birth interval. The results of the study provide support for both compliance and sanction perspectives and suggest that by the late 1980s, the state was less willing than it had been previously to negotiate with couples who had had three children. Evidence is found of cooperation between couples and the state to ensure that each family had at least one son.

(CHINA, CITIES, FERTILITY, FAMILY PLANNING, FAMILY PLANNING POLICY, STERILIZATION, CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE, BIRTH INTERVALS, GOVERNMENT POLICY, POPULATION POLICY).

English - pp. 67?78.

R. Santana Cooney, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Fordham University, Rose Hill Campus, Dealy Hall, Room 407, Bronx, NY 10458?9993, U.S.A.; Jiali Li, New York City Department of Health, U.S.A.

rcooney@fordham.edu .

***

STUDIES IN FAMILY PLANNING, 2001, Vol. 32, No. 2

Casterline, John B.; Sathar, Zeba A.; ul Haque, Minhaj.

Obstacles to contraceptive use in Pakistan: A study in Punjab.

The principal aim of this study is to assess the strength in Pakistan of a set of hypothesized obstacles to practising contraception. Survey data are analyzed that were collected in Punjab province in 1996 and that contain unusually detailed measurement of various perceived costs of practising contraception, as well as focused measurement of fertility motivation. The framework guiding the research specifies six major obstacles to contraceptive use: the strength of motivation to avoid pregnancy, awareness and knowledge of contraception, the social and cultural acceptability of contraception, perceptions of the husband?s preferences and attitudes, health concerns, and perceived access to services. Net effects of each obstacle are estimated through structural equation modeling of the intention to practice contraception in the near future, in which the six obstacles are treated as latent variables. The estimates indicate that the two principal obstacles to using a contraceptive are the woman?s perception that such behavior would conflict with her husband?s fertility preferences and his attitudes toward family planning and her perception of the social or cultural unacceptability of contraception. The results confirm the value of taking contraceptive costs seriously, and, in particular, of attempting to measure these costs in empirical research on family planning.

(PAKISTAN, CITIES, FAMILY PLANNING, CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE, KNOWLEDGE OF CONTRACEPTIVES, HEALTH, ATTITUDE, PREFERENCES, CULTURE, SOCIAL NORMS, VALUE SYSTEMS, SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR, MODELS).

English - pp. 95-110.

J. B. Casterline, Policy Research Division, Population Council, New York, U.S.A.; Z. A. Sathar, M. ul Haque, Population Council, Islamabad, Pakistan.

jcasterline@popcouncil.org .

***

Becker, Stan; Costenbader, Elizabeth

Husbands? and wives? reports of contraceptive use.

Many Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) in the past decade have queried husbands and wives about their current contraceptive use. In this study, couples? concurrence on use and method used is compared by means of data from 23 countries, mostly in sub-Saharan Africa. Husbands report higher levels of use than do their wives in every country studied, with ranges from 2 percent higher (Brazil) to 150 percent higher (Mali). Many of the discrepancies are the result of husbands? sole reports of periodic abstinence and condom use. Couples with polygynous husbands show less concurrence than do monogamous couples, although the majority of these differences could result from a data-collection problem. Monogamous couples in which one or both spouses reported having extramarital sex partners show less concurrence than do monogamous couples reporting no other partners. Problems of validity of both husbands? and wives? reports are discerned, and in the few instances where a direct comparison is possible, wives? reports are shown to have greater validity. Logistic regression results show that spousal discussion about family planning and greater female education are consistent predictors of concurrence.

(DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, FERTILITY, DATA COLLECTION, QUALITY OF DATA, FAMILY PLANNING, CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE, CONTRACEPTIVE METHODS, CONDOM, SEXUAL ABSTINENCE, REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR, SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR, MARITAL UNION, MONOGAMY, POLYGAMY, POLYGYNY).

English - pp. 111-129.

S. Becker and Elizabeth Costenbader, School of Hygiene and Public Health, Department of Population and Family Health Sciences, Johns Hopkins University, 615 North Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 20205-2179, U.S.A.

sbecker@jhsph.edu .

***

Beegle, Kathleen; Frankenberg, Elizabeth; Thomas, Duncan.

Bargaining power within couples and use of prenatal and delivery care in Indonesia.

Indonesian women?s power relative to that of their husbands is examined to determine how it affects use of prenatal and delivery care. Holding household resources constant, a woman's control over economic resources affects the couple?s decisionmaking. Compared with a woman with no assets that she perceives as being her own, a woman with some share of household assets influences reproductive health decisions. Evidence suggests that her influence on service use also varies if a woman is better educated than her husband, comes from a background of higher social status than her husband's, or if her father is better educated than her father-in-law. Therefore, both economic and social dimensions of the distribution of power between spouses influence use of services, and conceptualizing power as multidimensional is useful for understanding couples' behavior.

(INDONESIA, WOMEN?S STATUS, WOMEN?S ROLE, DECISION MAKING, MARITAL ROLES, SEX ROLES, REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR, MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH, HEALTH SERVICES, HOUSEHOLD INCOME, EDUCATION, SOCIO-ECONOMIC STATUS).

English - pp. 130-146.

K. Beegle, E. Frankenberg, RAND, 1700 Main Street, P.O. Box 2138, Santa Monica, CA 90407-2138, U.S.A.; D. Thomas, Department of Economics, University of California, Los Angeles, U.S.A.

efrankenberg@rand.org .

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Kaufman, Carol E.; de Wet, Thea; Stadler, Jonathan

Adolescent pregnancy and parenthood in South Africa.

South Africa's total fertility rate is estimated to be one of the lowest in sub-Saharan Africa, fewer than three births per woman nationally and declining. At the same time, adolescent childbearing levels remain high: More than 30 percent of 19-year-old girls are reported to have given birth at least once. Evidence from focus-group discussions conducted in urban and rural areas in South Africa with young black women and men, and with the parents of teenage mothers, is used to consider the experience of early parenthood, including the role of paternity, education, work opportunities, and subsequent fertility. In South Africa, in contrast to many other settings, teenage mothers may return to school once they have given birth, and this opportunity is strongly related to a long delay before the birth of a second child. Educated girls also tend to bring more bridewealth, which may encourage parents to support their daughters' schooling, and perhaps their return to school following childbirth. The support of the child, however, is often subject to paternal recognition and commitment, even though boys are unwilling to admit paternity because it jeopardizes their educational and employment opportunities.

(SOUTH AFRICA, ADOLESCENT PREGNANCY, ADOLESCENT FERTILITY, BIRTH INTERVALS, RESPONSIBLE PARENTHOOD, PATERNAL RESPONSIBILITY, CHILD RECOGNITION, SOCIAL NORMS, VALUE SYSTEMS, EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES).

English - pp. 147-160.

C. E. Kaufman, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, University North Pavilion, 4455 East Twelfth Avenue, AO11-13, Denver, CO 80220, U.S.A.; T. de Wet, Rand Afrikaans University, Johannesburg, South Africa; J. Stadler, LoveLife, Reproductive Health Research Unit, Baragwanath Hospital, Johannesburg, South Africa.

carol.kaufman@uchsc.edu .

***

Miller, Kate; Cotts Watkins, Susan; Msiyaphazi Zulu, Eliya

Husband-wife survey responses in Malawi.

Previous efforts by demographers to describe and explain spousal differences in reporting about family planning behavior have focused on individual attributes that are assumed to be related to the practice of contraception. This study extends that research by documenting spousal disagreement on a range of issues-household items, livestock, children, and spousal communication about fertility, family planning, and AIDS. Using data from a 1998 study of 585 monogamous couples in rural Malawi, the analysis identifies a systematic gender component to reporting: For many of the survey questions considered, when spouses disagree, husbands are more likely to say "yes" and wives "no." The findings are interpreted in terms of gendered strategies in the interview process.

(MALAWI, RURAL AREAS, FAMILY PLANNING, CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE, AIDS, FERTILITY, REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR, DATA COLLECTION, QUALITY OF DATA, INTERVIEWS, SEX ROLES, MARITAL ROLES).

English - pp. 161-174.

K. Miller, S. Cotts Watkins, Department of Sociology, Population Studies Center, University of Pennsylvania, 3718 Locust Walk, Philadelphia, PA 19104, U.S.A.; E. Msiyaphazi Zulu, African Population and Health Research Centre, Population Council, Nairobi.

millerka@ssc.upenn.edu .

***

STUDIES IN FAMILY PLANNING, 2001, Vol. 32, No. 3

Blanc, Ann K.

The effect of power in sexual relationships on sexual and reproductive health: An examination of the evidence.

This article reviews what has been learned to date about the role of gender-based power in sexual relationships in determining sexual and reproductive health outcomes. A framework for assessing the relationship between power relations and reproductive health is outlined and measurement issues are critically discussed. A summary is included of the main types of intervention approaches that have been implemented, as are a discussion of the programmatic, methodological, and ethical implications of the findings and recommendations for further experimentation and research. Although many challenges remain, results to date suggest that when the role of gender-based power is made an integral feature of sexual and reproductive health programs, there is a considerable payoff for both women and men.

(SEX ROLES, SEXUAL RELATIONSHIPS, REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR, SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR, FAMILY PLANNING PROGRAMMES, MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH, HEALTH SERVICES, HEALTH POLICY, METHODOLOGY).

English - pp. 189-213.

A. K. Blanc, Blancroft Research International, 11718 Lightfall Court, Columbia, MD 21044, U.S.A.

ablanc@blancroft.com .

***

Ali, Mohamed M.; Cleland, John G.

The link between postnatal abstinence and extramarital sex in C?te d'Ivoire.

Whether the link, found in Benin, between postnatal abstinence and husbands' extramarital contacts can be generalized to other West African countries is assessed in this study. Data from the 1994 Demographic and Health Survey, C?te d'Ivoire, obtained from monogamous husbands concerning their extramarital sexual behavior in the two months preceding the survey were linked to data reported by wives concerning postnatal abstinence over the same time period. Logistic regression was applied to assess the link between these two factors, net of the effects of possible confounders. A significant effect of postnatal abstinence on the probability that the husband reported at least one extramarital partner was found. Unprotected extramarital sex was two times more common among men who observed conjugal abstinence than it was among other men. Other predictors of extramarital sex were urban-rural residence, region, education, and whether or not husband and wife had the same religious affiliation. Because condom use is low in this population, the protective effect of marital abstinence is offset by an increased probability that husbands will seek extramarital partners during the postpartum period. The results confirm the earlier findings for Benin and can likely be generalized to most of West Africa.

(COTE D?IVOIRE, POST-PARTUM ABSTINENCE, SEXUAL ABSTINENCE, SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR, SEXUAL RELATIONSHIPS, MARRIAGE, SEXUAL UNION, FAMILY PLANNING, EDUCATION, RELIGION, RURAL-URBAN DIFFERENTIALS).

English - pp. 214-219.

M. M. Ali and J. G. Cleland, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, 49-51 Bedford Square, London WC1B 3DP, U.K.

John.Cleland@lshtm.ac.uk .

***

Jain, Anrudh

Implications for evaluating the impact of family planning programs with a reproductive health orientation.

In 1994, Jain and Bruce proposed an index-HARI, an acronym for Helping Individuals Achieve their Reproductive Intentions-to measure success or failure of family planning programs with a reproductive health orientation. HARI applies the principle of individual rights and well-being to the assessment of these programs. The index measures two components: the achievement of an individual's reproductive intentions and the avoidance of severe reproductive health problems associated with an individual's efforts to achieve her stated reproductive intentions. A family planning program can be deemed successful if an individual is able to avoid having an unintended pregnancy (or is able to have a wanted child) within the stipulated period and if she experiences no severe reproductive health problems in the process. If these conditions are not met, the program could be deemed a failure. The HARI index has not yet been applied in field conditions. This report illustrates the procedure for estimating HARI by using data from a panel survey conducted in Peru. It discusses the usefulness and limitations of the index in assessing the success or failure of a family planning program with a reproductive health orientation.

(PERU, FAMILY PLANNING, CONTRACEPTION FAILURES, REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR, MEASUREMENT, INDICATORS, ATTITUDE, HEALTH, HUMAN RIGHTS, INDIVIDUAL WELFARE, UNWANTED PREGNANCY, FAMILY PLANNING PROGRAMMES, METHODOLOGY).

English - pp. 220-229.

A. Jain, Policy and Regional Programs, Population Council, New York, U.S.A.

***

Magnani, Robert J.; Gaffikin, Lynne; Seiber, Eric E.; Lipovsek, Varja; Le?o de Aquino, Estela Maria; de Concei??o Chagas Almeida, Maria.

Impact of an integrated adolescent reproductive health program in Brazil.

An impact evaluation of an integrated school- and health-clinic-based adolescent reproductive health initiative was undertaken by the State Secretariats of Health and Education in Bahia, Brazil during 1997-99. The project was initiated in response to continued high pregnancy rates among adolescents and growing numbers of new HIV infections among young adults. It sought to promote responsible sexual and health-seeking behaviors among public secondary-school students, including the use of public health clinics. The study design included a matched control group used to measure project impact. The findings indicate that the project was successful in increasing the flow of sexual and reproductive health information to secondary-school students and that it had an impact on adolescents' intentions to use public health clinics in the future. No effects on sexual or contraceptive-use behaviors or on use of public clinics were observed, however. Client exit-interview data from a subset of project clinics indicate that adolescents who use clinic-based services are overwhelmingly female and considerably older on average and much more likely ever to have been pregnant than are adolescents in the target population for the project.

(BRAZIL, CITIES, SECONDARY SCHOOLS, ADOLESCENT FERTILITY, ADOLESCENT PREGNANCY, CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE, FAMILY PLANNING PROGRAMMES, REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR, SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR, HEALTH, HEALTH SERVICES).

English - pp. 230-243.

R. J. Magnani, L. Gaffikin, E. E. Seiber, V. Lipovsek, Tulane University Health Sciences Center, School of Public Health & Tropical Medicine, Department of International Health & Development, 1440 Canal Street, Suite 2200, New Orleans, Louisiana 70112, U.S.A.; E. M. Le?o de Aquino, M. de Concei??o Chagas Almeida, Federal University of Bahia, Institute of Community Health, Salvador, Bahia, Brazil.

magnani@tulane.edu .

***

Williams, Lindy; Sobieszczyk, Teresa; Perez, Aurora E.

Consistency between survey and interview data concerning pregnancy wantedness in the Philippines.

Through a comparison of survey and in-depth interview data reported by a small sample of Filipino women and men, standard survey questions and the standard conceptualizations of pregnancy wantedness are assessed to determine whether they capture respondents' attitudes toward pregnancies and their timing in two areas in the Philippines. The study reveals that more than two-thirds of respondents were completely consistent in their survey and interview responses. Consistency was higher for women than for men, and it improved when a dichotomous measure (intended/unintended) was used rather than a more detailed variable that distinguished between intended, mistimed, and unwanted pregnancies. To the extent that the two data sources disagree, the interview transcripts suggest two possible reasons for inconsistent reports: deference to a spouse's perceived attitude or the respondent's ambivalence toward or ready acceptance of an unintended pregnancy.

(PHILIPPINES, DATA COLLECTION, QUALITY OF DATA, INTERVIEWS, SURVEYS, FAMILY PLANNING, UNWANTED PREGNANCY, ATTITUDE, SOCIAL NORMS).

English - pp. 244-253.

L. Williams, Department of Rural Sociology, Warren Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, U.S.A.; T. Sobieszczyk, Population Studies Center, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, U.S.A.; A. E. Perez, Population Institute, University of the Philippines, Quezon City, Philippines.

lbw2@cornell.edu .

***

Kaler, Amy; Cotts Watkins, Susan.

Disobedient distributors: Street-level bureaucrats and would-be patrons in community-based family planning programs in rural Kenya.

The implementation of social welfare programs, including family planning programs, is strongly conditioned by the needs, desires, and agendas of those who carry them out, known as "street-level bureaucrats." In this study, the strategies of CBD agents in western Kenya are examined in order to understand how they use their job as a means to achieve their own personal goals. The concept of clientelism, borrowed from the field of political science, can help to explain what the CBD agents are trying to achieve for themselves in their communities, at the same time as they promote the use of contraceptive pills and injections. CBD agents are concerned with building up their own stocks of prestige and respect from their community members, while avoiding blame for any possible negative outcomes of family planning.

(KENYA, FAMILY PLANNING PROGRAMMES, FAMILY PLANNING PERSONNEL, VISITING INSPECTORS, CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE).

English - pp. 254-269.

A. Kaler, Department of Sociology, University of Alberta, 5-21 HM Tory Building, Edmonton, T6G 2H4 Canada; S. Cotts Watkins, Department of Sociology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, U.S.A.

akaler@ualberta.ca .

***

STUDIES IN FAMILY PLANNING, 2001, Vol. 32, No. 4

Mensch, Barbara S.; Clark, Wesley H.; Lloyd, Cynthia B.; Erulkar, Annabel S.

Premarital sex, schoolgirl pregnancy, and school quality in rural Kenya.

Using data from nearly 600 adolescents aged 12-19 in combination with data collected from 33 primary schools that the adolescents attended, this report explores whether certain aspects of the school environment affect the initiation of premarital sex among girls and boys in three districts of Kenya. The results suggest that, although neither the school nor the home appears to influence whether boys engage in sex prior to marriage, for girls, a school characterized by a gender-neutral atmosphere appears to reduce the risk of their engaging in premarital sex. Furthermore, although policymakers in Kenya are clearly concerned with the problem of "schoolgirl pregnancy," the data indicate that in this sample, pregnancy is not the primary reason that girls leave school.

(KENYA, RURAL AREAS, PRIMARY SCHOOLS, ADOLESCENCE, SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR, PREMARITAL SEX BEHAVIOUR, ADOLESCENT PREGNANCY, RISK, POPULATION AT RISK).

English - pp. 285-301.

B. S. Mensch, Wesley H. Clark and C. B. Lloyd, Social Science Research, Policy Research Division, Population Council, New York, U.S.A.; A. S. Erulkar, Gender, Family, and Development Program, Population Council, Nairobi, Kenya.

***

Costello, Marilou; RamaRao, Saumya; Jain, Anrudh; Lacuesta, Marlina

A client-centered approach to family planning: The Davao Project.

The reproductive health approach to family planning shifts the focus of service provision from macro-level demographic objectives to meeting clients' needs. Little field experience exists to date, however, to indicate how to implement this approach. This study describes a field project in Davao del Norte and Compostela Valley provinces in the Philippines that implemented the reproductive health approach on a quasi-experimental basis. The intervention was designed to address clients' self-defined reproductive needs by providing them with relevant and accurate information and services of good quality. It consisted of two components: Providers were trained in information exchange at fixed clinics, and supervisors were trained in facilitative supervision. The results presented here indicate that the client-centered intervention was successful in enhancing service providers' knowledge and improving the content of information exchange between providers and clients. One provincial health officer has expanded the intervention throughout his province, while other provinces are interested in duplicating the model.

(PHILIPPINES, CITIES, CLIENTS, FAMILY PLANNING PROGRAMMES, FAMILY PLANNING PERSONNEL, HEALTH SERVICES, CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE, KNOWLEDGE OF CONTRACEPTIVES).

English - pp. 302-314.

M. Costello, S. RamaRao, A. Jain, Policy and Regional Programs, Population Council; M. Lacuesta, Social Research Office, Ateneo de Davao University, Davao, Philippines.

sramarao@popcouncil.org .

***

Guilherme Penteado, Luis; Cabral, Francisco; D?az, Margarita; D?az, Juan; Ghiron, Laura; Simmons, Ruth

Organizing a public-sector vasectomy program in Brazil.

Although models of high-quality family planning services for men exist in Latin America, few if any have been organized within the complex and resource-constrained national public health systems. This study provides evidence from the Santa Barbara project in southern Brazil showing how vasectomy was introduced into the municipal health system. It demonstrates that once the necessary operational and quality-of-care improvements were in place, and sufficient political and technical support existed to proceed, it was possible to establish low-cost, well-used, and sustainable vasectomy services free of charge. The findings show that careful attention to the development of strong technical competence and an informed choice process resulted in high user satisfaction. Focus-group discussions with men who underwent vasectomy indicate that they had no objection to being served in the context of a women's health center and that they act as opinion leaders who draw an increasing clientele to the service.

(BRAZIL, CITIES, VASECTOMY, MALE CONTRACEPTION, MALE STERILIZATION, CONTRACEPTION, ATTITUDE, FAMILY PLANNING PROGRAMMES).

English - pp. 315-328.

L. Guilherme Penteado, Secretariat of Health, Santa Barbara d?Oeste, SP, Brazil; F. Cabral, M. D?az, Reprolatina, Campinas, SP, Brazil; J. D?az, The Population Council, Brazil, Campinas, SP, Brazil; L. Ghiron, R. Simmons, Department of Health Behavior and Health Education, University of Michigan School of Public Health, 1420 Washington Heights, Ann Arbor, MI, 48109-2029, U.S.A.

rsimmons@umich.edu .

***

Carlson, Elwood; Lamb, Vicki

Changes in contraceptive use in Bulgaria, 1995-2000.

Comparison of results from national surveys conducted in Bulgaria in 1995 and 2000 reveal little overall change in use of modern contraceptives. Dramatic increases occurred, however, among women younger than 25 who entered their reproductive period after the end of the state socialist period. This finding suggests that contraceptive gains in the country will come largely as a cohort-replacement process. From these data, no separate program impact appears for special clinics established to provide direct, subsidized delivery of modern contraceptives to women in selected cities. The special clinics opened in cities where contraceptive use was already above the national average. During these five years, other cities lacking special clinics managed to gain in prevalence of modern contraceptive use, leaving a relatively homogenous urban-rural difference in levels of use throughout the country.

(BULGARIA, FAMILY PLANNING, CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE, CONTRACEPTIVE PREVALENCE, CONTRACEPTIVE METHODS, GENERATION EFFECT, RURAL-URBAN DIFFERENTIALS).

English - pp. 329-338.

E. Carlson, Research Unit on Reproductive Health, Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Doberaner Strasse 114, D-18057 Rostock, Germany; V. Lamb, Duke University Center for Demographic Studies, Durham, NC, U.S.A.

carlson@demogr.mpg.de .

***

Speizer, Ilene S.; Tambashe, B. Oleko; Tegang, Simon-Pierre.

An evaluation of the "Entre Nous Jeunes" Peer-educator Program for adolescents in Cameroon.

A quasi-experimental design is used in this study to evaluate the "Entre Nous Jeunes" peer-educator program to promote STI/HIV-preventive behaviors in Nkongsamba, Cameroon. The main objective of the study is to assess whether the young people exposed to a peer educator gained greater knowledge and practised more protective behaviors than did those in the control community and those who were not exposed. During the 18-month intervention period, the peer educators were able to reach a large number of young people, specifically those who were sexually experienced and in need of reproductive health information. Multivariate analyses indicate that contact with a peer educator is statistically significantly associated with greater spontaneous knowledge of modern contraception, the symptoms of sexually transmitted infections, and greater use of modern contraceptives, including the condom. In the absence of a peer-education program, current contraceptive use in the intervention community would have been significantly lower.

(CAMEROON, CITIES, EDUCATION, SEX EDUCATION, HEALTH EDUCATION, ADOLESCENTS, FAMILY PLANNING, SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR, REPRODUCTIVE BEHAVIOUR, CONTRACEPTIVE USAGE, CONTRACEPTIVE METHODS, CONDOM).

English - pp. 339-351.

I. S. Speizer, B. O. Tambashe, Tulane University School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, Department of International Health and Development, 1440 Canal Street, Suite 2200, New Orleans, LA 70112, U.S.A.; S.-P. Tegang, Institut de Recherche et des Etudes de Comportements, Yaound?, Cameroon.

ispeize@tulane.edu .

***

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