期刊论文详细信息
Gates Open Research
Collective norms and modern contraceptive use in men and women: A multilevel analysis of DHS Program data in Nigeria and Zambia
article
Sara Riese1  Shireen Assaf1  Jeffrey Edmeades2  Oluwatoyin Aladejebi3  Million Phiri3 
[1]The DHS Program
[2]The DHS Program, Avenir Health
[3]Demography and Population Studies Programme, Schools of Public Health and Social Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand
关键词: contraceptive use;    family planning;    social norms;    gender;    Nigeria;    Zambia;   
DOI  :  10.12688/gatesopenres.14406.1
学科分类:电子与电气工程
来源: American Journal Of Pharmtech Research
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【 摘 要 】
Background: Social norms have long been understood as essential for demographic preferences, intentions and behavior, despite a lack of consistent definitions and measures in the field. Recent work has more clearly defined these norms, both at the individual and community/collective levels. However, past research on the effect of social norms on contraceptive use has focused mainly on the influence of individual-level norms, largely among women only, contributing to mixed findings. Methods: This study addresses this gap through the use of multilevel models to identify associations between collective gender, fertility, and family planning norms and individual use of modern contraceptives for both men and women, using recent Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data from Nigeria and Zambia. Multiple measures of variation, including community-level random effects and the intraclass correlation, are calculated, providing evidence of the general effect of community factors on behavior. Results: Our findings support the importance of social, demographic and economic context on how collective gender, fertility, and family planning norms relate to modern contraceptive use. Different social norms are associated with use in the two countries, and, even within the same country, men and women’s use are influenced by different norms. Among the examined norms, only collective fertility norms were associated with use for all the groups examined, consistently associated with lower use of modern contraception. Overall, clustering at the community level explained a larger proportion of variance in individual use in men compared to women, suggesting that men’s behavior was more consistently associated with the measured social norms than women’s. Conclusions: These findings suggest that careful attention should be paid to understanding and measuring social norms when considering programs or policy around the provision of modern contraception and that these should not assume that social norms influence men and women’s behaviors in the same way.
【 授权许可】

CC BY   

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