Many women have inconsistent fertility desires and
contraceptive use behaviors. This increases their risk of unintended pregnancies.
Inconsistencies may reflect barriers to family planning (FP) use but may also
reflect ambivalence toward future childbearing. Using urban data from Kenya,
Nigeria, and Senegal, this study examines the role of fertility desires and FP
use behaviors on pregnancy experience over a 2-year follow-up period.
Data come from baseline and 2-year follow-up among urban
women interviewed in Kenya, Nigeria, and Senegal. At baseline (2010/2011),
women were asked about their future fertility desires (want child soon, want to
delay >2 years, does not want) and current FP use. At midterm
(2012/2013), women were asked if they were currently pregnant or had a birth in
the 2-year period. We examine the association between baseline fertility
desires and FP use with pregnancy experience and desirability of an experienced
pregnancy.
In the 2-year follow-up period, 27–39 % of women in
union experienced a pregnancy or birth. In Kenya and Nigeria, 30–35 % of
women using a modern FP method experienced a pregnancy/birth; the percentage
with a pregnancy/birth was slightly higher among women not using at baseline
(41 % in both countries). In Senegal, the distinction between pregnancy
experience between users and non-users was greater (16 % vs. 31 %,
respectively). In all countries, pregnancy was less common among users of
long-acting and permanent methods; only a small percentage of women use these
methods. Women not wanting any(more) children were the least likely to
experience a pregnancy in the 2-year follow-up period. No differences were
observed between those who wanted to delay and those who wanted soon.
Multivariate findings demonstrate distinctions in pregnancy experience by
fertility desires among modern FP users. Non-users have similar pregnancy
experience by fertility desires.
Fertility desires are not stable; providers need to consider
the fluidity of fertility desires in counseling clients. Programs focusing on
new FP users may miss women who are the most motivated to avoid a pregnancy and
need to switch to a more effective method; this will result in less unintended
pregnancies overall.
Full article at: http://goo.gl/FeS6Xz
1Department of Maternal and Child Health,
Gillings School of Global Public Health, The University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, NC, USA
2Carolina Population Center, University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, USA
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