Associations of spousal communication with contraceptive method use among adolescent wives and their husbands in Niger.

OBJECTIVES:This study aims to examine associations between spousal communication about contraception and ever use of modern contraception, overt modern contraceptive use (with husband's knowledge), and covert modern contraceptive use (without husband's knowledge) among adolescent wives and...

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Main Authors: Sneha Challa, Holly B Shakya, Nicole Carter, Sabrina C Boyce, Mohamad I Brooks, Sani Aliou, Jay G Silverman
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237512
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spelling doaj-6041add383b14a4294765a9aacbebc162021-03-03T22:01:23ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01158e023751210.1371/journal.pone.0237512Associations of spousal communication with contraceptive method use among adolescent wives and their husbands in Niger.Sneha ChallaHolly B ShakyaNicole CarterSabrina C BoyceMohamad I BrooksSani AliouJay G SilvermanOBJECTIVES:This study aims to examine associations between spousal communication about contraception and ever use of modern contraception, overt modern contraceptive use (with husband's knowledge), and covert modern contraceptive use (without husband's knowledge) among adolescent wives and their husbands in Niger. STUDY DESIGN:Cross-sectional data, from the Reaching Married Adolescents Study, were collected from randomly selected adolescent wives (ages 13-19 years) and their husbands from 48 randomly selected villages in rural Niger (N = 1,020 couples). Logistic regression models assessed associations of couples' reports of spousal communication about contraception with wives' reports of contraception (overall, overt, and covert). RESULTS:About one-fourth of adolescent wives and one-fifth of husbands reported spousal communication about contraception. Results showed couples' reports of spousal communication about contraception were positively associated with ever use of modern contraception. Couples' reports of spousal communication about contraception were negatively associated with covert modern contraceptive use compared to overt use. Wives' reports of spousal communication were marginally associated with covert use compared to no use but husbands' reports were not. CONCLUSION:Among a sample of couples in Niger, spousal communication about contraception was positively associated with modern contraceptive use (compared to no use) and negatively with covert use (compared to overt use) but wives' and husbands' reports showed differential associations with covert use compared to no use. Since there is little understanding of couple communication surrounding covert contraceptive use decisions, research should focus on characterizing content and context of couple communication particularly in cases of disagreement over fertility decisions.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237512
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sneha Challa
Holly B Shakya
Nicole Carter
Sabrina C Boyce
Mohamad I Brooks
Sani Aliou
Jay G Silverman
spellingShingle Sneha Challa
Holly B Shakya
Nicole Carter
Sabrina C Boyce
Mohamad I Brooks
Sani Aliou
Jay G Silverman
Associations of spousal communication with contraceptive method use among adolescent wives and their husbands in Niger.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Sneha Challa
Holly B Shakya
Nicole Carter
Sabrina C Boyce
Mohamad I Brooks
Sani Aliou
Jay G Silverman
author_sort Sneha Challa
title Associations of spousal communication with contraceptive method use among adolescent wives and their husbands in Niger.
title_short Associations of spousal communication with contraceptive method use among adolescent wives and their husbands in Niger.
title_full Associations of spousal communication with contraceptive method use among adolescent wives and their husbands in Niger.
title_fullStr Associations of spousal communication with contraceptive method use among adolescent wives and their husbands in Niger.
title_full_unstemmed Associations of spousal communication with contraceptive method use among adolescent wives and their husbands in Niger.
title_sort associations of spousal communication with contraceptive method use among adolescent wives and their husbands in niger.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description OBJECTIVES:This study aims to examine associations between spousal communication about contraception and ever use of modern contraception, overt modern contraceptive use (with husband's knowledge), and covert modern contraceptive use (without husband's knowledge) among adolescent wives and their husbands in Niger. STUDY DESIGN:Cross-sectional data, from the Reaching Married Adolescents Study, were collected from randomly selected adolescent wives (ages 13-19 years) and their husbands from 48 randomly selected villages in rural Niger (N = 1,020 couples). Logistic regression models assessed associations of couples' reports of spousal communication about contraception with wives' reports of contraception (overall, overt, and covert). RESULTS:About one-fourth of adolescent wives and one-fifth of husbands reported spousal communication about contraception. Results showed couples' reports of spousal communication about contraception were positively associated with ever use of modern contraception. Couples' reports of spousal communication about contraception were negatively associated with covert modern contraceptive use compared to overt use. Wives' reports of spousal communication were marginally associated with covert use compared to no use but husbands' reports were not. CONCLUSION:Among a sample of couples in Niger, spousal communication about contraception was positively associated with modern contraceptive use (compared to no use) and negatively with covert use (compared to overt use) but wives' and husbands' reports showed differential associations with covert use compared to no use. Since there is little understanding of couple communication surrounding covert contraceptive use decisions, research should focus on characterizing content and context of couple communication particularly in cases of disagreement over fertility decisions.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0237512
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