Abortion experience and self-efficacy: exploring socioeconomic profiles of GHANAIAN women

Abstract Background Unsafe abortions remain a major global public health concern and despite its prevalence, unsafe abortions remain one of the most neglected global health challenges. The proportion of women in Ghana who have experienced unsafe abortions has increased from 45% in 2007 to 62% in 201...

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Main Authors: Nkechi Srodah Owoo, Monica P. Lambon-Quayefio, Nicole Onuoha
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-07-01
Series:Reproductive Health
Subjects:
GIS
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12978-019-0775-9
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spelling doaj-c1f6fb5962f34ff980e7a10bb663b6302020-11-25T02:56:03ZengBMCReproductive Health1742-47552019-07-0116111310.1186/s12978-019-0775-9Abortion experience and self-efficacy: exploring socioeconomic profiles of GHANAIAN womenNkechi Srodah Owoo0Monica P. Lambon-Quayefio1Nicole OnuohaDepartment of Economics, University of GhanaDepartment of Economics, University of GhanaAbstract Background Unsafe abortions remain a major global public health concern and despite its prevalence, unsafe abortions remain one of the most neglected global health challenges. The proportion of women in Ghana who have experienced unsafe abortions has increased from 45% in 2007 to 62% in 2017. Given the noted consequences of (unsafe) abortions on women health, it is important to explore factors correlated with women’s abortion decisions and why they opt for safe or unsafe methods. The study also examines determinants of over 6,000 Ghanaian women’s self-efficacy in abortion decision-making, given that this is likely to affect the likelihood of future abortions. Methods Using cluster-level Geographic Information System data from the 2017 Ghana Maternal Health Survey, the study provides a hot spot analysis of the incidence of abortion in the country. The study also makes use of Probit multivariate analyses also show the correlates of abortion with socio-economic factors. Results Results suggest that abortion among women is positively correlated with the absence of partners, low education levels, higher household wealth, lower parity and family size, polygyny and Christian religious background. Conclusion It is observed that the groups of women with higher abortion self-efficacy are the same groups of women who are more likely to opt for safer abortion methods, indicating some correlation, albeit indirect, between abortion self-efficacy and women’s abortion behaviors in Ghana. Relevant policy applications are adduced from these research findings.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12978-019-0775-9AbortionSelf-efficacySpatial hot spotsGISGhana maternal health survey
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nkechi Srodah Owoo
Monica P. Lambon-Quayefio
Nicole Onuoha
spellingShingle Nkechi Srodah Owoo
Monica P. Lambon-Quayefio
Nicole Onuoha
Abortion experience and self-efficacy: exploring socioeconomic profiles of GHANAIAN women
Reproductive Health
Abortion
Self-efficacy
Spatial hot spots
GIS
Ghana maternal health survey
author_facet Nkechi Srodah Owoo
Monica P. Lambon-Quayefio
Nicole Onuoha
author_sort Nkechi Srodah Owoo
title Abortion experience and self-efficacy: exploring socioeconomic profiles of GHANAIAN women
title_short Abortion experience and self-efficacy: exploring socioeconomic profiles of GHANAIAN women
title_full Abortion experience and self-efficacy: exploring socioeconomic profiles of GHANAIAN women
title_fullStr Abortion experience and self-efficacy: exploring socioeconomic profiles of GHANAIAN women
title_full_unstemmed Abortion experience and self-efficacy: exploring socioeconomic profiles of GHANAIAN women
title_sort abortion experience and self-efficacy: exploring socioeconomic profiles of ghanaian women
publisher BMC
series Reproductive Health
issn 1742-4755
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Abstract Background Unsafe abortions remain a major global public health concern and despite its prevalence, unsafe abortions remain one of the most neglected global health challenges. The proportion of women in Ghana who have experienced unsafe abortions has increased from 45% in 2007 to 62% in 2017. Given the noted consequences of (unsafe) abortions on women health, it is important to explore factors correlated with women’s abortion decisions and why they opt for safe or unsafe methods. The study also examines determinants of over 6,000 Ghanaian women’s self-efficacy in abortion decision-making, given that this is likely to affect the likelihood of future abortions. Methods Using cluster-level Geographic Information System data from the 2017 Ghana Maternal Health Survey, the study provides a hot spot analysis of the incidence of abortion in the country. The study also makes use of Probit multivariate analyses also show the correlates of abortion with socio-economic factors. Results Results suggest that abortion among women is positively correlated with the absence of partners, low education levels, higher household wealth, lower parity and family size, polygyny and Christian religious background. Conclusion It is observed that the groups of women with higher abortion self-efficacy are the same groups of women who are more likely to opt for safer abortion methods, indicating some correlation, albeit indirect, between abortion self-efficacy and women’s abortion behaviors in Ghana. Relevant policy applications are adduced from these research findings.
topic Abortion
Self-efficacy
Spatial hot spots
GIS
Ghana maternal health survey
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12978-019-0775-9
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