Identifying factors influencing contraceptive use in Bangladesh: evidence from BDHS 2014 data

Abstract Background Birth control is the conscious control of the birth rate by methods which temporarily prevent conception by interfering with the normal process of ovulation, fertilization, and implantation. High contraceptive prevalence rate is always expected for controlling births for those co...

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Main Authors: MB Hossain, MHR Khan, F Ababneh, JEH Shaw
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-01-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-018-5098-1
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spelling doaj-e3b78fe9bc8149c98c9660a44561ccdb2020-11-25T00:44:06ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582018-01-0118111410.1186/s12889-018-5098-1Identifying factors influencing contraceptive use in Bangladesh: evidence from BDHS 2014 dataMB Hossain0MHR Khan1F Ababneh2JEH Shaw3BRAC Research and Evaluation Division, BRAC CenterInstitute of Statistical Research and Training (ISRT), University of DhakaDepartment of Mathematics and Statistics, Sultan Qaboos UniversityDepartment of Statistics, University of WarwickAbstract Background Birth control is the conscious control of the birth rate by methods which temporarily prevent conception by interfering with the normal process of ovulation, fertilization, and implantation. High contraceptive prevalence rate is always expected for controlling births for those countries that are experiencing high population growth rate. The factors that influence contraceptive prevalence are also important to know for policy implication purposes in Bangladesh. This study aims to explore the socio-economic, demographic and others key factors that influence the use of contraception in Bangladesh. Methods The contraception data are extracted from the 2014 Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey (BDHS) data which were collected by using a two stage stratified random sampling technique that is a source of nested variability. The nested sources of variability must be incorporated in the model using random effects in order to model the actual parameter effects on contraceptive prevalence. A mixed effect logistic regression model has been implemented for the binary contraceptive data, where parameters are estimated through generalized estimating equation by assuming exchangeable correlation structure to explore and identify the factors that truly affect the use of contraception in Bangladesh. Results The prevalence of contraception use by currently married 15–49 years aged women or their husbands is 62.4%. Our study finds that administrative division, place of residence, religion, number of household members, woman’s age, occupation, body mass index, breastfeeding practice, husband’s education, wish for children, living status with wife, sexual activity in past year, women amenorrheic status, abstaining status, number of children born in last five years and total children ever died were significantly associated with contraception use in Bangladesh. Conclusions The odds of women experiencing the outcome of interest are not independent due to the nested structure of the data. As a result, a mixed effect model is implemented for the binary variable ‘contraceptive use’ to produce true estimates for the significant determinants of contraceptive use in Bangladesh. Knowing such true estimates is important for attaining future goals including increasing contraception use from 62 to 75% by 2020 by the Bangladesh government’s Health, Population & Nutrition Sector Development Program (HPNSDP).http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-018-5098-1Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey (BDHS)Sampling weightDivisionsMixed effectGeneralized estimating equation (GEE)
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author MB Hossain
MHR Khan
F Ababneh
JEH Shaw
spellingShingle MB Hossain
MHR Khan
F Ababneh
JEH Shaw
Identifying factors influencing contraceptive use in Bangladesh: evidence from BDHS 2014 data
BMC Public Health
Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey (BDHS)
Sampling weight
Divisions
Mixed effect
Generalized estimating equation (GEE)
author_facet MB Hossain
MHR Khan
F Ababneh
JEH Shaw
author_sort MB Hossain
title Identifying factors influencing contraceptive use in Bangladesh: evidence from BDHS 2014 data
title_short Identifying factors influencing contraceptive use in Bangladesh: evidence from BDHS 2014 data
title_full Identifying factors influencing contraceptive use in Bangladesh: evidence from BDHS 2014 data
title_fullStr Identifying factors influencing contraceptive use in Bangladesh: evidence from BDHS 2014 data
title_full_unstemmed Identifying factors influencing contraceptive use in Bangladesh: evidence from BDHS 2014 data
title_sort identifying factors influencing contraceptive use in bangladesh: evidence from bdhs 2014 data
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Abstract Background Birth control is the conscious control of the birth rate by methods which temporarily prevent conception by interfering with the normal process of ovulation, fertilization, and implantation. High contraceptive prevalence rate is always expected for controlling births for those countries that are experiencing high population growth rate. The factors that influence contraceptive prevalence are also important to know for policy implication purposes in Bangladesh. This study aims to explore the socio-economic, demographic and others key factors that influence the use of contraception in Bangladesh. Methods The contraception data are extracted from the 2014 Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey (BDHS) data which were collected by using a two stage stratified random sampling technique that is a source of nested variability. The nested sources of variability must be incorporated in the model using random effects in order to model the actual parameter effects on contraceptive prevalence. A mixed effect logistic regression model has been implemented for the binary contraceptive data, where parameters are estimated through generalized estimating equation by assuming exchangeable correlation structure to explore and identify the factors that truly affect the use of contraception in Bangladesh. Results The prevalence of contraception use by currently married 15–49 years aged women or their husbands is 62.4%. Our study finds that administrative division, place of residence, religion, number of household members, woman’s age, occupation, body mass index, breastfeeding practice, husband’s education, wish for children, living status with wife, sexual activity in past year, women amenorrheic status, abstaining status, number of children born in last five years and total children ever died were significantly associated with contraception use in Bangladesh. Conclusions The odds of women experiencing the outcome of interest are not independent due to the nested structure of the data. As a result, a mixed effect model is implemented for the binary variable ‘contraceptive use’ to produce true estimates for the significant determinants of contraceptive use in Bangladesh. Knowing such true estimates is important for attaining future goals including increasing contraception use from 62 to 75% by 2020 by the Bangladesh government’s Health, Population & Nutrition Sector Development Program (HPNSDP).
topic Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey (BDHS)
Sampling weight
Divisions
Mixed effect
Generalized estimating equation (GEE)
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12889-018-5098-1
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