Assessment of intention to use contraceptive methods with spatial distributions and associated factors among women in Ethiopia: evidence from EDHS 2016

Abstract Background Modern contraceptive methods have immense influences on the health of mothers and their children. Using contraceptive methods is seen to control family size and unnecessary pregnancies. Considering different factors like resources and various cultural aspects, assessing the inten...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Girma Gilano, Samuel Hailegebreal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-06-01
Series:Archives of Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s13690-021-00631-2
id doaj-ffd71f991dfa43428778a084ab5c2054
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ffd71f991dfa43428778a084ab5c20542021-06-27T11:21:50ZengBMCArchives of Public Health2049-32582021-06-0179111310.1186/s13690-021-00631-2Assessment of intention to use contraceptive methods with spatial distributions and associated factors among women in Ethiopia: evidence from EDHS 2016Girma Gilano0Samuel Hailegebreal1Department of Health Informatics, School of Public Health, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Arba Minch UniversityDepartment of Health Informatics, School of Public Health, College of Medicine and Health Sciences, Arba Minch UniversityAbstract Background Modern contraceptive methods have immense influences on the health of mothers and their children. Using contraceptive methods is seen to control family size and unnecessary pregnancies. Considering different factors like resources and various cultural aspects, assessing the intention to use contraception might bring areas with these problems into the light for intervention. Methods We analyzed the cross-sectional survey data from EDHS 2016, which comprised 5651 reproductive-age women. Spatial autocorrelation was checked with global Moran’s statistics, at ±1 for dispersion and clustering. Aselin Local moran’s statistics also indicated types of clusters. Hot spot(Getis-Ord Gi) statistics further used to measure autocorrelation over different spatial locations. The significance level was checked by calculating Z-score and hot and cold spots indicated the variation in intention to use contraceptives per catchments. Interpolation was also applied to see the number of intents to use contraceptive areas other than the sampled using ordinary Kriging spatial interpolation. We used Kulldorff’s SatScan for specific local clustering and the Bernoulli model test was applied to check significance. Individual and community-level factors were examined using multilevel logistic regression. Due to the clustering nature of data where p-value< 0.05 signaled associations. The disproportional nature of data was adjusted using sampling weights. Result From the total sample of women, the intention to use contraceptive methods was 2366.08(44.11%) and was highly clustered in North and Western Ethiopia. The mean number of children was (4.5 ± 2.90); age at first cohabitation was (16.9 ± 3.99); the ideal number of children was (4.77 ± 2.00). Age and the ideal number of children were negatively associated with the use of contraception. Primary education, number of children, counseling at health facilities, and age at first cohabitation were negatively associated. Conclusion We observed various distributions among regions. Educational status and various socio-cultural including working with the religious organization might need serious considerations to increase the intention to use contraceptive methods. Besides the efforts done, policy decisions might need to consider this finding and uphill the intervention against the negatively associated socio-cultural and demographic variables in outplayed areas.https://doi.org/10.1186/s13690-021-00631-2IntentionEthiopiaContraceptive method useSpatial analysisEDH data
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Girma Gilano
Samuel Hailegebreal
spellingShingle Girma Gilano
Samuel Hailegebreal
Assessment of intention to use contraceptive methods with spatial distributions and associated factors among women in Ethiopia: evidence from EDHS 2016
Archives of Public Health
Intention
Ethiopia
Contraceptive method use
Spatial analysis
EDH data
author_facet Girma Gilano
Samuel Hailegebreal
author_sort Girma Gilano
title Assessment of intention to use contraceptive methods with spatial distributions and associated factors among women in Ethiopia: evidence from EDHS 2016
title_short Assessment of intention to use contraceptive methods with spatial distributions and associated factors among women in Ethiopia: evidence from EDHS 2016
title_full Assessment of intention to use contraceptive methods with spatial distributions and associated factors among women in Ethiopia: evidence from EDHS 2016
title_fullStr Assessment of intention to use contraceptive methods with spatial distributions and associated factors among women in Ethiopia: evidence from EDHS 2016
title_full_unstemmed Assessment of intention to use contraceptive methods with spatial distributions and associated factors among women in Ethiopia: evidence from EDHS 2016
title_sort assessment of intention to use contraceptive methods with spatial distributions and associated factors among women in ethiopia: evidence from edhs 2016
publisher BMC
series Archives of Public Health
issn 2049-3258
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Abstract Background Modern contraceptive methods have immense influences on the health of mothers and their children. Using contraceptive methods is seen to control family size and unnecessary pregnancies. Considering different factors like resources and various cultural aspects, assessing the intention to use contraception might bring areas with these problems into the light for intervention. Methods We analyzed the cross-sectional survey data from EDHS 2016, which comprised 5651 reproductive-age women. Spatial autocorrelation was checked with global Moran’s statistics, at ±1 for dispersion and clustering. Aselin Local moran’s statistics also indicated types of clusters. Hot spot(Getis-Ord Gi) statistics further used to measure autocorrelation over different spatial locations. The significance level was checked by calculating Z-score and hot and cold spots indicated the variation in intention to use contraceptives per catchments. Interpolation was also applied to see the number of intents to use contraceptive areas other than the sampled using ordinary Kriging spatial interpolation. We used Kulldorff’s SatScan for specific local clustering and the Bernoulli model test was applied to check significance. Individual and community-level factors were examined using multilevel logistic regression. Due to the clustering nature of data where p-value< 0.05 signaled associations. The disproportional nature of data was adjusted using sampling weights. Result From the total sample of women, the intention to use contraceptive methods was 2366.08(44.11%) and was highly clustered in North and Western Ethiopia. The mean number of children was (4.5 ± 2.90); age at first cohabitation was (16.9 ± 3.99); the ideal number of children was (4.77 ± 2.00). Age and the ideal number of children were negatively associated with the use of contraception. Primary education, number of children, counseling at health facilities, and age at first cohabitation were negatively associated. Conclusion We observed various distributions among regions. Educational status and various socio-cultural including working with the religious organization might need serious considerations to increase the intention to use contraceptive methods. Besides the efforts done, policy decisions might need to consider this finding and uphill the intervention against the negatively associated socio-cultural and demographic variables in outplayed areas.
topic Intention
Ethiopia
Contraceptive method use
Spatial analysis
EDH data
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s13690-021-00631-2
work_keys_str_mv AT girmagilano assessmentofintentiontousecontraceptivemethodswithspatialdistributionsandassociatedfactorsamongwomeninethiopiaevidencefromedhs2016
AT samuelhailegebreal assessmentofintentiontousecontraceptivemethodswithspatialdistributionsandassociatedfactorsamongwomeninethiopiaevidencefromedhs2016
_version_ 1721357960732475392