Order No. | 12 | Bivariate analysis, a binary logistic model, a multinomial logistic model | married women aged 15 - 49 years | 800 women | Not described | off-farm wage employed women were more likely to use traditional contraception, employment was significantly associated with the use of traditional methods for women who were older than 30 years, who had more than three children, who were wealthier, and who lived less than 30 km from a major town, more frequent among older women and women with more children. | |
1er author | Goedele Van den Broeck | ||||||
Year of publication | 2019 | ||||||
Country | Uganda | ||||||
Setting | rural Uganda | ||||||
Study Design | Quantitative | ||||||
Study duration | data from the 2010 and 2012 rounds of the Uganda National Panel Survey | ||||||
Data collection | Methods | Survey | |||||
Tools | Questionnaire | ||||||
Order No. | 13 | Descriptive and regression analyses account for the DHS’s stratified, clustered sample design by using the svy commands in stata. | 409,399 women of reproductive age (15 to 49) | 409,399 women | Use of traditional methods is higher among women who wish to limit/end childbearing and among better-educated, urban, and wealthier women, but only slightly higher for ever-married women compared to never-married ones. A higher proportion of older women now use traditional methods, as do never-married women compared to ever-married women. The proportion of traditional method users among those with a demand for contraception is six times greater among women with a secondary education compared to those with no education 4 percent of women in sub-Saharan Africa use either periodic abstinence or Withdrawal | ||
1er author | Clémentine Rossier | ||||||
Year of publication | 2017 | ||||||
Country | Sub-Saharan Africa | ||||||
Setting | countries in West, East, and Central Africa | ||||||
Study Design | Quantitative | ||||||
Study duration | |||||||
Data collection | Methods | Survey | |||||
Tools | Questionnaire |