Abstract

Introductionfamily planning programmes have helped in increasing the prevalence of contraceptive use and reducing total fertility rate in developing countries from six to three births per woman. However, its uptake is lower in the rural areas compared to urban areas. This study seeks to elucidate the effect of community mobilisation on awareness, approval and use of family planning among women of reproductive age in the rural areas of Ebonyi state, Nigeria.Methodswe conducted a quasi-experimental study among women aged 15 to 49 years in two rural communities in Ebonyi state. Using simple random method, we recruited 484 women for the study. We used pre-tested interviewer-administered questionnaire to collect information from the participants. Community awareness and distribution of information, education and communication materials were carried out within one month. We estimated the effect of the intervention on the level of awareness, approval and uptake of family planning methods.Resultslevel of awareness increased by 19% (p<0.001) while uptake of family planning increased by 16.7% (p<0.001) in the intervention group. The approval rate was higher in the intervention group compared to the control group (p=0.008). The most commonly used method of family planning was the natural method in intervention and control arms.Conclusionalthough uptake of family planning increased significantly in the study population, the rate is generally low. Given the critical role of the community in family planning programmes, community mobilisation may be deployed to increase uptake of family planning in similar rural communities.

Highlights

  • Planning is an essential component of primary health care and reproductive health [1, 2] and has contributed in improving reproductive health [3]

  • In Nigeria, in spite of the high level of knowledge of family planning methods, [8, 9] uptake of modern methods is still low with only 9.7% of married women using a modern method of family planning according to the 2008 national demographic health survey and 9.4% according to 2013 national demographic health survey [8, 10]

  • Uptake of family planning was low in the control arm at the beginning of the study

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Planning is an essential component of primary health care and reproductive health [1, 2] and has contributed in improving reproductive health [3]. In Nigeria, in spite of the high level of knowledge of family planning methods, [8, 9] uptake of modern methods is still low with only 9.7% of married women using a modern method of family planning according to the 2008 national demographic health survey and 9.4% according to 2013 national demographic health survey [8, 10]. This shows a slight decrease in the use of modern family planning methods in the country. Almost all married women make use of modern methods of family planning at one point or the other in their reproductive lives but the proportion reporting such use is very low in developing countries [12]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call