Abstract

Background Ethiopia has large unmet need for contraception among postpartum women. Community-level services may improve postpartum contraceptive use in Ethiopia and other contexts where home childbirth is common. This study estimated the additional effect of systematically integrating messages on postpartum family planning (PPFP) into community contacts with pregnant and postpartum women, on top of integrated facility contacts. Methods The quasi-experimental study was conducted in two districts in Oromia Regional State and used a controlled trial design with random assignment of primary health care units—a health center and surrounding health posts—to intervention and comparison arms. We used the log-rank test and fitted a multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression model to estimate the adjusted hazard ratio (adjHR) and 95% confidence interval (95% CI) for differences in contraceptive uptake by arm. Time from delivery to uptake of modern contraception was the outcome variable. We separately analyzed subsets of women by place of delivery, as this variable interacts with the study arm. Results A total of 772 pregnant women were enrolled February–March 2017 and re-interviewed 15 months later (May 2018). Loss to follow-up was 10% in intervention, 7% in comparison areas. Among women who delivered at home, there was higher PPFP adoption by one year postpartum in the intervention arm (35.2%, 95% CI: 28.8–42.4%) versus comparison arm (27.8%, 95% CI: 22.2–34.4%). In the adjusted Cox regression model, women who delivered at home in the intervention arm were 45% more likely to adopt contraception (adjHR1.45, CI: 1.01–2.07). There was no difference by arm for women who delivered in a facility. Conclusions Integrating PPFP into community-level services for pregnant and postpartum women and infants may have additional benefit on top of PPFP services at facilities. The intervention benefited women who delivered at home, an important target population in countries like Ethiopia, where many women do not deliver in a facility. This study, implemented under real world conditions, informs the PPFP body of evidence and fills a gap in research on the contribution of community-based PPFP in contexts where services are integrated within maternal, newborn, and child health care in facilities.

Highlights

  • Ethiopia has large unmet need for contraception among postpartum women

  • Among women who delivered at home, there was higher postpartum family planning (PPFP) adoption by one year postpartum in the intervention arm (35.2%, 95% confidence interval (95% CI): 28.8–42.4%) versus comparison arm (27.8%, 95% CI: 22.2–34.4%)

  • The large gap between the number of postpartum women desiring to prevent or delay another pregnancy and the number using modern contraception in Ethiopia[1] contributes to the high proportion of births occurring at short intervals with 22% of non-first births occurring less than 24 months after the previous birth.[2]

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Summary

Methods

The quasi-experimental study was conducted in two districts in Oromia Regional State and used a controlled trial design with random assignment of primary health care units—a health center and surrounding health posts—to intervention and comparison arms. Time from delivery to uptake of modern contraception was the outcome variable. The study was conducted in the Oromia Region, Ethiopia, in two adjacent woredas (districts) with an estimated population of approximately 300,000 people. Oromia Region is the most populous region in Ethiopia and has a modern contraceptive prevalence rate (mCPR) below the national average.[2] The woredas were selected with input from the MOH and were limited to those with sufficient population size for the study and absence of food insecurity, which, based on a pre-study assessment, is associated with diminished contraceptive use. The selected woredas had eight health centers (four each) and 47 health posts (one per kebele, the smallest administrative unit of Ethiopia). Health centers provide technical oversight to health posts (staffed by HEWs) and HEWs provide technical oversight to WDA volunteers

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