Abstract

Men are underrepresented in family planning (FP) research, and despite the widespread promotion of FP through mass media, there is no systematic evaluation on how mass media exposure influences their FP knowledge, attitudes and behavior. Using Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data from 31 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), collected between 2010 and 2019, this paper examines the associations between three types of traditional mass media (radio, television and print) with FP knowledge, attitudes and method choices among reproductive age men in SSA, relative to other socio-cultural factors. Estimates to quantify the relative contribution of each type of mass media, relative to other evidence-based socio-cultural influences on FP outcomes, were derived using the Shorrocks-Shapley decomposition. Radio exposure had the largest impact on FP knowledge, attitudes and method choice, accounting for 26.1% of the variance in FP knowledge, followed by Television (21.4%) and education attainment (20.7%). Mass media exposure had relatively minimal impact on FP method choice, and between the three types of mass media, television (8%) had the largest influence on FP method choice. Print media had comparatively lesser impact on FP knowledge (8%), attitudes (6.2%) and method choice (3.2%). Findings suggest that mass media exposure has positive influences on FP knowledge, attitudes and method choice but its influence on FP knowledge, attitudes and method choice is smaller relative to other socio-cultural factors such as education, household wealth and marital status. As such, efforts to increase FP uptake in Sub-Saharan Africa should take into consideration the impact of these socio-cultural economic factors.

Highlights

  • Planning (FP) has numerous crosscutting benefits to individuals and society

  • Television exposure may have a greater effect on Family planning (FP) knowledge than radio exposure, but when it comes to FP attitudes, radio may be more effective than television

  • The differential effects of television and radio on FP knowledge and attitudes could be attributed to the nature and limitations of the various mass media channels, which influences several attributes of the mass media communication including nature and quality of content that can delivered through these channels, along these other operators e.g. audience segmentation, audience patterns of consumptions and preferences for cognitive processing and use of contextual cues that influence the salience of the content

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Summary

Methods

Data sourcesData are drawn from Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) collected in 31 countries in SSA, between 2010 and 2019. DHS uses a two-stage random sampling approach: 1) selection of enumeration areas (EAs) using probability proportional to size and power allocation with adjustments to meet the minimum number of clusters per survey domain required for a DHS survey; and 2) selection of households within EAs. All men aged 15 and older who were either permanent residents of the selected households or visitors who stayed in the household the night before the survey were eligible to be interviewed using a standardized man’s questionnaire. All men aged 15 and older who were either permanent residents of the selected households or visitors who stayed in the household the night before the survey were eligible to be interviewed using a standardized man’s questionnaire This uniformity in procedures ensured comparability of data across countries, enabling a pooled data approach to examining the influence of mass media on FP knowledge, attitudes and behaviors. The 31 countries included in these analyses are listed in Table 1, Country Angola Burkina Faso Benin Burundi Congo-Democratic Republic Cote d’Ivoire Cameroon Comoros Ethiopia Ghana Gambia Guinea Kenya Liberia Lesotho Malawi Mali Mozambique Namibia Nigeria Niger Rwanda Senegal Sierra Leone South Africa Chad Tanzania Togo Uganda Zambia Zimbabwe Total

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