Abstract

BackgroundFamily planning (FP) has the potential to improve maternal and child health outcomes and to reduce poverty in sub-Saharan Africa. However, substantial unmet need for modern contraceptive methods (MCMs) persists in this region. Current literature highlights multi-level barriers, including socio-cultural norms that discourage the use of MCMs. This paper explores women’s choices and decision-making around MCM use and examines whether integrating FP services with childhood immunisations influenced women’s perceptions of, and decision to use, an MCM.Methods94 semi-structured interviews and 21 focus group discussions with women, health providers, and community members (N = 253) were conducted in health facilities and outreach clinics where an intervention was delivering integrated FP and childhood immunisation services in Benin, Ethiopia, Kenya, Malawi and Uganda. Data were coded using Nvivo software and an analytical framework was developed to support interpretative and thematic analyses on women’s decision-making about MCM use.ResultsMost women shared the reproductive desire to space or limit births because of the perceived benefits of improved health and welfare for themselves and for their children, including the economic advantages. For some, choices about MCM use were restricted because of wider societal influences. Women’s decision to use MCMs was driven by their reproductive desires, but for some that was stymied by fears of side effects, community stigma, and disapproving husbands, which led to clandestine MCM use. Health providers acknowledged that women understood the benefits of using MCMs, but highlighted that the wider socio-cultural norms of their community often contributed to a reluctance to use them. Integration of FP and childhood immunisation services provided repeat opportunities for health providers to counter misinformation and it improved access to MCMs, including for women who needed to use them covertly.ConclusionsSome women chose to use MCMs without the approval of their husbands, and/or despite cultural norms, because of the perceived health and economic benefits for themselves and for their families, and because they lived with the consequences of short birth intervals and large families. Integrated FP and childhood immunisation services expanded women’s choices about MCM use and created opportunities for women to make decisions autonomously.

Highlights

  • Planning (FP) has the potential to improve maternal and child health outcomes and to reduce poverty in sub-Saharan Africa

  • Some women chose to use modern contraceptive method (MCM) without the approval of their husbands, and/or despite cultural norms, because of the perceived health and economic benefits for themselves and for their families, and because they lived with the consequences of short birth intervals and large families

  • Plain English summary The use of family planning (FP) to space or limit births can improve the health of women and their children and can help alleviate poverty in sub-Saharan Africa

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Summary

Introduction

Planning (FP) has the potential to improve maternal and child health outcomes and to reduce poverty in sub-Saharan Africa. Substantial unmet need for modern contraceptive methods (MCMs) persists in this region. A large unmet need for modern contraceptive methods (MCMs) persists in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). This hinders progress towards the third and fifth Sustainable Development Goals, which call for action to improve health and well-being and achieve gender equality [3]. Given the renewed international recognition of sexual and reproductive health as a human right and the commitment to eliminate the unmet need for FP made at a the Nairobi Summit in 2019 [5], there is a clear need for a comprehensive understanding of factors that influence women’s decision-making about MCM use

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