Examination of adolescent and youth modern contraceptive users' perceptions on how religion influences contraceptive use and their rationale and circumstances of use: qualitative evidence from Burkina Faso, Kenya and Niger.

IF 1.6 Q2 DEMOGRAPHY JOURNAL OF POPULATION RESEARCH Pub Date : 2025-01-01 Epub Date: 2025-01-17 DOI:10.1007/s12546-025-09362-5
Ilene S Speizer, Fiacre Bazie, Amelia Maytan-Joneydi, John A Mushomi, Sanoussi Chaibou, Kindo Boukary, Balki Ibrahim Agali, Julius Rwenyo
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Abstract

While religion is a key determining factor of contraceptive use, few studies examine how religion influences adolescent and youth contraceptive attitudes, beliefs, and use. We use recently collected (August-November 2022) qualitative data from Burkina Faso, Kenya, and Niger among young users of modern contraception who practice Christianity or Islam. In-depth interviews with married and unmarried young women ages 18-24 years were conducted in two sites in each country to obtain a mix of religions and method users. In each country, many young Christian and Muslim women perceived that their religion is not supportive of contraceptive use. Some nuances around perceived acceptability of use were identified in Niger and among Muslim women in Kenya particularly for married women for spacing or health reasons. Reasons given for using related to realities of life, personal choices, and that use is their prerogative and God will forgive them. Most married women felt there would be few consequences if their religious community learned of their use whereas unmarried young women feared more consequences from their religious and broader community. These findings demonstrate that while religion is important in all three study contexts, decisions around contraceptive use among the young women included were not necessarily influenced by their religious beliefs and practices. As a greater number of young people adopt contraception, with or without perceived religious support, social norms are likely to change leading to increased access to contraception for all young women, married and unmarried, when or if they need it.

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审查青少年和青年现代避孕药具使用者对宗教如何影响避孕药具使用及其使用理由和情况的看法:来自布基纳法索、肯尼亚和尼日尔的定性证据。
虽然宗教是避孕药具使用的关键决定因素,但很少有研究调查宗教如何影响青少年和青年避孕药具的态度、信仰和使用。我们使用最近收集的(2022年8月至11月)定性数据,这些数据来自布基纳法索、肯尼亚和尼日尔,涉及信奉基督教或伊斯兰教的现代避孕年轻使用者。在每个国家的两个地点对18-24岁的已婚和未婚年轻女性进行了深入访谈,以获得宗教和方法使用者的混合。在每个国家,许多年轻的基督教和穆斯林妇女认为她们的宗教不支持使用避孕措施。在尼日尔和肯尼亚的穆斯林妇女中,特别是已婚妇女中,由于间隔或健康原因,在可接受性方面发现了一些细微差别。使用的理由与生活的现实,个人的选择有关,使用是他们的特权,神会原谅他们。大多数已婚妇女认为,如果她们的宗教团体知道她们使用大麻,不会有什么后果,而未婚的年轻妇女则担心来自她们的宗教团体和更广泛的团体的更多后果。这些发现表明,虽然宗教在所有三种研究背景下都很重要,但所包括的年轻妇女关于使用避孕措施的决定并不一定受到她们的宗教信仰和习俗的影响。随着越来越多的年轻人采取避孕措施,无论是否有宗教支持,社会规范可能会发生变化,导致所有年轻妇女,无论已婚或未婚,在需要时或如果需要,都能更多地获得避孕措施。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: The Journal of Population Research is a peer-reviewed, international journal which publishes papers on demography and population-related issues. Coverage is not restricted geographically. The Journal publishes substantive empirical analyses, theoretical works, applied research and contributions to methodology. Submissions may take the form of original research papers, perspectives, review articles and shorter technical research notes. Special issues emanating from conferences and other meetings are also considered.
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