印度南部部落孕妇的计划生育知识和实践:一项观察研究。

IF 2.2 Q2 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY Contraception and reproductive medicine Pub Date : 2024-01-12 DOI:10.1186/s40834-023-00259-3
Kiranmayee Muralidhar, Holly Nishimura, Kate Coursey, Karl Krupp, Poornima Jaykrishna, Vijaya Srinivas, Purnima Madhivanan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:印度 30 个邦共有 700 多个在册部落(ST)。与世界各地的其他原住民群体一样,印度在册部落的婴幼儿健康状况也是印度所有社区中最差的。与其他印度人口相比,在册部落家庭出生的孩子在出生后第一个月死亡的几率要高出 19%,第一年死亡的几率要高出 45%。研究表明,早孕、高生育率和计划生育方法使用率低是造成这些差异的主要原因:在征得知情同意后,对印度迈索尔的 303 名部落孕妇进行了坎纳达语横断面调查。使用 Stata 14.0 进行了单变量和多变量分析,以确定与避孕方法知识相关的人口和社会心理因素:妇女普遍了解女性绝育手术,但只有 39.3%的妇女表示听说过一种或多种临时避孕方法,36.3%的妇女知道从哪里可以获得这些方法。听说过铜-T 的妇女比例最高(33.0%),其次是口服避孕药(23.8%)、避孕套(11.9%)和注射避孕药(4.6%)。只有 2.7% 的妇女表示曾经使用过任何形式的临时避孕措施。多变量逻辑回归的结果表明,了解至少一种临时避孕措施与年龄较大(调整后的几率比[AOR]:1.09;95% CI:1.02,1.17)、结婚年数较多(AOR:0.90;95% CI:0.85,0.96)和最后一次生育在政府机构有关(AOR:3.67;95% CI:1.99,6.82):这项研究表明,印度迈索尔农村地区的部落人口对临时避孕方法的了解和使用率很低。旨在增加避孕知识的干预措施对这一人群的生育间隔非常重要,应针对年轻妇女和未接触过政府医疗机构的妇女。
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Knowledge and practice of family planning among pregnant tribal women in Southern India: an observational study.

Background: There are over 700 Scheduled Tribes (ST) living in 30 Indian states. As with other indigenous groups across the world, Indian ST have some of the poorest infant and child health outcomes of any communities in India. A child born to an ST family is 19% more likely to die in the first month of life and has a 45 percent risk of dying in their first year compared with other Indian populations. Research suggests that early conception, high fertility, and low use of family planning methods are large contributors to these disparities.

Methods: A cross sectional survey in Kannada was conducted among 303 pregnant tribal women in Mysore, India after obtaining informed consent. Univariate and multivariable analyses were carried out to determine the demographic and psychosocial factors associated with knowledge of contraceptive methods using Stata 14.0.

Results: There was widespread knowledge about female sterilization, while only 39.3% of women reported hearing about one or more forms of temporary contraception, and 36.3% knew where to get them. The largest proportion of women had heard about copper-T (33.0%), followed by oral contraceptive pills (23.8%), condoms (11.9%), and injectables (4.6%). Only 2.7% of women reported ever using any form of temporary contraception. Results from the multivariable logistic regression indicated that knowledge of at least one form of temporary contraception was linked to higher age (adjusted odds ratio[AOR]: 1.09; 95% CI: 1.02, 1.17), greater number of years of marriage (AOR: 0.90; 95% CI: 0.85, 0.96), and last birth in a government facility (AOR: 3.67; 95% CI: 1.99, 6.82).

Conclusions: The study revealed poor knowledge and utilization of temporary contraceptive methods among a tribal population in rural Mysore, India. Interventions aiming to increase knowledge of contraceptive options are important for birth spacing in this population and should target younger women and those without contact with government health facilities.

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