Do mobile family planning clinics facilitate vasectomy use in Nepal?
Do mobile family planning clinics facilitate vasectomy use in Nepal?
Background: Nepal has a distinct topography that makes reproductive health and family planning services difficult to access, particularly in remote mountain and hill regions where over a quarter of modern contraceptive users rely exclusively on vasectomy.
Study design: a three-level random intercept logistic regression analysis was applied on data from the 2011 Nepal Demographic and Health Survey to investigate the extent of influence of mobile family planning clinics on the odds of a male or a female sterilization, adjusting for relevant characteristics including ecological differences and random effects. The analyses included a sample of 2014 sterilization users, considering responses from currently married women of reproductive ages.
Results: the odds of a male sterilization were significantly higher in a mobile clinic than those in a government hospital (odds ratio, 1.65; 95% confidence interval, 1.21–2.25). The effects remained unaltered and statistically significant after adjusting for sociodemographic and clustering effects. Random effects were highly significant, which suggest the extent of heterogeneity in vasectomy use at the community and district levels. The odds of vasectomy use in mobile clinics were significantly higher among couples residing in hill and mountain regions and among those with three or more sons or those with only daughters.
Conclusion: mobile clinics significantly increase the uptake of vasectomy in hard-to-reach areas of Nepal. Reproductive health interventions should consider mobile clinics as an effective strategy to improve access to male-based modern methods and enhance gender equity in family planning.
Implications: family planning interventions in hard-to-reach communities could consider mobile clinic as an effective strategy to promote male-based modern methods. Improving access to vasectomy could substantially reduce unmet need for family planning in countries experiencing rapid fertility transition
family planning, demographic and health surveys, mobile clinics, nepal, south asia, vasectomy
557-563
Padmadas, Sabu S.
64b6ab89-152b-48a3-838b-e9167964b508
Amoako Johnson, Fiifi
e348fd15-9fe2-472f-a701-2980b8cec4d5
Leone, Tiziana
bad788fd-5008-4a20-ad39-282fd96e6aca
Dahal, Govinda P.
a25acfea-c232-428f-90d2-0eb93ac13c59
June 2014
Padmadas, Sabu S.
64b6ab89-152b-48a3-838b-e9167964b508
Amoako Johnson, Fiifi
e348fd15-9fe2-472f-a701-2980b8cec4d5
Leone, Tiziana
bad788fd-5008-4a20-ad39-282fd96e6aca
Dahal, Govinda P.
a25acfea-c232-428f-90d2-0eb93ac13c59
Abstract
Background: Nepal has a distinct topography that makes reproductive health and family planning services difficult to access, particularly in remote mountain and hill regions where over a quarter of modern contraceptive users rely exclusively on vasectomy.
Study design: a three-level random intercept logistic regression analysis was applied on data from the 2011 Nepal Demographic and Health Survey to investigate the extent of influence of mobile family planning clinics on the odds of a male or a female sterilization, adjusting for relevant characteristics including ecological differences and random effects. The analyses included a sample of 2014 sterilization users, considering responses from currently married women of reproductive ages.
Results: the odds of a male sterilization were significantly higher in a mobile clinic than those in a government hospital (odds ratio, 1.65; 95% confidence interval, 1.21–2.25). The effects remained unaltered and statistically significant after adjusting for sociodemographic and clustering effects. Random effects were highly significant, which suggest the extent of heterogeneity in vasectomy use at the community and district levels. The odds of vasectomy use in mobile clinics were significantly higher among couples residing in hill and mountain regions and among those with three or more sons or those with only daughters.
Conclusion: mobile clinics significantly increase the uptake of vasectomy in hard-to-reach areas of Nepal. Reproductive health interventions should consider mobile clinics as an effective strategy to improve access to male-based modern methods and enhance gender equity in family planning.
Implications: family planning interventions in hard-to-reach communities could consider mobile clinic as an effective strategy to promote male-based modern methods. Improving access to vasectomy could substantially reduce unmet need for family planning in countries experiencing rapid fertility transition
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More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 February 2014
Published date: June 2014
Keywords:
family planning, demographic and health surveys, mobile clinics, nepal, south asia, vasectomy
Organisations:
Social Statistics & Demography
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 363142
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/363142
ISSN: 0010-7824
PURE UUID: 8202bfb3-9a39-4ce3-ae55-a376bcedf49b
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Date deposited: 21 Mar 2014 08:29
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:16
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Contributors
Author:
Fiifi Amoako Johnson
Author:
Tiziana Leone
Author:
Govinda P. Dahal
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