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Childbearing and the use of contraceptive methods among married adolescents in Bangladesh.
Authors: Mostafa Kamal SM.
Source: European Journal of Contraception and Reproductive Health Care, 2012 Jan 15. [Epub ahead of print]
Topic(s): Contraception
Fertility
Youth
Country: Asia
  Bangladesh
Published: JAN 2012
Abstract: Abstract Objectives To investigate the socioeconomic determinants of childbearing and contraceptive use among married adolescents in Bangladesh. Methods The study used the Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey 2007 data. Both bivariate and multivariate statistical analyses were used to examine the association between the socioeconomic factors and childbearing and contraceptive use among married female adolescents. Results Overall, 69% of the married adolescents initiated childbearing and 25% of the most recent pregnancies were unintended. The current contraceptive prevalence rate was 42%. The multivariate logistic regression yielded a significantly increased risk of childbearing among adolescents with no formal education, those who were married-off before age 16, the poor and those who had ever used any contraceptive method. Inter-spousal communication on family planning (FP) appeared as the most single significant determinant of any contraceptive use. Number of living children, working status and visitations by FP workers are also important determinants of contraceptive use among the married female adolescents. Conclusions Early childbearing, lower use rate of contraceptive methods and unintended pregnancies are common among married adolescents in Bangladesh. Expanded schooling and reproductive health programmes in Bangladesh should promote increased communication about FP within the couples in order to achieve successful contraception and better reproductive outcomes, particularly among adolescents.