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Daughter Preference and Contraceptive-use in Matrilineal Tribal Societies in Meghalaya, India

Although son preference in patrilineal society is an established fact, daughter preference in matrilineal society is not thoroughly examined. Very few studies have been carried out on the issue. This paper attempts to explore the daughter preference and contraceptive-use in matrilineal tribal societ...

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Autores principales: Narzary, Pralip Kumar, Sharma, Shilpi Mishra
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3702350/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23930347
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author Narzary, Pralip Kumar
Sharma, Shilpi Mishra
author_facet Narzary, Pralip Kumar
Sharma, Shilpi Mishra
author_sort Narzary, Pralip Kumar
collection PubMed
description Although son preference in patrilineal society is an established fact, daughter preference in matrilineal society is not thoroughly examined. Very few studies have been carried out on the issue. This paper attempts to explore the daughter preference and contraceptive-use in matrilineal tribal societies in Meghalaya, India. Data from the National Family Health Survey 1998-1999 have been used in this study because, among the large-scale surveys, only this dataset allows identification of matrilineal sample. Mean, percentage, and standard deviation are computed in the present study. Further, the data have been cross-tabulated, and logistic regression has been run through SPSS (version 15). Among the ever-married matrilineal women, 17% desired more sons than daughters but 18.2% desired more daughters than sons. About 11% of ever-married women could achieve their desired sex composition of children. However, a very striking finding suggests that, even after achieving desired sex composition of children, as high as 61.8% of women were still not using contraception mainly because of programme factors while one-fourth were still depending on temporary methods. The rest 13.2% adopted terminal method of contraception, which calls for immediate attention of planners. With the increase in the number of sons but without daughter, contraceptive-use drastically decreased. The most desired sex composition of children seems to be two daughters and a son. Absence of daughter with increase in the total number of sons increased the desire for additional children. Every woman with two or more sons but without daughter wanted the next child to be a daughter. Thus, there are ample evidences to draw the conclusion that there is, in fact, a daughter preference in the matrilineal tribal societies in Meghalaya, India. Policy-makers may, thus, target the women who have achieved fertility and should ensure that daughter preference does not lead to the negligence to sons.
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spelling pubmed-37023502013-07-24 Daughter Preference and Contraceptive-use in Matrilineal Tribal Societies in Meghalaya, India Narzary, Pralip Kumar Sharma, Shilpi Mishra J Health Popul Nutr Original Papers Although son preference in patrilineal society is an established fact, daughter preference in matrilineal society is not thoroughly examined. Very few studies have been carried out on the issue. This paper attempts to explore the daughter preference and contraceptive-use in matrilineal tribal societies in Meghalaya, India. Data from the National Family Health Survey 1998-1999 have been used in this study because, among the large-scale surveys, only this dataset allows identification of matrilineal sample. Mean, percentage, and standard deviation are computed in the present study. Further, the data have been cross-tabulated, and logistic regression has been run through SPSS (version 15). Among the ever-married matrilineal women, 17% desired more sons than daughters but 18.2% desired more daughters than sons. About 11% of ever-married women could achieve their desired sex composition of children. However, a very striking finding suggests that, even after achieving desired sex composition of children, as high as 61.8% of women were still not using contraception mainly because of programme factors while one-fourth were still depending on temporary methods. The rest 13.2% adopted terminal method of contraception, which calls for immediate attention of planners. With the increase in the number of sons but without daughter, contraceptive-use drastically decreased. The most desired sex composition of children seems to be two daughters and a son. Absence of daughter with increase in the total number of sons increased the desire for additional children. Every woman with two or more sons but without daughter wanted the next child to be a daughter. Thus, there are ample evidences to draw the conclusion that there is, in fact, a daughter preference in the matrilineal tribal societies in Meghalaya, India. Policy-makers may, thus, target the women who have achieved fertility and should ensure that daughter preference does not lead to the negligence to sons. International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh 2013-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3702350/ /pubmed/23930347 Text en © INTERNATIONAL CENTRE FOR DIARRHOEAL DISEASE RESEARCH, BANGLADESH http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Papers
Narzary, Pralip Kumar
Sharma, Shilpi Mishra
Daughter Preference and Contraceptive-use in Matrilineal Tribal Societies in Meghalaya, India
title Daughter Preference and Contraceptive-use in Matrilineal Tribal Societies in Meghalaya, India
title_full Daughter Preference and Contraceptive-use in Matrilineal Tribal Societies in Meghalaya, India
title_fullStr Daughter Preference and Contraceptive-use in Matrilineal Tribal Societies in Meghalaya, India
title_full_unstemmed Daughter Preference and Contraceptive-use in Matrilineal Tribal Societies in Meghalaya, India
title_short Daughter Preference and Contraceptive-use in Matrilineal Tribal Societies in Meghalaya, India
title_sort daughter preference and contraceptive-use in matrilineal tribal societies in meghalaya, india
topic Original Papers
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3702350/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23930347
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