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Extended post-partum modern contraceptive utilization and associated factors among women in Arba Minch town, Southern Ethiopia

INTRODUCTION: Post-partum family planning is a novel strategy to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality by preventing unwanted pregnancy and unsafe abortion. However, little was done on community-based design to assess modern contraceptive use during an extended postpartum period in southern Ethiopi...

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Autores principales: Mesfin Yesgat, Yibeltal, Gultie Ketema, Tekilemariam, Abebe Dessalegn, Samuel, Wallelign Bayabil, Abraham, Argaw Enyew, Muche, Habte Dagnaw, Eyaya
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8926256/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35294469
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0265163
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author Mesfin Yesgat, Yibeltal
Gultie Ketema, Tekilemariam
Abebe Dessalegn, Samuel
Wallelign Bayabil, Abraham
Argaw Enyew, Muche
Habte Dagnaw, Eyaya
author_facet Mesfin Yesgat, Yibeltal
Gultie Ketema, Tekilemariam
Abebe Dessalegn, Samuel
Wallelign Bayabil, Abraham
Argaw Enyew, Muche
Habte Dagnaw, Eyaya
author_sort Mesfin Yesgat, Yibeltal
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Post-partum family planning is a novel strategy to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality by preventing unwanted pregnancy and unsafe abortion. However, little was done on community-based design to assess modern contraceptive use during an extended postpartum period in southern Ethiopia. Therefore, this study aimed to assess modern contraceptive use during extended postpartum period and factors associated among women who gave birth in the previous twelve months in southern Ethiopia. METHODS: A community-based cross-sectional study was conducted among 416 women in Arba Minch town. A systematic random sampling technique was employed to select the enrolled women. Data were collected using a structured and pretested questionnaire. The data were entered into Epi-Data version 4.6 then exported to statically package of social science (SPSS) version 25 for data analysis. RESULT: Among enrolled postpartum women, 64.7% were used modern contraceptives for the last 12 months. Women were more likely to use a modern contraceptive during the extended period of postpartum if they resumed sexual intercourse (AOR:7.4 [4.08, 13.23]), received post-partum family planning counseling (AOR: 3.2 [1.95, 5.28]), and if they resumed menses (AOR: 5.3 [3.12, 9.15]) than the counterpart. Being young age women (AOR: 3.2 [1.05, 9.82]) compared to age above 35 years and married (AOR:3.2 [1.17–10.28]) compared to currently unmarried were significantly associated factors for modern contraceptive use during the extended period of postpartum. CONCLUSION: The level of modern contraceptive utilization during the extended postpartum period was satisfactory. Therefore, in light of this finding, there is a need to improve the strengthening and scale-up antenatal and postnatal counseling of contraceptive use during the extended postpartum period, advice on preceding the return of menses, and give better attention for older age and unmarried women education on family planning.
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spelling pubmed-89262562022-03-17 Extended post-partum modern contraceptive utilization and associated factors among women in Arba Minch town, Southern Ethiopia Mesfin Yesgat, Yibeltal Gultie Ketema, Tekilemariam Abebe Dessalegn, Samuel Wallelign Bayabil, Abraham Argaw Enyew, Muche Habte Dagnaw, Eyaya PLoS One Research Article INTRODUCTION: Post-partum family planning is a novel strategy to reduce maternal and neonatal mortality by preventing unwanted pregnancy and unsafe abortion. However, little was done on community-based design to assess modern contraceptive use during an extended postpartum period in southern Ethiopia. Therefore, this study aimed to assess modern contraceptive use during extended postpartum period and factors associated among women who gave birth in the previous twelve months in southern Ethiopia. METHODS: A community-based cross-sectional study was conducted among 416 women in Arba Minch town. A systematic random sampling technique was employed to select the enrolled women. Data were collected using a structured and pretested questionnaire. The data were entered into Epi-Data version 4.6 then exported to statically package of social science (SPSS) version 25 for data analysis. RESULT: Among enrolled postpartum women, 64.7% were used modern contraceptives for the last 12 months. Women were more likely to use a modern contraceptive during the extended period of postpartum if they resumed sexual intercourse (AOR:7.4 [4.08, 13.23]), received post-partum family planning counseling (AOR: 3.2 [1.95, 5.28]), and if they resumed menses (AOR: 5.3 [3.12, 9.15]) than the counterpart. Being young age women (AOR: 3.2 [1.05, 9.82]) compared to age above 35 years and married (AOR:3.2 [1.17–10.28]) compared to currently unmarried were significantly associated factors for modern contraceptive use during the extended period of postpartum. CONCLUSION: The level of modern contraceptive utilization during the extended postpartum period was satisfactory. Therefore, in light of this finding, there is a need to improve the strengthening and scale-up antenatal and postnatal counseling of contraceptive use during the extended postpartum period, advice on preceding the return of menses, and give better attention for older age and unmarried women education on family planning. Public Library of Science 2022-03-16 /pmc/articles/PMC8926256/ /pubmed/35294469 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0265163 Text en © 2022 Mesfin Yesgat et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Mesfin Yesgat, Yibeltal
Gultie Ketema, Tekilemariam
Abebe Dessalegn, Samuel
Wallelign Bayabil, Abraham
Argaw Enyew, Muche
Habte Dagnaw, Eyaya
Extended post-partum modern contraceptive utilization and associated factors among women in Arba Minch town, Southern Ethiopia
title Extended post-partum modern contraceptive utilization and associated factors among women in Arba Minch town, Southern Ethiopia
title_full Extended post-partum modern contraceptive utilization and associated factors among women in Arba Minch town, Southern Ethiopia
title_fullStr Extended post-partum modern contraceptive utilization and associated factors among women in Arba Minch town, Southern Ethiopia
title_full_unstemmed Extended post-partum modern contraceptive utilization and associated factors among women in Arba Minch town, Southern Ethiopia
title_short Extended post-partum modern contraceptive utilization and associated factors among women in Arba Minch town, Southern Ethiopia
title_sort extended post-partum modern contraceptive utilization and associated factors among women in arba minch town, southern ethiopia
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8926256/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35294469
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0265163
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