Unmet contraceptive need among married Nigerian women: an examination of trends and drivers

Type Journal Article - Contraception
Title Unmet contraceptive need among married Nigerian women: an examination of trends and drivers
Author(s)
Volume 91
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2015
Page numbers 31-38
URL http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0010782414006969
Abstract
Objective

The aim of this study is to examine trends in and drivers of unmet need for contraceptives among married Nigerian women between 2003 and 2013.

Methods

This analysis utilized combined data from the 2003, 2008 and 2013 cross-sectional Nigerian Demographic Health Surveys, resulting in a sample size of 54,873 currently married women. Multinomial logistic regression examined associations between trends in unmet need for spacing and limiting, and the demographic, socioeconomic, and reproductive profiles of the respondents.

Results

Women in 2008 were 30% more likely to have an unmet need for spacing, relative to women in 2013. Despite these significant declines in unmet need to space fertility between 2008 and 2013, the adjusted results show that between 2003 and 2013, there was no significant change in the trends in unmet need to space fertility. Unmet need to limit fertility was significantly higher in 2003, adjusted, and 2008 relative to 2013. Younger, low-parity, Muslim women were significantly less likely than older, high-parity, non-Muslim women to have an unmet need to limit fertility. Women residing in the northeast and northwest of the country were significantly less likely than women residing in the south of the country to have an unmet need to limit fertility. Women whose most recent child had died were significantly less likely to have an unmet need to space and limit fertility.

Conclusions

These data suggest that interventions to increase the knowledge of modern contraceptives, to reduce child mortality, and to improve women's decision-making power would all serve to increase demand for contraceptives, even in areas with high-fertility preferences.

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