Role of community and context in contraceptive behaviour in rural West Bengal, India: A multilevel multinomial approach

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Ghosh, Saswata
Siddiqui, Zakaria

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Cambridge University Press

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Studies examining the influence of community-level interactions and contextual/supply-side factors in determining contraceptive choices have yielded mixed results in the context of rural India. Using small-scale survey data of 1348 women from rural West Bengal and by employing multilevel multinomial logit models, this study tested the influence of these factors after controlling for various socio-demographic and individual-level socioeconomic factors. The study reveals that supply-side intervention strategies, i.e. addressing outreach and advocacy activities and socio-religious needs at the community level, are essential prerequisites to breaking away from the predominance of sterilization in the contraceptive method-mix and enhancing the adoption of modern reversible contraceptives for improved spacing of births - a crucial factor in maternal and child health outcomes.

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Journal of Biosocial Science

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2099-12-31