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. 2017 Nov 9;17(1):107.
doi: 10.1186/s12905-017-0462-3.

Couple's concordance and discordance in household decision-making and married women's use of modern contraceptives in Bangladesh

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Couple's concordance and discordance in household decision-making and married women's use of modern contraceptives in Bangladesh

Jalal Uddin et al. BMC Womens Health. .

Abstract

Background: Although a large body of studies documents that women's autonomy in the household is associated with better reproductive health outcomes, these studies typically examined autonomy only from women's point of view. The current study employs husband's and wife's perspectives together to examine the relationship between the decision-making arrangements in the household and the women's use of modern contraceptives in Bangladesh.

Methods: The study used the couple dataset of 2007 Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey. The sample was comprised of 3336 married couples. Binary logistic regression models were used to examine the associations between the selected items on household decision-making and the use of modern contraceptives.

Results: Our results indicate that the couples disagree considerably as to who in the household exercises the decision-making power. The pattern of decision-making regarding visiting family and relatives emerged as an important predictor of use of modern contraceptives in the multivariate regression analysis. The results suggest that compared to the couple's concordant joint decision-making, the husband-only decision-making is associated with lower odds of contraceptives use (OR 0.49; 95% CI 0.28-0.85). Only a small part of this association is explained by spousal communication about family planning issues while the socio-demographic correlates hardly affected the association. On the contrary, the wife-only decision-making did not result in increased contraceptives use (OR 0.71; 95% CI 0.45-1.13).

Conclusions: The study findings imply that women's greater autonomy may not necessarily result in improved reproductive health behavior, and therefore, a balance of power in the spousal relationship is warranted.

Keywords: Couple; Household decision-making; Modern contraceptives; women’s power.

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Conflict of interest statement

Ethics approval and consent to participate

The Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey received ethical approval from ICF Macro Institutional Review Board, Maryland, USA and National Research Ethics Committee of Bangladesh Medical Research Council (BMRC), Dhaka, Bangladesh. The data used in this study was collected through a collaborative effort of the National Institute of Population Research and Training (NIPORT) (Bangladesh), ICF International (USA) and Mitra & Associates (Bangladesh). Interviewers sought verbal informed consent from the respondents prior to administering the survey. They read a prescribed statement to the respondent and recorded the consent in the questionnaire. We obtained permission from MEASURE DHS to download the data from the DHS on-line archive. In this study, as we used de-identified data, institutional ethical approval was not necessary.

Consent for publication

Not applicable.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.

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