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Factors associated with the knowledge, practice and perceptions of contraception in rural southern Nigeria


L.O Omo-aghoja
V.W Omo-aghoja
C.O Aghoja
F.E Okonofua
O Aghedo
C Umueri
R Otayohwo
P Feyi-waboso
E.A Onowhakpor
K.A Inikori

Abstract

Background: Significant proportion of maternal deaths in Nigeria is due to complications of unsafe abortions, and these abortions are responses to unwanted pregnancies that could have been prevented by effective contraceptive programming. Despite intense programmatic efforts by the Nigerian government and various non-governmental agencies to
reverse the trend, there has been little evidence to suggest a systematic improvement in these indicators. Methodology: A household random survey of 1,528 women aged between 15-49 years was undertaken at Amukpe community in Nigeria, to determine their
knowledge, practice and perceptions of contraception. Results: The results showed that 86.2% of the respondents had secondary or less level of education and 19.2% of the respondents were single parents. The level of contraceptive awareness was high (92.3%) and
88% of the respondents became aware of contraception in the last 14 years. Friends/relatives (40.6%), followed by nurses (31.7%) and then doctors (17.3%) were the common sources of contraceptive awareness. The most  widely known contraceptive methods were injectables,
condoms, POP and OCP. The specific knowledge of emergency contraception was poor. The factors associated with low contraceptive usage were poor level of training and ineffective conveyance of relevant information to clients by health personnel, low literacy levels,
extremes of reproductive age and extremes of parity. Others were fear of side effects, lack of knowledge, and lack of spousal consent.
Conclusion: Contraceptive usage remain poor despite high level of awareness. Effective educational and counseling interventions are likely to improve providers’ and consumers’ knowledge and subsequent uptake
of contraceptive usage.

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