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Title
Contraceptive Prevalence in Lesotho: Does the Sex of the Household Head Matter? |
Full text
http://bioline.utsc.utoronto.ca/archive/00000517/01/ep97010.PDF; http://hdl.handle.net/1807/1379 |
Date
1997 |
Author(s)
Makajane, Tiisetso |
Abstract
It is often assumed that women in female-headed households are less sexually active and, therefore, are expected to make less use of modern methods of contraception than their counterparts in male-headed households. The data from a demographic and health survey carried out in 1991 was used to examine the effects of type of households in which women live on their contraceptive behaviour. The sex of the household head was found to make a difference on the level of contraceptive use in Lesotho. However, the effect is dependent on the marital status of the woman and whether the method in use is modern or traditional. The results show that women in male-headed households reported higher rates of modern contraceptive prevalence than those in female-headed households. There is no support for the hypothesis that women in female-headed households use modern contraceptives more than women in male-headed households except for never married women. |
Subject(s)
Public Health |
Language
en_US |
Publisher
Union for African Population Studies (UAPS) |
Type of publication
Journal (On-line/Unpaginated) |
Format
204226 bytes; application/pdf |
Identifier
African Population Studies/Etude de la Population Africaine 12(2) |
Repository
Toronto - University of Toronto
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Added to C-A: 2014-06-30;10:40:12 |
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