Decision making autonomy of women on contraceptive use and its factors in Dalocha woreda, silte zone southern Ethiopia
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Summary
Background: Majority of women, Who Live in developing country, have little health care decision
making and contraceptive use autonomy. Even if it has improvement, women’s independence and
autonomy, with respect to health-related decision-making, may be restricted by many factors and
a little investigation has done to identify the factors.
Objective: to assess the autonomy of women in decision making on contraceptive use and its
factors in Dolucha wereda, silte zone
Method: A community based analytic study has been used to assessing the autonomy of women
in decision making on contraceptive use and its factors in Dolucha woreda of site zone. In which
systematic random sampling technique was used.
Result: In this study, 264 respondent mothers who were in reproductive age group from which
173(65.5%) of respondent mothers are autonomous on decision making on contraceptive use. most
of contraceptive use 155(58.7%) decision were done together followed by her husband 91(34.5%)
which include nonuser decision and by herself 18(6.8%). Binary logistic regression has revealed
that religion, woman attending school, husband’s educational status, and current employment
respondent has association with decision making autonomy women on contraceptive use. When
multivariable logistic regression analysis was done for those factor, the association are not
significant.
Conclusion: The study shows that participant’s mothers are fairly autonomous on decision making
on contraceptive use despite her involvement alone is not significant compare to her husband
involvement alone. Religion, woman attending school, husband’s educational status, and current
employment of respondents has significance but not has significant association in multivariable
logistic regression analysis.