The Role of Education and Employment in Shaping Modern Contraceptive Practices among Married Women in Pakistan: A Focus on Employed vs. Unemployed Females
Education, Employment, and Contraception in Pakistan
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.62807/jowach.v1i4.2024.39-43Keywords:
women health, Public HealthAbstract
Introduction:
This study examines the relationship between women's employment, education, and contraception use in Pakistan, a country with high rates of maternal mortality and population growth. The study emphasizes the need of providing women with economic and educational opportunities to improve family planning outcomes and reduce maternal mortality, poverty, and population growth.
Methodology:
The study used data from the Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey (PDHS 2017-2018). Three approaches were used in our study: Descriptive analysis was done to summarize sociodemographic characteristics and Chi square test and Logistic Regression was done to measure relationship between modern contraceptive usage and employment status of educated women, with the P values less than 0.05.
Results:
The results show that the use of contraceptives is highly influenced by age and geographic factors. Significantly, older age groups have a higher probability of utilizing contraceptives. The significant Chi-Square value indicates that among educated married women in Pakistan, work position has a considerable impact on the chance of adopting modern contraceptive methods. There was no significant variation in the utilization of contraceptives between educated women with employment and educated women without employment.
Conclusion:
Women's autonomy and contraceptive use were highly connected; our findings revealed a statistically significant difference in contraceptive usage between educated women who were employed and those who were not. In order to enhance maternal health outcomes, family planning behavior and advocates for policies that support women's autonomy and education.
Keywords: women empowerment, contraception, PDHS, education, women
References
Islam AZ, Mondal MN, Khatun ML, Rahman MM, Islam MR, Mostofa MG, et al. Prevalence and Determinants of Contraceptive use among Employed and Unemployed Women in Bangladesh. International journal of MCH and AIDS. 2016;5(2):92-102.
Mondal MN, Shitan M. Relative importance of demographic, socioeconomic and health factors on life expectancy in low- and lower-middle-income countries. Journal of epidemiology. 2014;24(2):117-24.
Wado YD. Women's autonomy and reproductive health-care-seeking behavior in Ethiopia. Women & health. 2018;58(7):729-43.
Kantorová V, Wheldon MC, Dasgupta ANZ, Ueffing P, Castanheira HC. Contraceptive use and needs among adolescent women aged 15-19: Regional and global estimates and projections from 1990 to 2030 from a Bayesian hierarchical modelling study. PloS one. 2021;16(3):e0247479.
Nadeem M, Malik MI, Anwar M, Khurram S. Women decision making autonomy as a facilitating factor for contraceptive use for family planning in Pakistan. Social Indicators Research. 2021;156(1):71-89.
Elkasabi M. Calculating fertility and childhood mortality rates from survey data using the DHS. rates R package. PloS one. 2019;14(5):e0216403.
Jabeen S, Rathor A, Riaz M, Zakar R, Fischer F. Demand-and supply-side factors associated with the use of contraceptive methods in Pakistan: a comparative study of demographic and health surveys, 1990–2018. BMC Women's Health. 2020;20:1-11.
Keller LH, Sonfield A. More to be done: Individuals’ needs for sexual and reproductive health coverage and care. Guttmacher Policy Review. 2019;22:8-15.
a FM, , b LJ. Educational level and family planning among Pakistani women: A prospective explorative knowledge, attitude and practice study. Middle East Fertility Society Journal. 2018;23(4):464-7.
Sano Y, Mammen S, Houghten M. Well-Being and Stability among Low-income Families: A 10-Year Review of Research. Journal of family and economic issues. 2021;42(Suppl 1):107-17.
Park H, Kim K. Trends and Factors Associated with Oral Contraceptive Use among Korean Women. Healthcare (Basel, Switzerland). 2021;9(10).
Naz L, Siddiqui UA, Sriram S. Examining contraceptive utilization behavior in Pakistani women. Reproductive health. 2024;21(1):100.
Anik AI, Islam MR, Rahman MS. Association between socioeconomic factors and unmet need for modern contraception among the young married women: A comparative study across the low- and lower-middle-income countries of Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa. PLOS global public health. 2022;2(7):e0000731.
Meherali S, Ali A, Khaliq A, Lassi ZS. Prevalence and determinants of contraception use in Pakistan: trend analysis from the Pakistan Demographic and Health Surveys (PDHS) dataset from 1990 to 2018. F1000Research. 2021;10:790.
Ahinkorah BO, Ameyaw EK, Seidu AA. Socio-economic and demographic predictors of unmet need for contraception among young women in sub-Saharan Africa: evidence from cross-sectional surveys. Reproductive health. 2020;17(1):163.
Farooqui MN. Son preference, fertility desire and contraceptive use in two largest cities of Pakistan. Pakistan population review. 1990;1(1):54-64.
D'Souza P, Bailey JV, Stephenson J, Oliver S. Factors influencing contraception choice and use globally: a synthesis of systematic reviews. The European journal of contraception & reproductive health care : the official journal of the European Society of Contraception. 2022;27(5):364-72.

Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2024 Javeria Khan, Iqra Syeda, Alizay Khan, Ujala Rehman, Anusha Ilyas

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
The Journal of Women and Child Health (JoWaCH) adheres to the CC BY 4.0 license, which is a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. For comprehensive information, we kindly request that you refer to the full license legal code. JoWaCH employs a non-exclusive license agreement for the purpose of open-access publication. In the context of open access publishing, the authors maintain the copyright of their work while also granting the journal the rights to publish and distribute it, while retaining the primary academic use rights. This practice facilitates the optimal use and dissemination of the work, while also guaranteeing proper attribution to the original source. The handling of manuscript content shall be conducted with confidentiality, with the exception of cases involving review processes and investigations related to potential misconduct, plagiarism, and duplicate/redundant or overlapping publications, in accordance with the guidelines provided by the Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE) COPE Guidelines.
JoWaCH is prohibited from disseminating content derived from previously published scientific work without obtaining proper authorization. Obtaining permission from the copyright holder, who may be either the author(s) or the publisher, is necessary in cases where the copyright holder is the publisher, for any work you want to use.
While it is acceptable to use a small amount of a work, obtaining permission from the copyright owners is necessary for a significant extraction.
The use of unmodified or little modified tables, graphs, and artworks (whether they are the user's own work previously published elsewhere or created by another copyright holder) necessitates obtaining permission.
Tables, graphs, charts, and artworks that have been fully redesigned and rebuilt, and include proper reference of the source, do not need obtaining permission.
JoWaCH facilitates unrestricted access to journal material for readers, necessitating the imposition of membership fees. The journal operates on a self-sustaining financial model and does not rely on support from other sources. The procedure of publishing is contingent only upon the financial resources of the publisher. The readers have unrestricted access to the information on the journal website.