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Family-Planning Services in a Low-performing Rural Area of Bangladesh: Insights from field observations
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Published
2001-09
Author(s)
Hanifi, S.M. Manzoor Ahmed
Bhuiya, Abbas Uddin
Metadata
This paper mainly reports the results of an observational study carried out during 1994-1995 in five rural unions of Bangladesh to identify the barriers to adoption of family-planning methods. At the time of the survey, one-fifth of 1,889 mothers with a living child, aged less than five years, were practising modern family-planning methods. Of the methods used, oral pill was the most common (50%), followed by injectables (20%), female sterilization (13%), IUD (11%), and condom (4%). Various factors that were responsible for the low performance of the family-planning programme included:inadequacy of motivational work by the field workers,poor counselling on the management of contraceptive-related side-effects, inadequate response to the needs of clients,irregular field visits, and poor supervision and monitoring. The efficiency of the programme needs to be improved to meet the demand for family-planning methods in Chakaria, Bangladesh
Citation
J Health Popul Nutr 2001 Sep;19(3):209-214