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A Multilevel Analysis of Predictors of Modern Contraceptive Use among Reproductive Age Women in Sierra Leone: Insight from Demographic and Health Surveys

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  • Agbadi, Pascal
  • Tagoe, Eunice
  • Akosua, Agyemang Florence
  • Owusu, Seth

Abstract

Background: Variations in the effect of predictors of Sierra Leone women’s use of modern contraceptive from one community to another is unknown. The identified gap was addressed using multilevel logistic regression models. Methods: Pooled 2008 and 2013 Sierra Leone Demographic and Health Surveys datasets were used. Single level logistic regression analyses were conducted on 24,032 women, and multilevel logistic regression models were performed on 23,329 women. Statistical significance was pegged at p≤0.01 and p≤0.05. Results: About 22.1% of the reproductive age women ever used a modern contraceptive. The best-fitted model indicated that the effects of individual, household, and geo-residential level factors on the use of modern contraceptives among Sierra Leone Women vary from one community to another. The woman’s age, marital status, educational qualification, listening to the radio, recent sexual activity, household wealth, place of residence, and region of residence were the statistically significant predictors of modern contraceptive use among reproductive-age Sierra Leone women. Conclusion: The study provided in-depth insight into the significant factors that account for the variability in women use of contraceptives in Sierra Leone. The study underscored the need for community-based intervention programs to address the low use of modern contraceptives among Sierra Leone women.

Suggested Citation

  • Agbadi, Pascal & Tagoe, Eunice & Akosua, Agyemang Florence & Owusu, Seth, 2019. "A Multilevel Analysis of Predictors of Modern Contraceptive Use among Reproductive Age Women in Sierra Leone: Insight from Demographic and Health Surveys," SocArXiv vu5ag, Center for Open Science.
  • Handle: RePEc:osf:socarx:vu5ag
    DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/vu5ag
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    1. United Nations UN, 2015. "Transforming our World: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development," Working Papers id:7559, eSocialSciences.
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