Decision-making patterns and contraceptive use: evidence from Uganda
Decision-making patterns and contraceptive use: evidence from Uganda
Literature on the effect of decision-making patterns on contraceptive use often does not (1) distinguish between women participating in decisions and controlling them, and (2) account for effects of common decision-making patterns within the community. In Uganda where high fertility persists, both of these factors may be relevant to adoption of contraception. Thia paper used data from the 1995/96 Negotiating Reproductive Outcomes (NRO) Study which surveyed 1,750 women in 78 communities located in two districts in Uganda. It assesses the effects of individual and community factors on the adoption of modern contraceptive methods using multilevel logistic regression.
Originally published in: Population Research and Policy Review .

