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THE
ATTITUDE OF MEN TOWARDS FAMILY PLANNING
Abstract
This project examines the linkages
between socioeconomic characteristics, attitudes, and familial contraceptive
use. Past family planning programs in Nigeria have been mainly directed toward
women. However, because northern Nigeria (and to a slightly lesser extent all
of Nigeria) remains a patrilineal society characterised by early age at
marriage for women, men at present continue to determine familial fertility and
contraceptive decisions. Consequently, at least for the time period relevant
for current policy planning purposes, the willingness of husbands to adopt or
allow their spouses to use family planning practices will determine the pace of
fertility reduction in Nigeria. The results suggest that there is high
knowledge of contraceptives, a generally negative attitude towards limiting
family size for economic reasons, and consequently low rates of contraceptive
use. Respondents who were willing to use contraceptives were more willing to
use them for child spacing purposes than explicitly for limiting family size.
Path-analytic decompositions of the effects of predictor variables show that
education has the largest direct and total effects on contraceptive use while
specific knowledge of contraceptives has the smallest direct and total effect
(as well as a paradoxical negative direct effect when education is included in
the model). Most importantly, attitudes have the largest direct effect on
contraceptive use with a standardized coefficient value of 781. Thus, since
knowledge of contraceptive is already high among even those respondents who do
not use contraceptives, the attitudes of males are especially important for
decisions about contraceptive use. As a result, family planning programs that
continue to focus solely on women will continue to achieve only limited
successes in northern Nigeria (and likely in the many patrilineal societies
where similar programs are pursued).
TABLE OF CONTENT:
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 Background of the Study
1.2 Statement of the Research
Problem
1.3 Objectives of the Study
1.4 Significance of the Study
1.5 Research Questions
1.6 Research Hypothesis
1.7 Conceptual and Operational
Definition
1.8 Assumptions
1.9 Limitations of the Study
CHAPTER TWO
LITERATURE REVIEW
2.1 Sources of Literature
2.2 The Review
2.3 Summary of Literature Review
CHAPTER THREE
RESEARCH METHODOLOGY
3.1 Research Method
3.2 Research Design
3.3 Research Sample
3.4 Measuring Instrument
3.5 Data Collection
3.6 Data Analysis
3.7 Expected Result
CHAPTER FOUR
DATA ANALYSIS AND RESULTS
4.1 Data Analysis
4.2 Results
4.3 Discussion
CHAPTER FIVE
SUMMARY AND RECOMMENDATIONS
5.1 Summary
5.2 Recommendations for Further
Study
References
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