Male-female concordance in reported involvement of women in contraceptive decision-making and its association with modern contraceptive use among couples in rural Maharashtra, India

Reprod Health. 2021 Jun 30;18(1):139. doi: 10.1186/s12978-021-01187-8.

Abstract

Objective: Women's involvement in contraceptive decision-making increases contraceptive use and reduces unmet need, but study of this has been limited to women's self-reports. Less research is available examining couple concordance and women's involvement in contraceptive decision-making as reported by both men and women.

Study design: We carried out a cross-sectional study using data from rural India (N = 961 young married couples). Using multivariable regression we examined the association between concordance or discordance in spousal reports of wife's involvement in contraceptive decision-making and modern contraceptive use, adjusting for demographics, intimate partner violence, and contraceptive use discussion.

Results: More than one third (38.3%) of women reported current modern contraceptive use. Report of women's involvement in contraceptive decision-making showed 70.3% of couples agreed that women were involved, jointly or alone (categorized as Concordant 1), 4.2% agreed women were not involved (categorized at Concordant 2), 13.2% had women report involvement but men report women were uninvolved (categorized as Discordant 1), and 12.2% had women report uninvolvement but men report that women were involved (categorized as Discordant 2). Discordant 2 couples had lower odds of modern contraceptive use relative to Concordant 1 couples (adjusted RR = 0.61, 95% CI 0.45-0.83). No other significant differences between Concordant 1 couples and other categories were observed.

Conclusion: One in four couples indicated discordance on women's involvement in contraceptive decision making, with Discordant 2 category having lower odds of contraceptive use. Couples' concordance in women's involvement in contraceptive decision-making offers a target for family planning research and interventions to better meet their needs. Trial registration ClinicalTrial.gov, NCT03514914. https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03514914.

Keywords: Contraceptive decision-making; Contraceptive use; Couple concordance; Dyadic data; India.

Plain language summary

Evidence on women’s involvement in decision-making are limited to women’s self reports and often not specific to contraceptive decision-making. This study uses couples dyadic data to assess male–female concordance on women’s involvement in contraceptive decision-making and contraceptive use outcomes. Couple’s concordance on women’s involvement in contraceptive decision-making is associated with contraceptive use. There is potential in couple-focused family planning counseling that enhances women’s contraceptive decision-making agency to improve women’s contraceptive use.

MeSH terms

  • Contraception Behavior / ethnology
  • Contraceptive Agents*
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Decision Making*
  • Family Planning Services / statistics & numerical data*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • India
  • Male
  • Pregnancy
  • Rural Population

Substances

  • Contraceptive Agents

Associated data

  • ClinicalTrials.gov/NCT03514914