Spousal communication on family planning, pregnancy, and delivery among men in rural Northern Nigeria

Dublin Core

Title

Spousal communication on family planning, pregnancy, and delivery among men in rural Northern Nigeria

Author

Ibrahim, Muhammed Sani
Sabitu, Kabir
Bashir, Sulaiman Saidu
Olorukooba, Abdulhakeem Abayomi

Language

English

Publication Date

20180706

Abstract

Introduction: Communication between a husband and wife is necessary for joint decision-making on reproductive health issues. This study assessed the practice of spousal communication and reasons for not engaging in spousal communication among married men in two rural communities in Northern Nigeria. Materials and Methods: It was a cross-sectional study conducted among 411 married men selected through multistage sampling. Data were collected using a structured interviewer-administered questionnaire containing open- and close-ended questions and analyzed using SPSS Statistics version 17.0. Results: All of the men were Muslim and Hausa-Fulani, with mean age 37.3 ± 10.9 years. Overall, spousal communication was adequate in 204 (49.6%) of them. It was highest on whether or not wife should attend antenatal care (ANC) (68.3%), importance of ANC (66.3%), and services available at the health facility during ANC and delivery (55.6%). It was lowest on whether or not the couple should use family planning (22.4%), when to get pregnant (21.0%), husband's or wife's feeling about family planning (21.0%), and number of children to have (14.6%). The most common reason given for not engaging in spousal communication was that religion forbids the act and such discussion is not important. Conclusion and Recommendation: More effort should be put into improving spousal communication, especially in relation to family planning and birth preparedness. Such effort must address harmful cultural and religious beliefs, possibly by collaborating with religious leaders.

Primary Classification

9.5.8

Secondary Classification

9.5.8; 7.1; 1.2

Primary keywords

communication [pri]; males [pri]; Muslims [pri]; prenatal care [pri]

Secondary keywords

family planning; interviews; Islamic ethics; married persons; questionnaire; rural population

Subject

Nigeria

Journal Article

Sahel Medical Journal 2018; 21(2): 88-92

Note

Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

Primary Document Type

j

Subject Captions

e

ISSN

11188561 (print); 23216689 (online)

Collection

Citation

“Spousal communication on family planning, pregnancy, and delivery among men in rural Northern Nigeria,” Islamic Medical & Scientific Ethics, accessed January 16, 2025, https://imse.ibp.georgetown.domains/items/show/38202.