International Journal of Health Sciences (IJHS), Apr 22, 2022
Indonesia is a developing country that has population problems. Problems associated with Indonesi... more Indonesia is a developing country that has population problems. Problems associated with Indonesia's population include a large population and a high level of population growth. The contraceptive prevalence rate in Indonesia has not experienced much improvement, which has led to an increase in the number of pregnancies. This article is structured to analyze the relationship between education level and contraceptive use among women of childbearing age (15-49 years) in Indonesia. Methods: The research design used was a cross-sectional study in which researchers looked at the relationship between education and contraceptive use. The research sample is fertile women aged 15-49 years from the total population of women of childbearing age in Indonesia. The selection of respondents using simple random sampling technique. Analysis: The data is processed using SPSS software. Result: This study shows users of contraceptive contraceptives (62.1%), mostly in urban areas (52.1%), but there is no relationship between contraceptive use in urban areas and women in rural areas, Wealth status with the highest poorest 27.8 %, the age category is a fraction of 0.5% , work status (60.1%) working, marital status (93.7%) married/living with a partner, health insurance (63.8%) using, parity (68.9 %) multipara. Women of childbearing age with primary education (OR 2,107; 95% CI 1.936-2,294) compared to those without education, Contraceptive use in secondary education (OR 2.172; 95% CI 1,992-2,369) compared with uneducated, Contraceptive use in higher education (OR 1.966; 95% CI 1.780-2,171) compared to the uneducated. Conclusion: The results of the study indicate that the level of education has an influence on the use of contraceptives in women. Education has been shown to be an important factor in women's contraceptive use in Indonesia.
Introduction: Residence (urban and rural) has a significant effect on the desire of using contrac... more Introduction: Residence (urban and rural) has a significant effect on the desire of using contraception. Several other studies have also shown that the area where women live has a significant relationship with a person who has a pregnancy status. This study aimed to explore the contraception used better in urban areas: Analysis of the 2017 IDHS (Indonesia Demographic and Health Survey). Methods: Secondary data analysis in this study was sourced from secondary data of the 2017 IDHS with a cross-sectional approach. The research instrument was a structured questionnaire that had been tested for validity and reliability. Analysis: Data analysis used Logistic Regression for windows. Result: The results of this study indicated that urban women were the largest users of contraception, at about (26197; 63.4%), mostly in the age group of 40-44 with (10073; 24.4%), generally they were workers, about (24344; 59.0%), commonly they graduated from secondary level of education, about (23201; 56.2%...
Introduction: The contraceptive prevalence rate in Indonesia has not experienced much improvement... more Introduction: The contraceptive prevalence rate in Indonesia has not experienced much improvement, which has led to an increase in the number of pregnancies. This study aimed to analyse the barriers to contraception use among women of childbearing age in rural Indonesia. Methods: This study used a cross-sectional design with data from the Indonesian Demographic and Health Survey (IDHS) of 2017. The independent variables were age, employment status, education, marital status, wealth status, health insurance and parity. The dependent variable was the use of contraception. The statistical significance was set at p <0.05 using bivariate analysis and binary logistic regression. Results: The study showed that the age group of 45–49 years (OR 0.199; 95% CI 0.149–0.266), secondary education (OR 2.227; 95% CI 2.060–2.514), women married/living with their partner (OR 43.752; 95% CI: 35.484–53.946), wealth status: middle (OR 1.492; 95% CI 1.400–1.589) and multipara (OR 2.524; 95% CI: 2.328–...
International Journal of Health Sciences (IJHS), Apr 22, 2022
Indonesia is a developing country that has population problems. Problems associated with Indonesi... more Indonesia is a developing country that has population problems. Problems associated with Indonesia's population include a large population and a high level of population growth. The contraceptive prevalence rate in Indonesia has not experienced much improvement, which has led to an increase in the number of pregnancies. This article is structured to analyze the relationship between education level and contraceptive use among women of childbearing age (15-49 years) in Indonesia. Methods: The research design used was a cross-sectional study in which researchers looked at the relationship between education and contraceptive use. The research sample is fertile women aged 15-49 years from the total population of women of childbearing age in Indonesia. The selection of respondents using simple random sampling technique. Analysis: The data is processed using SPSS software. Result: This study shows users of contraceptive contraceptives (62.1%), mostly in urban areas (52.1%), but there is no relationship between contraceptive use in urban areas and women in rural areas, Wealth status with the highest poorest 27.8 %, the age category is a fraction of 0.5% , work status (60.1%) working, marital status (93.7%) married/living with a partner, health insurance (63.8%) using, parity (68.9 %) multipara. Women of childbearing age with primary education (OR 2,107; 95% CI 1.936-2,294) compared to those without education, Contraceptive use in secondary education (OR 2.172; 95% CI 1,992-2,369) compared with uneducated, Contraceptive use in higher education (OR 1.966; 95% CI 1.780-2,171) compared to the uneducated. Conclusion: The results of the study indicate that the level of education has an influence on the use of contraceptives in women. Education has been shown to be an important factor in women's contraceptive use in Indonesia.
Introduction: Residence (urban and rural) has a significant effect on the desire of using contrac... more Introduction: Residence (urban and rural) has a significant effect on the desire of using contraception. Several other studies have also shown that the area where women live has a significant relationship with a person who has a pregnancy status. This study aimed to explore the contraception used better in urban areas: Analysis of the 2017 IDHS (Indonesia Demographic and Health Survey). Methods: Secondary data analysis in this study was sourced from secondary data of the 2017 IDHS with a cross-sectional approach. The research instrument was a structured questionnaire that had been tested for validity and reliability. Analysis: Data analysis used Logistic Regression for windows. Result: The results of this study indicated that urban women were the largest users of contraception, at about (26197; 63.4%), mostly in the age group of 40-44 with (10073; 24.4%), generally they were workers, about (24344; 59.0%), commonly they graduated from secondary level of education, about (23201; 56.2%...
Introduction: The contraceptive prevalence rate in Indonesia has not experienced much improvement... more Introduction: The contraceptive prevalence rate in Indonesia has not experienced much improvement, which has led to an increase in the number of pregnancies. This study aimed to analyse the barriers to contraception use among women of childbearing age in rural Indonesia. Methods: This study used a cross-sectional design with data from the Indonesian Demographic and Health Survey (IDHS) of 2017. The independent variables were age, employment status, education, marital status, wealth status, health insurance and parity. The dependent variable was the use of contraception. The statistical significance was set at p <0.05 using bivariate analysis and binary logistic regression. Results: The study showed that the age group of 45–49 years (OR 0.199; 95% CI 0.149–0.266), secondary education (OR 2.227; 95% CI 2.060–2.514), women married/living with their partner (OR 43.752; 95% CI: 35.484–53.946), wealth status: middle (OR 1.492; 95% CI 1.400–1.589) and multipara (OR 2.524; 95% CI: 2.328–...
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