The Crucial Role of Family Planning in Advancing Ghana's National
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English Family Planning 2022 GDHS
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COMMENTS
Knowledge, Acceptance, and Uptake of Family Planning: A ...
The use of family planning (FP) methods significantly contributes to improved outcomes for mothers and their offspring. However, the use of FP remains low, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. A cluster randomized controlled clinical trial was implemented in Ghana, comparing group anten ….
Family planning among undergraduate university students: a ...
This study examined family planning among undergraduate university students focusing on their knowledge, use and attitudes towards contraception in the University of Education Winneba. The study was a descriptive cross-sectional survey using a structured self-administered questionnaire.
Factors influencing unmet need for family planning among ...
Unmet need for family planning is high (30%) in Ghana. Reducing unmet need for family planning will reduce the high levels of unintended pregnancies, unsafe abortions, maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality.
Integrating Family Planning into Primary Health Care in Ghana
We have combined a desk review of key documents with insights gained from interviews with health sector experts in Ghana to describe how family planning services are currently delivered in Ghana, the degree to which they are integrated with the PHC system, the actors involved, and their dynamics.
Being ready, willing and able: understanding the dynamics of ...
Community-based family planning interventions in Ghana. In 1999, a national health policy initiative was instituted with a mandate to provide primary healthcare, maternal and child health, and family planning services, at the community level, nationwide.
Unmet Need for Family Planning in Ghana: The Shifting ... - JSTOR
In Ghana, despite a 38 percent decline in the total fertility rate from 1988 to 2008, unmet need for family planning among married women exposed to preg nancy risk declined only modestly in this period: from 50 percent to 42 percent. Examining data from the five DHS surveys conducted in Ghana during these
Assessment of men involvement in family planning services use ...
In Ghana, The male partner may have an influence in decision-making regarding contraceptive use and the number of offspring they would like to have. Family planning research in ruralUpperWestRegion has been dominated by findings almost exclusively from women studies.
Prevalence and determinants of unmet need for family planning ...
Background: Documentary evidence points to high unmet need for family planning across sub-Saharan Africa. Modern contraceptive use has been staggering over decades with unacceptable marginal increases given that one in three women still report unmet need in Ghana.
Side effect concerns and their impact on women’s uptake of ...
The goal of this study was to examine the use of modern family planning, in particular hormonal methods, in one district in rural Ghana, and to understand the role that side effects play in women’s decisions to start or continue use.
FAMILY PLANNING HEALTH PROFILE GHANA 2019 - WHO
unmet need: % of fecund women of reproductive age who want no more children or to postpone having the next child, but are not using a contraceptive method, plus women who are currently using a traditional method of family planning.
IMAGES
VIDEO
COMMENTS
The use of family planning (FP) methods significantly contributes to improved outcomes for mothers and their offspring. However, the use of FP remains low, particularly in low- and middle-income countries. A cluster randomized controlled clinical trial was implemented in Ghana, comparing group anten ….
This study examined family planning among undergraduate university students focusing on their knowledge, use and attitudes towards contraception in the University of Education Winneba. The study was a descriptive cross-sectional survey using a structured self-administered questionnaire.
Unmet need for family planning is high (30%) in Ghana. Reducing unmet need for family planning will reduce the high levels of unintended pregnancies, unsafe abortions, maternal and neonatal morbidity and mortality.
We have combined a desk review of key documents with insights gained from interviews with health sector experts in Ghana to describe how family planning services are currently delivered in Ghana, the degree to which they are integrated with the PHC system, the actors involved, and their dynamics.
Community-based family planning interventions in Ghana. In 1999, a national health policy initiative was instituted with a mandate to provide primary healthcare, maternal and child health, and family planning services, at the community level, nationwide.
In Ghana, despite a 38 percent decline in the total fertility rate from 1988 to 2008, unmet need for family planning among married women exposed to preg nancy risk declined only modestly in this period: from 50 percent to 42 percent. Examining data from the five DHS surveys conducted in Ghana during these
In Ghana, The male partner may have an influence in decision-making regarding contraceptive use and the number of offspring they would like to have. Family planning research in rural Upper West Region has been dominated by findings almost exclusively from women studies.
Background: Documentary evidence points to high unmet need for family planning across sub-Saharan Africa. Modern contraceptive use has been staggering over decades with unacceptable marginal increases given that one in three women still report unmet need in Ghana.
The goal of this study was to examine the use of modern family planning, in particular hormonal methods, in one district in rural Ghana, and to understand the role that side effects play in women’s decisions to start or continue use.
unmet need: % of fecund women of reproductive age who want no more children or to postpone having the next child, but are not using a contraceptive method, plus women who are currently using a traditional method of family planning.