tailieunhanh - Inconsistent fertility motivations and contraceptive use behaviors among women in Honduras

Actively involving marginalised groups in decision making processes at all levels, and providing them with the opportunity to hold service providers and policy makers accountable for discriminatory practices, corruption or poor quality services, helps to redress inequalities in access to SRH services and ensure that they are acceptable and appropriate. In practice, representation in the planning processes for SRH services has been limited. A review of community participation and (public) SRH service accountability across developing countries found that participation was restricted to service delivery, and was not extended to the design of. | Reproductive Health BioMed Central Research Inconsistent fertility motivations and contraceptive use behaviors among women in Honduras Ilene S Speizer 11 2 Laili Irani11 Janine Barden-O Fallon12 and Jessica Levy1 2 Open Access Address Department of Maternal and Child Health Gillings School of Global Public Health University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill CB 7599 Chapel Hill NC 27599-7599 USA and 2MEASURE Evaluation Project Carolina Population Center University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill 206 W Franklin Street Chapel Hill NC 27516 USA Email Ilene S Speizer - speizer@ Laili Irani - lirani@ Janine Barden-O Fallon - bardenof@ Jessica Levy - jklevy@ Corresponding author fEqual contributors Published 19 November 2009 Reproductive Health 2009 6 19 doi 1742-4755-6-19 Received 7 July 2009 Accepted 19 November 2009 This article is available from http content 6 1 19 2009 Speizer et al licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License http licenses by which permits unrestricted use distribution and reproduction in any medium provided the original work is properly cited. Abstract__ Background Recent studies have demonstrated that it is common for women to report inconsistent fertility motivations and family planning behaviors. This study examines these inconsistencies among urban Honduran women interviewed at two points in time and presents reasons for inconsistent fertility motivations and contraceptive behaviors at follow-up. Methods Data come from a one-year panel study conducted in Honduras from October 2006 to December 2007. A total of 633 women aged 15-44 years were interviewed at baseline and followup and have non-missing information on the key variables of interest. At baseline and