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Spatial Distribution and Determinant Factors of Unmet Need for Family Planning among All Reproductive Age Women in Ethiopian Administrative Woredas from EDHS-2016 Data: A Multilevel Multinomial Regression Modelling Approach

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dc.contributor.author Degsew Sileshi
dc.date.accessioned 2023-07-10T08:23:45Z
dc.date.available 2023-07-10T08:23:45Z
dc.date.issued 2023-07
dc.identifier.uri http://ir.bdu.edu.et/handle/123456789/15483
dc.description.abstract Background: Unmet need for family planning is the number of reproductive-age women, who want to space or limit births but are not currently using any family planning methods. Exploring the Spatial distribution and identifying factors of these outcomes is important to design programs to reduce unmet for family planning need. Thus, this study aimed to identify factors that affect unmet need for family planning in Ethiopian administrative woredas using the multilevel multinomial logistic regression model from 2016 EDHS data . Method: In this study, a total of 8716 women who were fecund, married, and/or sexually active were included in the analysis from 2016 EDHS data. The study was evaluated by spatial and multilevel multinomial logistic regression models. In the bi-variable multilevel multinomial analysis, those variables with p-value < 0.2 were considered for multivariable multilevel multinomial analysis. Finally, predictors with p-value<0.05 were significantly associated for unmet need of FP. Results: The overall prevalence of unmet need for family planning in this study was 21.04%, of which unmet need for spacing and limiting was 12.84% and 8.20% in Ethiopia respectively. This study also revealed that the spatial distribution of unmet needs for family planning was random with spacing and dispersed with limiting in Ethiopian administrative woreda with Moran’s index statistics ( 0.107017 and 0.486040 with p values 0.428860 and 0.017026) respectively. In multile vel multinomial logistic regression analysis, knowledge of FP (AOR: 1.758, 2.446), women having more than four living children (AOR: 1.397, 10.041), and place of residence by father occupation (AOR: 1.982, 2.415) times more likely to have unmet need for spacing and limiting of family planning relative to respectively. Conclusions: This study revealed that the prevalence of unmet needs among reproductive-age women varies across woredas in Ethiopia. Random intercept with cross-interaction effects multilevel multinomial model was preferred, with low AIC value. Addressing unmet needs for family planning targeted rural residents with low and middle-wealth status, more knowledge of family planning and women aged above 20 should be given top priority. Keywords: unmet need for spacing, unmet need for limiting, spatial analysis, multilevel multinomial regression, Ethiopia en_US
dc.language.iso en_US en_US
dc.subject Statistics en_US
dc.title Spatial Distribution and Determinant Factors of Unmet Need for Family Planning among All Reproductive Age Women in Ethiopian Administrative Woredas from EDHS-2016 Data: A Multilevel Multinomial Regression Modelling Approach en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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