Type | Journal Article - Population and Development Review |
Title | Contemporary Use of Traditional Contraception in sub-Saharan Africa |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 43 |
Issue | S1 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2017 |
Page numbers | 192-215 |
URL | https://archive-ouverte.unige.ch/unige:91907/ATTACHMENT01 |
Abstract | The historic fertility declines in Western countries that occurred prior to diffusion of modern contraceptives were achieved primarily through induced abortion, abstinence, and use of traditional methods of contraception, in particular withdrawal. While these alternative means of fertility regulation have also contributed to contemporary fertility declines in developing countries, modern contraception seems to have taken the center stage in the scientific literature and policy debates. Indeed, fertility declines in developing countries have been highly correlated with the diffusion of modern contraception. Sub-Saharan Africa is no exception to this general pattern, although, as is typical in the beginning of fertility transitions, the relationship between fertility decline and contraceptive use is still relatively loose in the region (Westoff and Bankole 2001). It thus seems especially important to consider the role of alternative means of birth control, including traditional contraceptive methods and periods of sexual abstinence or inactivity, in the case of contemporary sub-Saharan Africa. |
» | Ghana - Demographic and Health Survey 2014 |