Background
According to the 2013 Nigeria Demographic Health Survey, one in ten pregnancies in Nigeria were either mistimed or not wanted [
33]. Yet, about 16% of married women who want to stop or postpone childbearing in Nigeria are currently not using any form of contraception [
33]. This unmet need for contraception is even higher amongst unmarried, sexually active women (22%). In 2012, a study using data obtained from a nationally representative sample of 772 health facilities and interviews with 194 health care professionals demonstrated an even higher proportion of unintended pregnancies. The study estimated that there were 9.2 million births in Nigeria in 2012 with almost a quarter (24%) mistimed or unwanted. More than half (56%) of these unintended pregnancies were resolved by illegal induced abortion [
13].
Globally, Nigeria accounts for 19% of all maternal deaths [
56]. The maternal mortality ratio (MMR) in Nigeria in 2015 was estimated to be about 814 per thousand live births, the fourth highest in the world after Sierra Leone, Central African Republic and Chad. This 2015 MMR represents a decline of only about 2% per annum since 1990 and translates into 160 women dying every day from complications related to pregnancy or childbirth [
56].
Most causes of maternal deaths can be prevented by improved management of pregnancy-related complications and the use of family planning [
9,
23]. If all women who wanted to delay or stop childbirth used effective contraception to prevent unintended pregnancy, maternal death would decline by 67% and newborn death would decline by 77%. Family planning is a high impact, cost-effective health intervention that could save numerous lives, especially in developing countries [
50].
Behavioral change theories and models including the Theory of Planned Behavior [
7,
8], the theory of reasoned action [
17,
18], the protection motivation theory [
40] and the model of interpersonal behavior [
54] all suggest that intentions are the most proximal and most important determinants of human behaviors. Intentions offer a more reliable predictor of human behavior compared to other cognitions including self-efficacy, attitudes, beliefs and norms and perception of risk severity [
31,
44,
45]. Substantial evidence supports the association between fertility intentions and subsequent fertility ([
12,
14,
29,
39,
42]; Ilene S. [
52]). However, there is still a considerable gap between fertility intentions and actual behaviors to prevent a birth [
3,
34]. This discrepancy is typically referred to as the “intention-behavior gap” where individual intentions do not necessarily translate to behavior.
The basis for forming an intention has been shown to predict how well the intention predicts behavior. Sheeran and colleagues suggest that attitudinally controlled intentions which are based on personal beliefs about the consequences of actions or self-chosen intentions predict actualization of the behaviors better than normatively controlled intentions which are based on social pressures to act [
46]. However, Godin et al. argue that if a behavior has moral relevance, intentions that are based on moral norms are much stronger predictors of behavior than attitudinally controlled intentions [
24]. When individuals experience a moral obligation to perform a particular behavior they are more tightly bound to their intentions, making it more likely for them to carry them out [
1,
24,
25]. Individuals who anticipate significant regret if they do not carry out a behavior have a higher likelihood of carrying out the behavior than individuals with similar intentions who do not hold such regret [
3].
Past behavior in itself has a bearing on the likelihood that a behavior would be performed [
35]. However, other research has shown that past behavior moderates the relationship between intentions and behaviors. Kashima and colleagues showed that intentions that are based on greater experience predict behaviors better than those with lesser experience [
30]. Also, Sheeran, Orbell and Tramifow have shown that intentions are more stable when they are formed from behaviors for which individuals have greater experience and therefore produce a stronger intention-behavior correlation [
47].
Some studies have emphasized the importance of implementation intentions for behaviors. According to the studies in this school of thought, promoting implementation intentions that emphasize specific actions required for goal implementation can more easily bridge the intention-behavior gap. Thus, planning upfront what, when, and how to take actions favors the attainment of the goal [
26‐
28,
48,
55]. Other studies have argued that level of goal commitment and strength of intentions are critical elements in translating intentions to behaviors [
19,
38,
43].
Literature abounds with evidence about the factors associated with the achievement of reproductive intentions. These studies have identified marital duration, age at first marriage, family size and education to be strong determinants of achievement of fertility intentions [
4,
5,
16,
21]. Other documented predictors of reproductive intentions achievement include spousal communication, the level of agreement between the husband and the wife regarding family size, husband’s reproductive intentions, and recent loss of a child [
21,
22]. Furthermore, some studies have found that the woman’s age, autonomy and religion are significant predictors [
4‐
6]. Others have stressed the negative role of intimate partner violence [
20,
37,
49].
Understanding the potentially modifiable factors associated with acting on fertility intentions in the Nigerian context is key to creating interventions than can facilitate the uptake of healthy behaviors and lead to reduced unintended pregnancies. Using a prospective longitudinal sample of Nigerian women matched at baseline and endline, this study examines the factors that are associated with the achievement of intentions amongst women who reported that they wanted to stop childbearing in six urban sites of Nigeria.
The context for this research was an impact evaluation of a comprehensive family planning program, the Nigerian Urban Reproductive Health Initiative (NURHI), that aimed to substantially increase the contraceptive prevalence rate. The project did this by addressing supply and demand barriers to contraceptive use in six urban centers of Nigeria: Abuja, Benin, Kaduna, Ibadan, Ilorin, and Zaria. NURHI was implemented between 2009 and 2015 by the Johns Hopkins Center for Communication Programs and its Nigerian partners with funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.
Results
The socio-demographic, ideational and behavioral characteristics of the women who wanted no more children are presented in Table
1. About two-thirds (65.1%) of the women that did not want any more children at baseline achieved their fertility intentions. At endline in 2014, these women had not had an additional birth and were not currently pregnant. The average age at baseline was 38.8 years while the mean parity was 5.3 children. The majority of the respondents had some form of formal education and the modal education level was secondary. Spousal communication about family size was reported by 61.9% of the respondents at baseline. Only about a third (33.2%) of the respondents were using a modern method of contraception at baseline, mainly injectables (38.1%), intrauterine device (20.2%), condom (16.3%), and daily pill (14.3%). The respondents were approximately equally divided between Muslims and Christians. Similarly, the respondents were equally divided among those who perceived that another pregnancy would be a big problem and those that did not. Proportionally more of the women who did not want any more children at baseline were from Ibadan and Ilorin than any other city. The data further show that the respondents were more likely to be in the higher wealth groups than expected, indicating that poor women were more likely than richer ones to desire additional children. In additional, about three fifths of the study participants reported desiring as many children as their spouse. Finally, about three-quarters of the women reported no spouse-imposed restrictions.
Table 1
Socio-demographic, ideational and behavioral characteristics of study participants (women who desired no additional children at baseline)
Achievement of fertility desires of no additional child |
Achieved – no additional child or pregnancy | 1254 | 65.3 | 65.1 |
Did not achieve – had an additional child or pregnancy | 667 | 34.7 | 34.9 |
Discussion of family size with spouse/partner at baseline |
Discussed | 1167 | 60.8 | 61.9 |
Did not discuss | 754 | 39.2 | 38.1 |
Using modern method at baseline |
Yes | 645 | 33.6 | 33.2 |
No | 1276 | 66.4 | 66.8 |
City of residence at baseline |
Abuja | 252 | 13.1 | 13.6 |
Benin City | 241 | 12.6 | 11.9 |
Ibadan | 423 | 22.0 | 21.7 |
Ilorin | 446 | 23.2 | 22.7 |
Kaduna | 269 | 14.0 | 14.8 |
Zaria | 290 | 15.1 | 15.3 |
Education Level at baseline |
No formal education | 365 | 19.0 | 17.9 |
Primary | 447 | 23.3 | 23.5 |
Secondary | 660 | 34.3 | 36.0 |
Higher | 449 | 23.4 | 22.6 |
Religion at baseline |
Christian | 949 | 49.4 | 51.3 |
Muslim | 972 | 50.6 | 48.7 |
Wealth Quintile at baseline |
Lowest | 277 | 14.4 | 14.5 |
Second | 344 | 17.9 | 17.8 |
Middle | 397 | 20.7 | 21.3 |
Fourth | 407 | 21.2 | 21.9 |
Highest | 496 | 25.8 | 24.5 |
Perception that a pregnancy would be a big problem at baseline |
Perceived | 955 | 49.7 | 51.2 |
Did not perceive | 966 | 50.3 | 48.8 |
Spousal agreement about number of children to have as reported by the woman at baseline |
Husband wants same number as wife | 1166 | 61.2 | 60.9 |
Husband wants more children than wife | 301 | 15.8 | 15.7 |
Husband wants fewer children than wife | 114 | 6.0 | 6.6 |
Does not know how many children husband wants | 325 | 17.0 | 16.8 |
Husband’s restrictions on wife’s movement and relationships as reported by woman at baseline |
At least one restriction | 524 | 27.3 | 26.4 |
No restriction | 1397 | 72.7 | 73.6 |
Mean (SD) number of children ever born at baseline | 1921 | 5.4 (2.4) | 5.3 (2.3) |
Mean (SD) age in years at baseline | 1921 | 39.3 (5.8) | 38.8 (5.9) |
The unadjusted logistic regression results (Table
2) show that the socio-demographic variables most strongly associated with achievement of fertility intentions were parity, age, religion, city of residence, education, and wealth quintile. The significant behavioral and ideational correlates revealed by the unadjusted results were spousal communication about family size, the perception that another pregnancy would be a big problem, and baseline use of a modern method at baseline.
Table 2
Results of the logistic regression of achievement of fertility intention of no additional child on ideational and socio-demographic variables
Ever discussed family size with spouse (RC = Never discussed) | 1.488*** (1.229, 1.800) | 1.487** (1.137, 1.944) | 0.097 |
Using any modern method at baseline (RC = Not using) | 1.654*** (1.354, 2.021) | 1.467*** (1.167, 1.843) | 0.091 |
Number of children-ever-born at baseline | 1.143*** (1.091, 1.197) | 1.294*** (1.208, 1.389) | 0.307 |
Age at baseline | 1.088*** (1.069, 1.106) | 1.066*** (1.047, 1.086) | 0.187 |
Believed at baseline that having another child would be a big problem (RC = Did not so believe) | 1.440*** (1.185, 1.750) | 1.319** (1.070, 1.627) | 0.069 |
Muslim (RC = Christian) | 0.693*** (0.574, 0.836) | 0.715** (0.562, 0.909) | −0.084 |
Spousal agreement about number of children to have as reported by the woman at baseline |
Husband desires same number as wife (RC) | 1.00 | 1.00 | – |
Husband desire more children than wife | 0.678**(0.522, 0.880) | 0.806 (0.579, 1.120) | −0.039 |
Husband desired fewer children than wife | 0.876 (0.577, 1.330) | 0.800 (0.513, 1.247) | −0.026 |
Does not know how many children husband desires | 0.625*** (0.482, 0.810) | 0.806 (0.578, 1.124) | −0.041 |
Husband placed any restrictions on wife’s movement and relationships; reported by woman at baseline (RC = No restrictions) | 0.797* (0.639, 0.995) | 0.966 (0.750, 1.243) | −0.008 |
City of Residence |
Abuja (RC) | 1.00 | 1.00 | – |
Benin City | 0.665* (0.431, 1.025) | 0.618* (0.393, 0.973) | −0.079 |
Ibadan | 0.760 (0.517, 1.115) | 0.879 (0.589, 1.312) | −0.027 |
Ilorin | 0.655* (0.448, 0.957) | 0.848 (0.568, 1.267) | −0.035 |
Kaduna | 0.729 (0.486, 1.093) | 0.738 (0.484, 1.124) | −0.053 |
Zaria | 0.606** (0.412, 0.891) | 0.515** (0.308, 0.859) | −0.119 |
Education Level at Baseline |
No formal education (RC) | 1.00 | 1.00 | – |
Primary | 0.886 (0.653, 1.203) | 0.925 (0.648, 1.322) | −0.016 |
Secondary | 1.046 (0.778, 1.407) | 1.173 (0.800, 1.721) | 0.038 |
Higher | 1.681*** (1.235, 2.289) | 1.610* (1.042, 2.489) | 0.101 |
Baseline Wealth Quintile |
Lowest (RC) | 1.00 | 1.00 | – |
Second | 1.010 (0.730, 1.397) | 0.932 (0.665, 1.305) | −0.014 |
Middle | 1.136 (0.831, 1.552) | 1.061 (0.757, 1.487) | 0.012 |
Fourth | 1.322‡ (0.962, 1.817) | 1.106 (0.785, 1.558) | 0.021 |
Highest | 1.778*** (1.293, 2.444) | 1.417‡ (0.971, 2.066) | 0.077 |
Pseudo-R2
| – | 10.1% | – |
Goodness of fit X
2/p | – | 1904.2/0.253 | – |
The results of the multivariable logistic regression (Table
2) confirmed the bivariate findings although the effects of some variables are attenuated. The odds of achieving fertility intentions were about 50% higher for women who had ever discussed family size with their spouses compared to their peers that had not. Similarly, use of modern contraceptive methods at baseline increased the odds of achieving fertility intentions by 46.7%. The differences by city of residence were such that the respondents from Benin City and Zaria were less likely than their peers from Abuja to achieve their reproductive intentions. Muslims were 29% less likely than Christians to attain their fertility desires. Women who perceived another pregnancy to be a big problem were about 32% more likely than those who did not perceive this occurrence to be a big problem to achieve their fertility intentions. The relationship with parity was positive such that a unit increase in the number of children ever born was associated with 29% increase in the odds of achieving fertility intentions. Similarly, the relationship with age was positive with a unit increase in age associated with an increase of 6.6% in the odds of achieving fertility intentions. The difference by level of education was only significant when we compare no formal education with tertiary education: the odds of achieving fertility intentions were 61% higher for women with tertiary education than for women with no formal education. Similarly, the difference by wealth quintile was only significant (and only marginally) if we compare the lowest and the highest quintile: the women in the highest quintile were about 42% more likely to achieve their fertility intentions compared to the women in the lowest quintile. Finally, spousal agreement about the number of children and spousal restrictions made no significant difference.
A look at the fully standardized beta weights reveals that the most important correlates of achieving fertility intentions are parity, woman’s age, spousal communication about family size, city of residence, and higher education.
Discussion
This manuscript examined the factors associated with the achievement of fertility intentions to stop childbearing. The analyses were based on longitudinal data, which helps to correct for major threats to internal validity and strengthens causal claims. It is interesting to note that the women who desired no more children were, on average, near the end of their childbearing age and were of higher parity. In other words, the data showed that urban women in Nigeria do not desire to stop childbearing until they have reached an advanced age and have a relatively large number of children. These findings are reflective of a high fertility setting where pronatalist attitudes are prevalent and are reminiscent of what other studies in Nigeria have suggested [
6,
36]. These two variables – age and parity – were also the most important correlates of achievement of fertility intentions among these women who desired no more children. In other words, the greatest motivations for not having another child or pregnancy were the age of the woman and the number of children that she currently had. This finding is consistent with results from other studies [
4,
5,
16]. Furthermore, the finding underscores the importance of promoting smaller family sizes and changing pronatalist attitudes.
Another strong and positive predictor of achievement of fertility desires was discussion of family size with spouse. Specifically, the women who discussed the number of children with their spouse or partner were more likely than the other women to achieve their fertility intention. The implication of this finding is that promoting spousal communication about reproductive issues and engaging men should be part of a comprehensive strategy to prevent unplanned pregnancies. For example, communication materials that show a man and his wife discussing family planning and deciding to adopt a method are relevant.
Consistent with the literature on the role of attitudinally-based intentions on behaviors [
1,
2,
15,
24,
46,
47], the perception that another pregnancy would be a big problem significantly and positively predicted the achievement of fertility intentions. It makes intuitive sense that women who perceived severe consequences of another pregnancy would be more determined than others to avoid a pregnancy. Related to this finding is the result that women who were using a modern method at baseline were more likely than others to achieve their reproductive intentions. Using an effective method of contraception reflects an appreciable level of determination to avoid a pregnancy [
52]. This finding echoes results of studies that have linked goal commitment and the strength of intentions with goal achievement [
19,
38,
43]. The programmatic implications of the documented roles of perceived severity of the consequences of another pregnancy and prior contraceptive use include the need to increase women’s understanding of effective ways to prevent unwanted pregnancies and strengthen self-efficacy for contraceptive use. Literature abounds with evidence on strategies for strengthening self-efficacy for action [
11]. Relevant strategies include identifying and removing logistic and structural barriers to contraceptive access; promoting discussion about contraceptive use; coaching men and women to communicate with their spouses about contraception using a satisfied contraceptive user similar to the intended audience to model relevant behaviors; addressing fears about contraceptives; and correcting misconceptions [
10].
These findings come in the context of an evaluation of a program that was designed specifically to positively change modifiable factors that are predictive of contraceptive use. Most relevant to this discussion was a focus on increasing spousal communication on family size and contraception. The program also focused on changing ideational factors such as contraceptive knowledge and self-efficacy to use contraceptives despite social disapproval, as well as improving service availability and quality. Program impact was significant, with measurable change in contraceptive prevalence rate, intention to use contraceptives, and ideational factors predictive of contraceptive use associated with program exposure [
32].
This study has a few limitations that warrant mention. Whereas the use of longitudinal data helps to strengthen causal claims, the data analyzed in this manuscript are derived from self-reported information and are likely affected by social desirability bias and memory lapse. During data collection, fieldworkers took appropriate steps to minimize social desirability bias, including private one-on-one interviews without the presence of a third party, assurance of confidentiality, voluntary participation, and informed consent. Second, this study only includes those women who at baseline reported that they do not want any more children. Prior research has demonstrated that fertility desires are fluid and not static [
51]. Therefore some women in the sample may have changed their fertility desires over the follow-up period and decided that they wanted more children. In addition, other women not included in the sample may have, after the baseline, decided that they did not want any more children but are not included here. In this analysis, we do not account for these changing fertility desires. Furthermore, the modifiable predictor variables included in the analysis are also subject to change over time. Since these variables were measured at baseline, it is possible that some of them may have changed before the final assessment. The analysis did not account for these changes and their potential effects on fertility desires.
Despite these limitations, this study that uses longitudinal data provides insights into approaches that can be used in urban Nigeria to support women to attain their desire to stop childbearing and reduce unintended pregnancies. Programs that promote couple communication, male involvement, and support attainment of fertility desires through the mass media or community-based outreach activities will help women (and couples) to achieve their fertility desires and help Nigeria to reduce the currently high maternal mortality ratio.