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Explore the link between child marriage and reproductive health outcomes in South Asia. Findings reveal significant negative effects, highlighting the need for targeted interventions. 8
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Understanding the role of child marriage on reproductive health outcomes: evidence from a multi-country study in South Asia Deepali Godha, David Hotchkiss, and Anastasia Gage Tulane University
Background • Child marriage remains a pervasive problem in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa • Increasingly recognized as a violation of human rights • Previous research has associated child marriage with a number of adverse health and social outcomes • But most studies to date have focused on India – very little research in other countries
Purpose of study • To assess the association of child marriage and reproductive health outcomes in four South Asian countries after controlling for individual-, and household- level factors • Prevalence of child marriage in South Asia is high • Among currently married women 20 to 24 years of age, percent married prior to age 15 ranged from 10 percent in Nepal to 38 percent in Bangladesh.
Data • Most recent Demographic and Health Surveys in four countries • India (2005/6) • Bangladesh (2007) • Nepal (2006) • Pakistan (2006/7) • Sample: Ever-married women 20-24 years of age • Sample size ranged from 1,546 in Pakistan to 22,807 in India
Methods (1) • Dependent variables • Fertility • Early fertility – childbirth within the first year of marriage • Multiple unwanted pregnancies • Having had at least one pregnancy termination • Having had at least one unwanted pregnancy • Fertility control • Lack of fertility control prior to the first birth • Low lifetime fertility control – history of rapid repeat childbirth • Maternal health care utilization
Methods (2) • Independent variables • Age at marriage dummy variables • Married at 14 years of age or younger • Married at 15 to 17 years of age • Other individual- and household-characteristics • Statistical methods • Logistic regression models to examine the association between various outcome variables and age of marriage • Unit of analysis is individual woman
Descriptive results Percent of women married as children ranges from 50% to 77%
Descriptive results Percent of women with various fertility and fertility control outcomes
Logistic regression results Odds ratios: comparison group is women married at 18 years and older Blue font indicates statistical significance (p<0.05)
Logistic regression results Odds ratios: comparison group is women married at 18 years and older Blue font indicates statistical significance (p<0.05)
Conclusions • In South Asia, child marriage is significantly associated with many negative fertility and fertility control outcomes (and maternal health care utilization) • Women married in early adolescence show a higher propensity towards most negative outcomes than women married in middle adolescence • Child marriage adds a layer of vulnerability to women that leads to poor fertility control and fertility related outcomes
Limitations • Outcomes are self-reported: may be prone to bias • Data are cross-sectional: difficult to attribute causality • High odds ratios and wide confidence intervals may be an indication of small cell sizes or small probabilities • Cannot distinguish between natural and induced pregnancy termination
MEASURE Evaluation PRH is a MEASURE project funded by the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) through Cooperative Agreement GHA-A-00-08-00003- 00 and is implemented by the Carolina Population Center at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in partnership with Futures Group International, Management Sciences for Health, and Tulane University. Views expressed in this presentation do not necessarily reflect the views of USAID or the U.S. Government. MEASURE Evaluation PRH supports improvements in monitoring and evaluation in population, health and nutrition worldwide.