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Review Article
Abortion and
Contraceptive Use in Sub-Saharan Africa: How Women Plan
Their Families
Don Lauro
Davis, California
For correspondence:
Email:
don_lauro@csx.com
African Journal of Reproductive Health,
March 2011; 15[1]:
13-23
Abstract
Based on available
evidence, this review article posits that
contemporary use of abortion in sub-Saharan Africa
often substitutes for and sometimes surpasses modern
contraceptive practice. Some studies and some data
sets indicate that this occurs not only among
adolescents but also within older age groups. In
several sub-Saharan cities, particularly where
contraceptive use is low and access to clinical
abortion is high (though largely illegal), abortion
appears to be the method of choice for limiting or
spacing births. Even in rural areas, women may
regularly resort to abortion, often using extremely
unsafe procedures, instead of contraception.
Available data seem to indicate that relatively high
levels of abortion correlate with low access to
modern contraception, low status of women, strong
sanctions against out-of-wedlock pregnancy,
traditional tolerance of abortion, and availability
of modern abortion practices. Abortion has been and
will likely continue to be used to plan families
within much of sub-Saharan Africa.
Résumé
L’emploi des contraceptifs :
Connaissance, perceptions et attitudes des jeunes
réfugiés dans le camp de réfugiés
Based on
available evidence, this review article posits that
contemporary use of abortion in sub-Saharan Africa
often substitutes for and sometimes surpasses modern
contraceptive practice.
Some studies and some
data sets indicate that this occurs not only among
adolescents but also within older age groups. In
several sub-Saharan cities, particularly where
contraceptive use is low and access to clinical
abortion is high (though largely illegal), abortion
appears to be the method of choice for limiting or
spacing births. Even in rural areas, women may
regularly resort to abortion, often using extremely
unsafe procedures, instead of contraception.
Available data seem to indicate that relatively high
levels of abortion correlate with low access to
modern contraception, low status of women, strong
sanctions against out-of-wedlock pregnancy,
traditional tolerance of abortion, and availability
of modern abortion practices. Abortion has been and
will likely continue to be used to plan families
within much of sub-Saharan Africa.
Keywords:
Abortion;
Contraception; Family Planning; Sub-Saharan Africa.
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