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Fertility Regulation Behaviors and Their Costs : Contraception and Unintended Pregnancies in Africa and Eastern Europe & Central Asia

2007

Lule, Elizabeth | Singh, Susheela | Chowdhury, Sadia Afroze


Información bibliográfica
Editorial
World Bank, Washington, DC
Otras materias
Number of women; Parenthood federation; Primary school; Levels of fertility; Postabortion; Contraceptive prevalence; Educational attainment; Modern contraceptive use; Government policies; Socioeconomic factors; Fertility trends; Number of children; Commodity security; Exposure to pregnancy; Abortion services; Ideal number of children; Fertility regulation; Young women; Unplanned pregnancies; Post­abortion care; Respect; Health care services; Rural residence; Fertility transition; Contraceptive commodities; Policy makers; Household poverty; Practitioners; Low fertility; Reproductive age; Abortion rate; Female education; Policy implications; Modern contraceptive methods; Modern methods of contraception; Unfpa; Fertility rate; Lack of knowledge; Gender inequalities; Levels of education; Husbands; Family health; Post abortion; Maternal deaths; Lower fertility; Female labor force; Contraceptive use; Oral contraceptives; Sexual initiation; Access to abortion; Fewer children; Iud; Childbirth; Changes in fertility; Fertility levels; Newborn care; Contraception; Reproductive health policies; Fertility rates; National level; Sex preferences; Vicious cycle; Population and development; Fertility control; Parental leave; Poor households; Fertility decline; Family planning programs; National health systems; Unwanted pregnancy; Population issues; Unintended pregnancy; Health sector; Sexual partners; Fertility behavior; Unwanted pregnancies; Contraceptive methods; Condom; Fistula; Child health services; Modern contraceptives; Ideal family size; Reducing maternal mortality; Unintended pregnancies; Reproductive health care; Contraceptive services; Teenage pregnancies; Post-abortion care; Obstetric care; Married women; Children per woman; Reproductive health services; Ministries of health; Post-abortion contraceptive; Intercourse; Oral rehydration therapy; Number of abortions; Population division; Decline in fertility; Obstetric complications; Child mortality; Contraceptive method; Behavior change; Woman; Post-abortion; Newborn; Antenatal care; Ill health; Health system; Access to education; Young men; Access to family planning; Postabortion care; Childbearing; Service providers; Improvements in child survival; Family income; Social science; Service delivery systems; Medical treatment; Policy dialogue; Abortion complications; Rural populations; Larger families; Method of contraception; Unsafe abortions; Provider attitudes; Child survival; Demand for contraception; Modern contraception; Implications for population policy; Place of residence; First birth; Sexually active; Need for family planning; Post­abortion; Small families; Infant deaths; Method of birth control; International center for research on women; Age at marriage; Disability; Family health international; Minimal medical standards; Post abortion care; Lack of information; Fertility declines; Maternal health; Unwanted births; Fertility preferences; Human development; Childbearing intentions; United nations population fund; Pace of decline; Reproductive behavior; Contraceptive information; Inequities; Mother; Quality services; Maternal mortality; Incomplete abortions; Unsafe abortion; Service delivery; Maternal mortality ratio; Family planning services; Young people; Fertility regulation methods; Health consequences
Licencia
HNP discussion paper series;http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/World BankCC BY 3.0 Unported
Fuente
HNP discussion paper series;

2014-09-15
AGRIS AP
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