The use of pregnancy prevention products has the potential to improve financial welfare of wives. Economic and social welfare are processes that fluctuate over period as individuals travel various life stages. Awareness of pregnancy prevention methods particularly contraceptives are high in Ghana. A quantitative survey-located study was carried out accompanying 400 randomly selected girls from all 39 settlements of the Amasaman Area Council in Ghana's Greater Accra Region, Ghana. The judgments of the survey data analysis disclosed that the likelihood of girls using birth control amount decreased as their gains increased. Students were less likely than non-students to use pregnancy prevention. However, the level of awareness of these brand played a role in growing the likelihood valuable by students and higher-salary women. The seen quality of information about generative health and the capacity of services offered by hospital nurses and doctors were additional variables that concerned the likelihood of taking pregnancy prevention products. It was found that women who had secondhand birth control merchandise at some point during their generative lives earned considerably more income than those who had never secondhand any of these brand.
Author(s) Details:
Hanny-Sherry Ayittey,
Integrated Investment Limited, Accra, Ghana.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/CTBEF-V5/article/view/10460
No comments:
Post a Comment