Assistant Professor Nadine Murshid and Associate Professor Gretchen Ely publish article "Microfinance participation and contraceptive use: does control over resources matter?"

Published September 9, 2016 This content is archived.

Nadine Murshid

Nadine Murshid.

Gretchen Ely

Gretchen Ely.
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Congratulations to Assistant Professor Nadine Murshid and Associate Professor Gretchen Ely on the publication of their article, "Microfinance Participation and Contraceptive Use: Does Control over Resources Matter?" in the Journal of Public Health.

Murshid, N.S. & Ely, G. E. (2016). Microfinance Participation and Contraceptive Use: Does Control over Resources Matter? Journal of Public Health.

Abstract:

Background:

The purpose of the present study was to assess the association between microfinance and contraceptive use. A secondary purpose of the study was to assess the role of control over resources between microfinance participation and contraceptive use.

Method:

Using secondary data from Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey 2011 the present study conducted logistic regression analysis to estimate the interaction effect of microfinance participation and control over resources on reported contraceptive use.

Results:

Findings indicate that microfinance participants are 1.69 times more likely to use contraceptive (P < 0.001), and women with control over resources are 4.28 times more likely to use contraceptive (P < 0.001). However, the interaction effect of microfinance participation and control over resources suggest that microfinance participants with control over resources are less likely to use contraceptive, but that finding is not significant.

Conclusion:

While control over resources matter the most in terms of women's use of contraceptive, this does not hold true for microfinance participants with control over resources.