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首页> 外文期刊>Reproductive Health >Causes of short birth interval ( kunika ) in Bauchi State, Nigeria: systematizing local knowledge with fuzzy cognitive mapping
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Causes of short birth interval ( kunika ) in Bauchi State, Nigeria: systematizing local knowledge with fuzzy cognitive mapping

机译:尼日利亚鲍奇州的短生间隔(Kunika)的原因:用模糊认知映射系统化当地知识

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摘要

Short birth intervals, defined by the World Health Organization as less than 33?months, may damage the health and wellbeing of children, mothers, and their families. People in northern Nigeria recognise many adverse effects of short birth interval (kunika in the Hausa language) but it remains common. We used fuzzy cognitive mapping to systematize local knowledge of causes of kunika to inform the co-design of culturally safe strategies to address it. Male and female groups in twelve communities built 48 maps of causes and protective factors for kunika, and government officers from the Local Government Area (LGA) and State made four maps. Each map showed causes of kunika or no-kunika, with arrows showing relationships with the outcome and between causes. Participants assigned weights for the perceived strength of relationships between 5 (strongest) and 1 (weakest). We combined maps for each group: men, women, and government officers. Fuzzy transitive closure calculated the maximum influence of each factor on the outcome, taking account of all relationships in the map. To condense the maps, we grouped individual factors into broader categories and calculated the cumulative net influence of each category. We made further summarised maps and presented these to the community mapping groups to review. The community maps identified frequent sex, not using modern or traditional contraception, and family dynamics (such as competition between wives) as the most influential causes of kunika. Women identified forced sex and men highlighted lack of awareness about contraception and fear of side effects as important causes of kunika. Lack of male involvement featured in women’s maps of causes and in the maps from LGA and State levels. Maps of protective factors largely mirrored those of the causes. Community groups readily appreciated and approved the summary maps resulting from the analysis. The maps showed how kunika results from a complex network of interacting factors, with culture-specific dynamics. Simply promoting contraception alone is unlikely to be enough to reduce kunika. Outputs from transitive closure analysis can be made accessible to ordinary stakeholders, allowing their meaningful participation in interpretation and use of the findings. For people in Bauchi State, northern Nigeria, kunika describes a short interval between successive births, understood as becoming pregnant again before the previous child is weaned. They recognise it is bad for children, mothers and households. We worked with 12 communities in Bauchi to map their knowledge of the causes and protective factors for kunika. Separate groups of men and women built 48 maps, and government officers at local and state level built four maps. Each group drew two maps showing causes of kunika or of no-kunika with arrows showing the links between causes and the outcome. Participants marked the strength of each link with a number (between 5 for the strongest and 1 for the weakest). We combined maps for women, men and government officers. We grouped similar causes together into broader categories. We calculated the overall influence of each category on kunika or no-kunika and produced summary maps to communicate findings. The maps identified the strongest causes of kunika as frequent sex, not using modern or traditional contraception, and family dynamics. Women indicated forced sex as an important cause, but men focused on lack of awareness about contraception and fear of side effects. The maps of protective factors mirrored those of the causes. The groups who created the maps approved the summary maps. The maps showed the complex causes of kunika in Bauchi. Promoting contraception is unlikely to be enough on its own to reduce kunika. The summary maps will help local stakeholders to co-design culturally safe ways of reducing kunika.
机译:由世界卫生组织定义的短暂出生间隔为不到33个月,可能会损害儿童,母亲及其家人的健康和福祉。尼日利亚北部的人们认识到短生儿间隔的不良影响(豪萨语中的Kunika),但它仍然很常见。我们使用模糊的认知映射来系统化了kunika的当地原因知识,以告知Co-Design对文化安全策略来解决它。十二个社区的男性和女性群体为kunika建造了48张原因和保护因素,以及地方政府地区(LGA)和国家的政府官员进行了四张地图。每张地图都显示出Kunika或No-Kunika的原因,箭头显示与结果和原因之间的关系。参与者为5(最强)和1(最弱)之间的关系的感知强度分配了权重。我们组合各组的地图:男性,妇女和政府官员。模糊的传递闭合计算每个因素对结果的最大影响,考虑到地图中的所有关系。为了缩聚地图,我们将个别因素分组为更广泛的类别,并计算每个类别的累积净影响。我们进一步汇总了地图,并将这些绘制到社区映射组以审查。社区地图确定了频繁的性别,而不是使用现代或传统避孕,以及家庭动态(如妻子之间的竞争)作为Kunika最具影响力的原因。妇女发现强迫性行为,男性强调缺乏对避孕和对副作用的恐惧作为kunika的重要原因的认识。妇女的原因地图和LGA和国家级地图中缺乏男性参与。保护因子的地图在很大程度上反映了原因的原因。社区团体易于赞赏并批准分析产生的摘要地图。地图显示了kunika如何由复杂的交互因素网络产生,具有文化特异性动态。仅仅促进避孕措施不太可能足以减少kunika。可以对普通利益相关者提供无障碍闭合分析的输出,允许他们有意义地参与调查和使用调查结果。对于尼日利亚北部北部鲍奇州的人来说,Kunika描述了连续的出生之间的短暂间隔,理解为在前一个孩子断奶之前再次怀孕。他们认识到儿童,母亲和家庭是不利的。我们在Bauchi举办了12个社区,以绘制他们对Kunika的原因和保护因素的了解。单独的男女群体建于48个地图,当地和国家级的政府官员建造了四张地图。每个组都画出了两张地图,显示了kunika或no-kunika的原因,其中箭头显示原因与结果之间的联系。参与者标志着每个链接的力量与数字(最强的最强和1之间的5之间)。我们组合妇女,男子和政府官员的地图。我们将类似的原因分组成更广泛的类别。我们计算了每种类别对kunika或no-kunika上的整体影响,并制作了传达调查结果的摘要地图。地图确定了kunika的最强烈原因是频繁的性别,而不是使用现代或传统避孕,以及家庭动态。妇女表明被迫性行为作为一个重要的原因,但男子专注于缺乏对避孕和对副作用的恐惧的认识。保护因子的地图反映了原因的原因。创建地图的小组批准了摘要映射。地图显示了Bauchi的Kunika的复杂原因。促进避孕不太可能是足够的,以减少kunika。摘要地图将帮助当地利益相关者共同设计文化安全的减少kunika的方法。

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