Gender preference and awareness regarding sex determination among antenatal mothers attending a medical college of eastern India

Author:

Yasmin Shamima1,Mukherjee Anindya2,Manna Nirmalya2,Baur Baijayanti2,Datta Mousumi2,Sau Manabendra2,Roy Manidipa3,Dasgupta Samir4

Affiliation:

1. NRS Medical College, West Bengal, India

2. Medical College Kolkata, Kolkata, West Bengal, India

3. Murshidabad Medical College, West Bengal

4. Burdwan Medical College, West Bengal

Abstract

Aim: There are many women “missing” due to an unfavourable sex ratio in India,, which has strong patriarchal norms and a preference for sons. Female gender discrimination has been reported in health care, nutrition, education, and resource allocation due to man-made norms, religious beliefs, and recently by ultrasonography resulting in lowered sex ratio. Methods: The present study attempts to find out the level of awareness regarding sex determination and to explore preference of gender and factors associated among antenatal mothers attending a medical college in eastern India. Interviews were done by predesigned pretested proforma over 6 months. The data were analysed by SPSS 16.0 software for proportions with chi-squared tests and binary logistic regression analysis. Results: Most women who were multigravida did not know about contraceptives; 1.8% of mothers knew the sex of the fetus in present pregnancy while another 34.7% expressed willingness; 13.6% knew of a place which could tell sex of the fetus beforehand; 55.6% expressed their preference of sex of the baby for present pregnancy while 50.6% of their husbands had gender preference. Gender preference was significantly high in subjects with: lower socioeconomic status ( p=0.011); lower level of education of mother ( p=0.047) and husband ( p=0.0001); multigravida ( p=0.002); presence of living children ( p=0.0001); and husband having preference of sex of baby ( p=0.0001). Conclusions: Parental education, socioeconomic background, and number of living issues were the main predictors for gender preference. Awareness regarding gender preference and related law and parental counselling to avoid gender preference with adoption of small family norm is recommended.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

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