Social Networks and Reproductive Healthcare-Seeking Behaviour of Garo and Mandai Women in Bangladesh

Author:

Ame Atia Sharmin12ORCID,Mozumdar Lavlu1ORCID,Islam Mohammad Amirul3,Saha Sumitra4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Rural Sociology, Bangladesh Agricultural University, Mymensingh, Bangladesh

2. Department of Rural Development, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Agricultural University, Gazipur, Bangladesh

3. Department of Agricultural and Applied Statistics, Bangladesh Agricultural University, Mymensingh, Bangladesh

4. Department of Biotechnology, Bangladesh Agricultural University, Mymensingh, Bangladesh

Abstract

The reproductive healthcare system is meagre in the ethnic communities of Bangladesh. Notwithstanding the availability of studies on the healthcare-seeking behaviour of ethnic groups in Bangladesh, studies explicitly focused on the social networks of ethnic women, and their likely influences on reproductive health in this context are rare. We analyse how social networks impact ethnic women’s reproductive healthcare-seeking behaviour in Bangladesh. A total of 205 married ethnic—Garo and Mandai—women were selected purposively from Madhupur Upazila in the Tangail district. Data were collected through face-to-face interviews using a structured interview schedule. Descriptive statistics show that the average score of reproductive healthcare-seeking behaviour of Garo and Mandai women is low (40 out of 70), and the average network size of that women is slightly small (2.58). Results from hierarchical multiple regression models show that, next to years of schooling, reproductive health-related training and membership status, network size is positively related, while reproductive health constraints are negatively related, and ethnicity is not statistically associated with reproductive healthcare-seeking behaviour of Garo and Mandai women. This study reveals that social networks of ethnic women may improve their reproductive healthcare-seeking behaviour in Bangladesh. Hence, the policy recommendation is that social network agents are more equipped with reproductive health-related knowledge and information.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Development,Geography, Planning and Development

Reference71 articles.

1. Agrawal P. K. (2009). How much the indigenous women of Jharkhand, India are in disadvantageous condition: Finding’s from India’s national family health survey. http://paa2009.princeton.edu/download.aspx?submissionId=90455

2. Healthcare-seeking behaviour in relation to sexual and reproductive health among Thai-born women in Sweden: a qualitative study

3. Akhter S. (2007). Knowledge, attitudes and practices on reproductive health and rights of urban and rural women in Bangladesh. 12(3), 131–150.

4. Impact of social networks on the choice of place of delivery among ethnic women in Bangladesh

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