Prevalence and determinants of adolescent childbearing: comparative analysis of 2017–18 and 2014 Bangladesh Demographic Health Survey
Abstract
Objectives: Bangladesh has one of the highest adolescent childbearing rates
in South Asia, which prevent women from realizing their full potential in life.
This study aimed to compare the prevalence and determinants of adolescent
childbearing in Bangladesh using data from the 2014 and 2017–18 Bangladesh
Demographic and Health Survey (BDHS).
Methods: Nationally representative surveys of respondents were selected using
a two-stage sampling process. The study recruited 2,023 and 1,951 ever-married
women aged 15–19 from 2014 and 2017–18 BDHS surveys, respectively, from
rural and urban settings from all eight geographic divisions of Bangladesh.
Univariate and multivariate logistic regression models were fit to determine the
factors associated with adolescent childbearing.
Result: The adolescent childbearing prevalence rate was 30.8% in 2014 BDHS and
27.6% in 2017–18 BDHS. Marriage at age 13 years or less also reduced significantly
in 2017–18 compared to 2014 (12.7% vs. 17.4%, respectively). Significantly higher
odds of adolescent childbearing were found in 2014 among women in the Sylhet
Division (adjusted odds ratio (AOR) = 3.0; 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.6–6.1)
and the Chittagong Division (AOR = 1.8; 95% CI: 1.8–2.7) compared to the Barisal
Region; however, in 2017, there were no significant differences was found across
the geographic Divisions. Compared to women in the lowest wealth quintile,
women in all other quintiles had lower odds of adolescent childbearing, with the
lowest odds found among women in the wealthiest quintile (AOR = 0.3; 95% CI:
0.2–0.6). Women who married at age 14–17 had 60% lower odds of adolescent
childbearing compared to the women who married at age 10–13.
Conclusion: Nearly one-third of married adolescents in Bangladesh were
pregnant or had at least one child in 2014, and it was reduced only marginally
in 2017–18. Marriage at an early age and income inequalities among families
were significant predictors of adolescent childbearing in Bangladesh. This study
highlighted change in the magnitude and determinants of adolescent childbearing
in Bangladesh taken data from two nationally representative surveys conducted
4 years apart.
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