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Wiley InterScience

Studies in Family Planning

Studies in Family Planning

Volume 36 Issue 3, Pages 173 - 188

Published Online: 21 Oct 2005

© 2009 The Population Council, Inc.



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Cultivating Men's Interest in Family Planning in Rural El Salvador
Rebecka I. Lundgren 1 , James N. Gribble 2 , Margaret E. Greene 3 , Gail E. Emrick, 4 Margarita de Monroy 5
  1 Director of Operations and Behavioral Research, Institute for Reproductive Health, Georgetown University, 4301 Connecticut Avenue, NW, Suite 310, Washington, DC 20008.   2 Senior Scientist, Futures Group, Washington, DC.   3 Director, Center for Global Health, George Washington University, Washington, DC.   4 Technical Advisor for Central America, Project Concern International El Salvador, San Salvador, El Salvador.   5 Regional Coordinator for Central America, Institute for Reproductive Health, Georgetown University, Santa Tecla, El Salvador. E-mail: lundgrer@georgetown.edu.
Copyright 2005 The Population Council, Inc.

ABSTRACT

A pilot project in rural El Salvador tested the integration of family planning into a water and sanitation program as a strategy for increasing male involvement in family planning decisionmaking and use. The organizations involved posited that integrating family planning into a resource management and community development project would facilitate male involvement by diffusing information, by referring men and women to services, and by expanding method choice to include the new Standard Days Method through networks established around issues men cared about and were already involved in. This article examines data from a community-based household survey to assess the impact of the intervention and finds significant changes in contraceptive knowledge, attitudes, and behavior from baseline to endline. Because the differences between baseline and endline are greater than the differences between participants and nonparticipants at endline, the study demonstrates the power of informal networks for spreading information.


DIGITAL OBJECT IDENTIFIER (DOI)
10.1111/j.1728-4465.2005.00060.x About DOI

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