Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-mp689 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-16T03:52:01.169Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

IMPAIRED FERTILITY AND PERCEIVED DIFFICULTIES CONCEIVING IN GHANA: MEASUREMENT PROBLEMS AND PROSPECTS

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 September 2015

Jasmine Fledderjohann*
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology, University of Oxford, UK
David R. Johnson
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology, The Pennsylvania State University, USA
*
1Corresponding author. Email: jasmine.fledderjohann@sociology.ox.ac.uk

Summary

What is the most appropriate measure of impaired fertility for understanding its social consequences in sub-Saharan Africa? The dearth of subjective measures in surveys in the region has prevented comparisons of subjective and objective measures. Perceived difficulties conceiving may have a greater impact than objective measures for social outcomes such as divorce, stigmatization and distress. This study compares 12- (clinical) and 24- (epidemiological) month measures from biomedicine and 5- and 7-year measures from demography with a subjective measure of impaired fertility using correlations, random effects models and test–retest models to assess relationships between measures, their association with sociodemographic characteristics and the stability of measures across time. Secondary panel data (1998–2004) from 1350 Ghanaian women aged 15–49 of all marital statuses are used. Longer waiting times to identification of impaired fertility required by demographic measures result in more stable measures, but perceived difficulties conceiving are most closely aligned with clinical infertility (r=0.61; p<0.05). Epidemiological infertility is also closely aligned with the subjective measure. A large proportion of those identified as having impaired fertility based purely on waiting times are successful contraceptors. Where subjective measures are not available, epidemiological (24-month) measures may be most appropriate for studies of the social consequences of impaired fertility. Accounting for contraceptive use is important in order to avoid false positives. Future research should consider a variety of measures of perceived difficulties conceiving and self-identified infertility to assess which is most valid; in order to accomplish this, it is imperative that subjective measures of infertility be included in social surveys in sub-Saharan Africa.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press, 2015 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Addai, I. (1999) Ethnicity and sexual behavior in Ghana. Biodemography and Social Biology 46(1–2), 1732.Google Scholar
Addai, I. (2000) Religious affiliation and sexual initiation among Ghanaian women. Review of Religious Research 41(3), 328343.Google Scholar
Addai, I. & Trovato, F. (1999) Structural assimilation and ethnic fertility in Ghana. Journal of Comparative Family Studies 30(3), 409427.Google Scholar
Alwin, D. F. (2007) Margins of Error: A Study of Reliability in Survey Measurement. John Wiley & Sons, Inc., Hoboken, NJ.Google Scholar
Anarfi, J. K. & Owusu, A. Y. (2011) The making of a sexual being in Ghana: the state, religion and the influence of society as agents of sexual socialization. Sexuality & Culture 15(1), 118.Google Scholar
Andrews, F. M., Abbey, A. & Halman, L. J. (1991) Stress from infertility, marriage factors, and subjective well-being of wives and husbands. Journal of Health and Social Behavior 32(3), 238253.Google Scholar
Armstrong, A. (1997) Law and the family in Southern Africa. In Adepoju, A. (ed.) Family, Population and Development in Africa. Zed Books, London, pp. 183202.Google Scholar
Aryee, A. F. (1997) The African family and changing nuptiality patterns. In Adepoju, A. (ed.) Family, Population and Development in Africa. Zed Books, London, pp. 7896.Google Scholar
Barden-O’Fallon, J. (2005) Unmet fertility expectations and the perception of fertility problems in a Malawian village. African Journal of Reproductive Health 9(2), 1425.Google Scholar
Bledsoe, C. H. (2002) Contingent Lives: Fertility, Time, and Aging in West Africa. University of Chicago Press, Chicago.Google Scholar
Bongaarts, J., Frank, O. & Lesthaeghe, R. (1984) The proximate determinants of fertility in sub-Saharan Africa. Population and Development Review 10(3), 511537.Google Scholar
Broekmans, F. J., Knauff, E. A., te Velde, E. R., Macklon, N. S. & Fauser, B. C. (2007) Female reproductive ageing: current knowledge and future trends. Trends in Endocrinology & Metabolism 18(2), 5865.Google Scholar
Casterline, J. (2007) Social Learning, Social Influence, and Fertility Control. Population Council, New York, and University of Cape Coast.Google Scholar
Casterline, J. B. (1989) Collecting data on pregnancy loss: a review of evidence from the World Fertility Survey. Studies in Family Planning 20(2), 8195.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Demographic and Health Surveys. (2011) STAT Compiler. URL: http://www.statcompiler.com/country.cfm? ctryid=14&Ctryname=Ghana#Google Scholar
DeRose, L. F. & Ezeh, A. C. (2005) Men’s influence on the onset and progress of fertility decline in Ghana, 1988–98. Population Studies 59(2), 197210.Google Scholar
Dick, M-L., Bain, C. J., Purdie, D. M., Siskind, V., Molloy, D. & Green, A. C. (2003) Self-reported difficulty in conceiving as a measure of infertility. Human Reproduction 18(12), 27112717.Google Scholar
Dodoo, F. N-A. & Frost, A. E. (2008) Gender in African population research: the fertility/reproductive health example. Annual Review of Sociology 34(1), 431452.Google Scholar
Donkor, E. S. (2008) Socio-cultural perceptions of infertility in Ghana. Africa Journal of Nursing and Midwifery 10(1), 2234.Google Scholar
Dyer, S. J. (2007) The value of children in African countries – insights from studies on infertility. Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics and Gynecology 28(2), 6977.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dyer, S. J., Abrahams, N., Hoffman, M. & Van der Spuy, Z. M. (2002) ‘Men leave me as I cannot have children’: women’s experiences with involuntary childlessness. Human Reproduction 17(6), 16631668.Google Scholar
Dyer, S. J., Abrahams, N., Hoffman, M. & Van der Spuy, Z. M. (2002) Infertility in South Africa: women’s reproductive health knowledge and treatment-seeking behaviour for involuntary childlessness. Human Reproduction 17(6), 16571662.Google Scholar
Dyer, S. J., Abrahams, N., Mokoena, N. E., Lombard, C. J. & Van der Spuy, Z. M. (2005) Psychological distress among women suffering from couple infertility in South Africa: a quantitative assessment. Human Reproduction 20(7), 19381943.Google Scholar
Ericksen, K. & Brunette, T. (1996) Patterns and predictors of infertility among African women: a cross-national survey of twenty-seven nations. Social Science & Medicine 42(2), 209220.Google Scholar
Ezeh, A. C. (1993) The influence of spouses over each other’s contraceptive attitudes in Ghana. Studies in Family Planning 24(3), 163174.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Farnes, C., Beckstrand, R. L. & Callister, L. C. (2011) Help-seeking behaviours in childbearing women in Ghana, West Africa. International Nursing Review 58(4), 491497.Google Scholar
Fledderjohann, J. J. (2012) ‘Zero is not good for me’: implications of infertility in Ghana. Human Reproduction 27(5), 13831390.Google Scholar
Frank, O. (1983) Infertility in sub-Saharan Africa: estimates and implications. Population and Development Review 9(1), 137144.Google Scholar
Gelbaya, T. A., Potdar, N., Jeve, Y. B. & Nardo, L. G. (2014) Definition and epidemiology of unexplained infertility. Obstetrical & Gynecological Survey 69(2), 109115.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gerrits, T. (1997) Social and cultural aspects of infertility in Mozambique. Patient Education and Counseling 31(1), 3948.Google Scholar
Gijsels, M., Mgalla, Z. & Wambura, L. (2001) ‘No child to send’: context and consequences of female infertility in northwest Tanzania. In Boerma, J. T. & Mgalla, Z. (eds) Women and Infertility in sub-Saharan Africa: A Multidisciplinary Perspective. KIT Publishers, Amsterdam, pp. 203222.Google Scholar
Gnoth, C., Godehardt, E., Frank-Herrmann, P., Friol, K., Tigges, J. & Freundl, G. (2005) Definition and prevalence of subfertility and infertility. Human Reproduction 20(5), 11441147.Google Scholar
Greil, A. L. (1991) Not Yet Pregnant: Infertile Couples in Contemporary America. Rutgers University Press, New Jersey.Google Scholar
Greil, A. L. & McQuillan, J. (2004) Help-seeking patterns among subfecund women. Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology 22(4), 305319.Google Scholar
Greil, A. L., McQuillan, J., Johnson, K., Slauson-Blevins, K. & Shreffler, K. M. (2010) The hidden infertile: infertile women without pregnancy intent in the United States. Fertility and Sterility 93(6), 20802083.Google Scholar
Gurunath, S., Pandian, Z., Anderson, R. A. & Bhattacharya, S. (2011) Defining infertility – a systematic review of prevalence studies. Human Reproduction Update 17(5), 575588.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gyimah, S. O. (2003) A cohort analysis of the timing of first birth and fertility in Ghana. Population Research and Policy Review 22(3), 251266.Google Scholar
Habbema, J. D. F., Collins, J., Leridon, H., Evers, J. L., Lunenfeld, B. et al. (2004) Towards less confusing terminology in reproductive medicine: a proposal. Human Reproduction 19(7), 14971501.Google Scholar
Hall, D. B. (2000) Zero-inflated Poisson and binomial regression with random effects: a case study. Biometrics 56(4), 10301039.Google Scholar
Hartzel, J., Agresti, A. & Caffo, B. (2001) Multinomial logit random effects models. Statistical Modelling 1(2), 81102.Google Scholar
Hollos, M. & Larsen, U. (2008) Motherhood in sub-Saharan Africa: the social consequences of infertility in an urban population in northern Tanzania. Culture, Health & Sexuality 10(2), 159173.Google Scholar
Hollos, M., Larsen, U., Obono, O. & Whitehouse, B. (2009) The problem of infertility in high fertility populations: meanings, consequences and coping mechanisms in two Nigerian communities. Social Science & Medicine 68(11), 20612068.Google Scholar
Jacob, M. C., McQuillan, J. & Greil, A. L. (2007) Psychological distress by type of fertility barrier. Human Reproduction 22(3), 885894.Google Scholar
Johnson, D. R. (1995) Assessing marital quality in longitudinal and life course studies. In Conoley, J. & Buterick Werth, E. (eds) Family Assessment, pp. 155202. Buros Institute of Mental Measurements, Lincoln, NE. URL: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/burosfamily/10/ Google Scholar
Johnson, D. R. & White, L. (no date) National Survey of Fertilty Barriers. The Pennsylvania State University Population Research Institute, University Park, PA.Google Scholar
Koster-Oyekan, W. (1999) Infertility among Yoruba women: perceptions on causes, treatments and consequences. African Journal of Reproductive Health 3(1), 1326.Google Scholar
Larsen, U. (1994) Sterility in sub-Saharan Africa. Population Studies 48(3), 459474.Google Scholar
Larsen, U. (2000) Primary and secondary infertility in sub-Saharan Africa. International Journal of Epidemiology 29(2), 285291.Google Scholar
Larsen, U. (2005) Research on infertility: which definition should we use? Fertility and Sterility 83(4), 846852.Google Scholar
Larsen, U. & Menken, J. (1989) Measuring sterility from incomplete birth histories. Demography 26(2), 185201.Google Scholar
Larsen, U. & Menken, J. (1991) Individual-level sterility: a new method of estimation with application to sub-Saharan Africa. Demography 28(2), 229247.Google Scholar
Larsen, U. & Raggers, H. (2001) Levels and trends in infertility in sub-Saharan Africa. In Boerma J. T. & Mgalla Z. (eds) Women and Infertility in sub-Saharan Africa: A Multidisciplinary Perspective. KIT Publishers, Amsterdam, pp. 2570.Google Scholar
Leonard, L. (2002) Problematizing fertility: ‘scientific’ accounts and Chadian women’s narratives. In Inhorn, M. & Van Balen, F. (eds) Infertility around the Globe: New Thinking on Childlessness, Gender, and Reproductive Technologies. University of California Press, Berkeley, pp. 193214.Google Scholar
Leridon, H. (1991) Sterility and sub-fecundity: from silence to impatience? Population 46(2), 225247.Google Scholar
Loftus, J. (2009) ‘Oh, no, I’m not infertile’: culture, support groups, and the infertile identity. Sociological Focus 42(4), 394416.Google Scholar
Marchbanks, P. A., Peterson, H. B., Rubin, G. L. & Wingo, P. A. (1989) Research on infertility: definition makes a difference. American Journal of Epidemiology 130(2), 259267.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mascarenhas, M. N., Flaxman, S. R., Boerma, T., Vanderpoel, S., Mathers, C. D. & Stevens, G. A. (2013) Trends in primary and secondary infertility prevalence since 1990: a systematic analysis of demographic and reproductive health surveys. The Lancet 381, S90.Google Scholar
Mayaud, P. (2001) The role of reproductive tract infections. In Boerma, J. T. & Mgalla, Z. (eds) Women and Infertility in sub-Saharan Africa: A Multidisciplinary Perspective. KIT Publishers, Amsterdam, pp. 71108.Google Scholar
Meekers, D. & Calvès, A-E. (1997) ‘Main’ girlfriends, girlfriends, marriage, and money: the social context of HIV risk behaviour in sub-Saharan Africa. Health Transition Review 7(supplement), 361375.Google Scholar
Mgalla, Z. & Boerma, J. T. (2001) The discourse of infertility in Tanzania. In Boerma, J. T. & Mgalla, Z. (eds) Women and Infertility in sub-Saharan Africa: A Multidisciplinary Perspective. KIT Publishers, Amsterdam, pp. 189202.Google Scholar
Oppong, C. & Abu, K. (1987) Seven Roles of Women: Impact of Education, Migration and Employment on Ghanaian Mothers. International Labour Office, Geneva.Google Scholar
Population Reference Bureau. (2012) World Population Data Sheet. Population Reference Bureau. URL: http://www.prb.org/Publications/Datasheets/2012/world-population-data-sheet/data-sheet.aspx.Google Scholar
Rouchou, B. (2013) Consequences of infertility in developing countries. Perspectives in Public Health 133(3), 174179.Google Scholar
Tabong, P. T-N. & Adongo, P. B. (2013) Understanding the social meaning of infertility and childbearing: a qualitative study of the perception of childbearing and childlessness in Northern Ghana. PloS One 8(1), e54429.Google Scholar
Takyi, B. K. & Gyimah, S. O. (2007) Matrilineal family ties and marital dissolution in Ghana. Journal of Family Issues 28(5), 682705.Google Scholar
Weinstein, M., Wood, J. & Chang, M. (1993) Age Patterns of Fecundability. URL: http://www.popline.org/node/324690 Google Scholar
White, M., Muhidin, S., Andrzejewski, C., Tagoe, E., Knight, R. & Reed, H. (2008) Urbanization and fertility: an event-history analysis of coastal Ghana. Demography 45(4), 803816.Google Scholar
White, R. G., Zaba, B., Boerma, J. T. & Blacker, J. (2001) Modeling the dramatic decline of primary infertility in sub-Saharan Africa. In Boerma, J. T. & Mgalla, Z. (eds) Women and Infertility in sub-Saharan Africa: A Multidisciplinary Perspective. KIT Publishers, Amsterdam, pp. 117150.Google Scholar