Journal ArticleUnknown
Social networks, ideation, and contraceptive behavior in Bangladesh: a longitudinal analysis
Authors
Author Affiliations
Johns Hopkins University, Johns Hopkins Medicine
Published InSocial Science & Medicine
Year2000
Citations199
Abstract
Longitudinal survey data from a panel of married women in Bangladesh is used to estimate the impact of a social network approach to family planning field worker communication and to test a theoretical model of behavior change that explains why women adopt modern contraceptives. Government field workers were trained to organize group discussions with women in the homes of opinion leaders located at central points in each village's social network. A set of intervening variables, referred to collectively as 'ideation', are derived from diffusion of innovation and social network theory to explain how the social network approach affects contraceptive behavior. The rate of increase in modern contraceptive use was found to be five times greater among women in the social…
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