Research Article

A cross-sectional assessment of predictors of contraception practice among rural and urban female adolescents in North Central Nigeria

Volume: 23 Number: 2 August 9, 2025
EN

A cross-sectional assessment of predictors of contraception practice among rural and urban female adolescents in North Central Nigeria

Abstract

Objective: This study aimed to assess the prevalence of contraception practice among unmarried female adolescents aged 15-19 years in rural and urban community settings, assess the socio-demographic characteristics, community area, and knowledge as factors associated with contraception practice, and identify which of these factors that predicts their contraceptive practice in comparing between the adolescents in rural and urban communities. Method: A total of 400 unmarried female adolescents, aged 15-19 years from the rural and urban settings of Abuja, in North-Central Nigeria, were recruited in the study, and pregnant adolescents were excluded. A comparative crosssectional study design was used, and a sample size formula for comparing two proportions was applied. A multistage sampling technique was used to select eligible participants. An interviewer-administered structured questionnaire was used, and data were analyzed using Statistical Package for Social Sciences version 26. Results: The prevalence of contraception practice among adolescents in urban and rural communities were 47.1% and 24.1%, respectively, and the prevalent type of contraception practice among respondents in rural and urban areas were male condoms (37.2%) and injectables (32.3%), respectively. Community type (X2=10,023, p=0.003), respondents’ age groups (X2=6.28, p=0.010), and culture (X2=6,574, p=0.010) were significantly associated with contraception practice, however, only culture was a predictor. Conclusion: The prevalence of contraception practice among unmarried adolescents in the urban community almost doubled that of rural adolescents. This implied that more morbid consequences among rural adolescents. Culture was the only predictor of contraception practice, hence, the promotion of adolescent-health-friendly culture on contraception should be advocated in communities.

Keywords

Supporting Institution

Federal Medical Centre, Owo, Ondo State, Nigeria

Ethical Statement

Approval of this study was obtained from the Health Research and Ethics Committee of the Federal Capital Territory (FCT). Verbal and written informed consents were obtained from the respondents and strict confidentiality of all information and results of findings were maintained throughout the course of the study. As part of measures to ensure confidentiality, no names of respondents were collected on the questionnaire.

Thanks

I gratefully acknowledge the contributions of Bldr. Olabode J. Ogundana for his encouragement throughout this research work.

References

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  5. 5. Adedini SA, Babalola S, Ibeawuchi C, Omotoso O, Akiode A, Odeku M. Role of Religious Leaders in Promoting Contraceptive Use in Nigeria: Evidence From the Nigerian Urban Reproductive Health Initiative. Glob Heal Sci Pract 2018;6(3):500-514.
  6. 6. Agyemang J, Newton S, Nkrumah I, Tsoka-Gwegweni JM, Cumber SN. Contraceptive use and associated factors among sexually active female adolescents in Atwima Kwanwoma District, Ashanti region-Ghana. Pan Afr Med J. 2019;32:182.
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Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

Health Services and Systems (Other)

Journal Section

Research Article

Early Pub Date

August 6, 2025

Publication Date

August 9, 2025

Submission Date

January 23, 2025

Acceptance Date

May 22, 2025

Published in Issue

Year 2025 Volume: 23 Number: 2

APA
Subulade, A., Ogundana, A., & Ajite, A. (2025). A cross-sectional assessment of predictors of contraception practice among rural and urban female adolescents in North Central Nigeria. Turkish Journal of Public Health, 23(2), 120-131. https://doi.org/10.20518/tjph.1576659
AMA
1.Subulade A, Ogundana A, Ajite A. A cross-sectional assessment of predictors of contraception practice among rural and urban female adolescents in North Central Nigeria. TJPH. 2025;23(2):120-131. doi:10.20518/tjph.1576659
Chicago
Subulade, Adetumi, Adejoke Ogundana, and Adebukola Ajite. 2025. “A Cross-Sectional Assessment of Predictors of Contraception Practice Among Rural and Urban Female Adolescents in North Central Nigeria”. Turkish Journal of Public Health 23 (2): 120-31. https://doi.org/10.20518/tjph.1576659.
EndNote
Subulade A, Ogundana A, Ajite A (August 1, 2025) A cross-sectional assessment of predictors of contraception practice among rural and urban female adolescents in North Central Nigeria. Turkish Journal of Public Health 23 2 120–131.
IEEE
[1]A. Subulade, A. Ogundana, and A. Ajite, “A cross-sectional assessment of predictors of contraception practice among rural and urban female adolescents in North Central Nigeria”, TJPH, vol. 23, no. 2, pp. 120–131, Aug. 2025, doi: 10.20518/tjph.1576659.
ISNAD
Subulade, Adetumi - Ogundana, Adejoke - Ajite, Adebukola. “A Cross-Sectional Assessment of Predictors of Contraception Practice Among Rural and Urban Female Adolescents in North Central Nigeria”. Turkish Journal of Public Health 23/2 (August 1, 2025): 120-131. https://doi.org/10.20518/tjph.1576659.
JAMA
1.Subulade A, Ogundana A, Ajite A. A cross-sectional assessment of predictors of contraception practice among rural and urban female adolescents in North Central Nigeria. TJPH. 2025;23:120–131.
MLA
Subulade, Adetumi, et al. “A Cross-Sectional Assessment of Predictors of Contraception Practice Among Rural and Urban Female Adolescents in North Central Nigeria”. Turkish Journal of Public Health, vol. 23, no. 2, Aug. 2025, pp. 120-31, doi:10.20518/tjph.1576659.
Vancouver
1.Adetumi Subulade, Adejoke Ogundana, Adebukola Ajite. A cross-sectional assessment of predictors of contraception practice among rural and urban female adolescents in North Central Nigeria. TJPH. 2025 Aug. 1;23(2):120-31. doi:10.20518/tjph.1576659

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