The Dominant Role of Community Influences over Individual Contraceptive Choices in Pakistan

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Abstract

Introduction Contraceptive use is essential for improving maternal and child health, yet family planning (FP) uptake in Pakistan remains low, with stark disparities shaped by both individual and community-level influences. While individual determinants such as education and wealth have been widely studied, the role of community norms, peer influence, and social networks in shaping contraceptive behaviors remains underexplored. Drawing on Rogers’ Diffusion of Innovation Theory this study examines how social learning and collective behaviors influence FP adoption. Methodology This study analyzed data from the 2017–18 Pakistan Demographic and Health Survey, including 15,068 married women aged 15–49 nested within primary sampling units. Logistic regression models were estimated for any contraceptive use and modern contraceptive use. Individual-level covariates included age, education, wealth, parity, and decision-making autonomy. Community-level variables—constructed using leave-one-out means—captured shared intention to use family planning, parity norms, health-seeking behavior, wealth, age structure, and mean age at first birth. Predictive margins were used to assess non-linear relationships and potential threshold effects, with robustness assessed using a 75% subsample. Results Community intention to use family planning was a strong and consistent predictor of contraceptive behavior. Compared to women in the lowest-intention communities, those residing in medium–high intention communities had significantly higher odds of contraceptive use (OR = 1.86; 95% CI [1.57, 2.21]) and communities with highest intention to use exhibited (OR = 1.92; 95% CI [1.61, 2.29]). At the individual level, education and wealth remained strong predictors, autonomy was modestly significant, its effect was amplified in supportive community environments where FP was normalized. Conclusion This study underscores the transformative role of community dynamics in shaping contraceptive behaviors in Pakistan. Family planning programs may achieve greater and more durable impact by prioritizing community-wide norm formation and health system engagement rather than focusing solely on individual-level interventions.

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