A Family Planning, Method in Urban Women Between Age Group of 25-45, in Jeeva Hospital Satara


Year : 2025 | Volume : 15 | Issue : 01 | Page : 1-8
    By

    Sujata Kiran Kurhade,

  • Hamid Attar,

  • Sakshi Laxman Magar,

  • Shahin Rafik Pathan,

  • Namrata Ramchandra Lamje,

  • Pooja Shankar Wayadande,

  1. Professor, Devibai Narayandas Chhabada Rural Education Society’s, Late Narayandas Bhawandas Chhabada Training College of Nursing, Maharashtra, India
  2. Professor, Devibai Narayandas Chhabada Rural Education Society’s, Late Narayandas Bhawandas Chhabada Training College of Nursing, Maharashtra, India
  3. Student, Devibai Narayandas Chhabada Rural Education Society’s, Late Narayandas Bhawandas Chhabada Training College of Nursing, Maharashtra, India
  4. Student, Devibai Narayandas Chhabada Rural Education Society’s, Late Narayandas Bhawandas Chhabada Training College of Nursing, Maharashtra, India
  5. Student, Devibai Narayandas Chhabada Rural Education Society’s, Late Narayandas Bhawandas Chhabada Training College of Nursing, Maharashtra, India
  6. Student, Devibai Narayandas Chhabada Rural Education Society’s, Late Narayandas Bhawandas Chhabada Training College of Nursing, Maharashtra, India

Abstract

Family planning addresses a woman’s reproductive health, appropriate spacing between pregnancies, avoiding unintended pregnancies and abortions, preventing STDs, and enhancing the quality of life for the mother, fetus, and family as a whole. A simple random technique was used to select 50 women of reproductive age from Jeeva Hospital in Satara City. The study focused on the limitations of family planning practices among these women, who were between the ages of 25 and 45. A questionnaire was created to gather information from the respondents, and the data gathered was analyzed. The results of the statistical analysis of the data showed that the main factors limiting the use of family planning by women between the ages of 25 and 45 were complications and adverse effects.Nonetheless, it was determined that there is no one-size-fits-all birth control method and that women of reproductive age should receive health education about the advantages of family planning. A technique that works well for one woman could not work well for another; you have to be critically analyzed to determine which new technique is best. We will talk about a family planning method in Jeeva Hospital Satara that is used by urban women between the ages of 25 and 45 in this paper.

Keywords: Family Planning, Reproductive, Children, Infertility, Socio-Cultural, Urban Women, Knowledge

[This article belongs to Journal of Nursing Science & Practice (jonsp)]

How to cite this article:
Sujata Kiran Kurhade, Hamid Attar, Sakshi Laxman Magar, Shahin Rafik Pathan, Namrata Ramchandra Lamje, Pooja Shankar Wayadande. A Family Planning, Method in Urban Women Between Age Group of 25-45, in Jeeva Hospital Satara. Journal of Nursing Science & Practice. 2025; 15(01):1-8.
How to cite this URL:
Sujata Kiran Kurhade, Hamid Attar, Sakshi Laxman Magar, Shahin Rafik Pathan, Namrata Ramchandra Lamje, Pooja Shankar Wayadande. A Family Planning, Method in Urban Women Between Age Group of 25-45, in Jeeva Hospital Satara. Journal of Nursing Science & Practice. 2025; 15(01):1-8. Available from: https://journals.stmjournals.com/jonsp/article=2025/view=196916


References

  1. Coombs, L. C. and Chang, M. (1981). Do Husbands and Wives agree? Fertility attitudes and later behavior. Population and Environment, 4(2):109-127.
  2. India map. Available at https://www.Mapsofindia .com. Accessed 7 June 2018.
  3. Lakshmi MM, Rai NS. Contraceptive practices among reproductive age groups of women in Justice K. S. Hegde Medical College Hospital, Mangalore. Int J ReprodContracepObstetr Gynecol. 2013;2(1):39-46.
  4. Grant C. Benefits of investing in family planning. K4D Helpdesk Research Report. Brighton, UK: Institute of Development Studies. 2016
  5. Ahmed AA, Mohamed AA, Guled I am, Elamin H M, and Abou-Zeid A H. Knowledge Translation in Africa for 21st Century Integrative Biology: The ‘‘Know-Do Gap’’ in Family Planning with Contraceptive Use among Somali Women. OMICS A Journal of Integrative Biology. 2014;18 (11):1-9.
  6. Fitrianto. Family planning/Contraception. 2018.
  7. Park K. Park’s Textbook of Preventive and Social Medicine. 23rd Ed. Jabalpur: BanarasidasBhanot; 2017: P.525-6.
  8. RCH Training module for Medical Officers. Family Welfare Statistics (2006), Ministry Health & Family Welfare, Govt. of India, Reference table C-21, page C-65, section-C.
  9. Halli, S.S., Ashwini, D, Dehury, B, Isac, S, Joseph, A, Anand, P, Gothalwal, V, Prakash, R, Ramesh, BM, Blanchard, J and Boerma, T (2019). Fertility and family planning in Uttar Pradesh, India: major progress and persistent gaps. Reproductive Health. 16, doi:10.1186/s12978-019-0790-xCrossRefGoogle Scholar

Regular Issue Subscription Original Research
Volume 15
Issue 01
Received 10/09/2024
Accepted 19/12/2024
Published 18/01/2025


Loading citations…