{"doc_desc":{"title":"Sri Lanka Contraceptive Survey - 1985","idno":"DDI-LKA-DCS-SLCS-1985-v1.0","producers":[{"name":"Department of Census and Statistics","abbreviation":"DCS","affiliation":"Ministry of Finance and Planning","role":"Conducting the Survey"}],"prod_date":"2009-10-20","version_statement":{"version":"Version 1.0 (October 2009)."}},"study_desc":{"title_statement":{"idno":"DDI-LKA-DCS-SLCS-1985-v1.0","title":"Sri Lanka Contraceptive Survey - 1985","alt_title":"SLCS 1985"},"authoring_entity":[{"name":"Department of Census and Statistics","affiliation":"Ministry of Finance and planning"}],"production_statement":{"producers":[{"name":"Family Health International","affiliation":"US Agency for International Development ","role":"Financial support and Technical assistance"}],"copyright":"(C) 2009, Department of Census and Statistics","funding_agencies":[{"name":"Family Health International","abbreviation":"FHI","role":"Funding source"}]},"distribution_statement":{"contact":[{"name":"Information Unit (Department of Census and Statistics)","affiliation":"","email":"information@statistics.gov.lk","uri":"www.statistics.gov.lk"},{"name":"","affiliation":"","email":"","uri":""}]},"series_statement":{"series_name":"World Fertility Survey [hh\/wfs]","series_info":"The 1985 Sri Lanka Contraceptive Survey is a follow- up of the Contraceptive Prevalence Survey (CPS) of 1982. This survey addresses some of the major issues raised by the 1982 and the 1975 World Fertility  Survey (WFS). \n\nThe Department of Census and Statistics (DCS) of  the Ministry of Plan Implementation collaborated  with Family Health International  (FHI) in this venture. PHI provided financial support and technical assistance to the DCS to ensure that the practice of contraception was measured as completely and as accurately as possible and a new approach was developed and adopted by an enthusiastic team of DCS staff.\n\n------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------\nThe Sri Lanka Contraceptive Prevalence Survey , on the other hand, was one of a series of surveys conducted in a number of countries under the sponsorship of the Westinghouse Health Systems of the U.S.A. The Sponsor's proposal to conduct the, survey came at a time when the country's family planning and population policy programs were reaching maturity and the need for measures of contraceptive prevalence to evaluate the programs was strong. \n\nBetween WFS and CPS, a period of 7 years,  use of traditional methods increased by 11 percentage points. Yet in the CPS and Family Health Impact Survey (FHIS) both conducted in 1982, the estimated  prevalence of traditional contraceptive use differed substantially - from 24% in the CPS to only 14% in the FHIS. \n\nOf  immediate concern was whether CPS had overestimated the prevalence of  traditional methods.  A second issue was caused Sri Lankan couples to adopt these traditional methods  in preference to modern temporary methods. The issues have a decisive bearing on how information and education programs should be structured to whom they should be directed, and on the delivery of services to motivated couples. \n\nThese concerns were voiced at several meetings following the release of CPS findings by the personnel\nat the  helm of Government's population programs and managers of non-governmental programs and they led to the decision to further investigate the situation."},"version_statement":{"version":"v1.0:  Full edited dataset, for internal DPD Use","version_date":"2009-10-20"},"study_info":{"topics":[{"topic":"childbearing, family planning and abortion [8.2]","vocab":"CESSDA","uri":"http:\/\/www.nesstar.org\/rdf\/common"}],"abstract":"The purpose of the 1985 Sri Lanka Contraceptive Survey (SLCS) was to provide a detailed examination of the knowledge and use of traditional and modern contraceptive methods in Sri Lanka, and to document changes in these practices over time. Both qualitative and quantitative data collection methodologies were employed to achieve these goals. A series of qualitative in-depth interviews with urban and rural couples and grass root level family planning workers were conducted as the initial data collection phase of this project, followed by a more standard quantitative survey.\n\nThe 1985 SLCS followed-up respondents to the 1982 Contraceptive Prevalence Survey. Its coverage was restricted to 17 Districts in the West, South and Central regions of Sri Lanka and included only those respondents to the 1982 CPS who were still currently married and under 50 years of age in 1985. In all, 2,310 women and a subsample of 577 of their husbands were interviewed.\n\nAlthough the study documents the widespread awareness and use of contraception across all sectors of Sri Lankan society, it also points to serious insufficiencies and misconceptions in couples' knowledge of how to correctly use methods such as rhythm and the pill and how the methods work. The 1985 SLCS confirms the high reported prevalence in the 1982 CPS of the use of traditional contraception and sterilization in Sri Lanka and provides some of the major reasons for these contraceptive use patterns.  \n\nUse of both rhythm and withdrawal is widespread and has contributed to the significant decline in Sri Lankan fertility in recent years. Modern temporary methods such as oral contraceptives, IUDs, and injectables appear to be 'not too readily accepted' by many Sri Lankan couples. For most methods used  it appears that both the husband and the wife play an important role in the contraceptive decision-making process.\n\nPreliminary results from the 1985 SLCS reveal that there continues to be an important need in at least two areas of family planning service delivery in Sri Lanka -- one relates to traditional mathods and the other to modern temporary methods. Although the prevalence of use of the rhythm method is quite high in Sri Lanka, knowledge of the correct 'safe and unsafe' periods in a woman's menstrual cycle appears to be lacking and incomplete. Dissemination of information on methods involving periodic abstinence, and the provision of counseling services are needed. The main reasons couples gave for choosing traditional methods are plausible (i.e., convenience of use and absence of side effects).\n\nUse of modern temporary methods in Sri Lanka continues to be  low, even though a high proportion of both wives and husbands expressed interest in learning more about these methods. Concerns about side effects appear to be a major motivating force behind the nonuse or discontinuation of modern temporary methods such as the pill, IUD and injectables. Actions taken to improve the dissemination of information and to provide counseling services for all temporary methods are likely to increase contraceptive prevalence, user satisfaction and method-use effectiveness.\n\nThe major objectives of this study were:\n\n- to find out the reasons why use of traditional contraceptive methods in Sri Lanka is so high compared to use of modern temporary methods;\n\n- to determine how rates of traditional and modern contraceptive use have changed over time;\n\n- to asses the depth of knowledge about traditional and modern contraceptive methods in terms of how to use the method, how they work, and where to obtain them;\n\n- to examine husbands' attitudes towards and reported practice of family planning and to determine the consistency of husband and wife reporting of contraceptive use;\n\n- to determine the extent of husband and wife communication in family planning matters, to explore the contraceptive decision making process, and to consider how both of these processes vary according to fertility desires and the methods used;\n\n- to examine the reasons for using not using  or discontinuing various methods of contraception and to explore the patterns of method switching from temporary to permanent methods, and between traditional and modern temporary methods;\n\n- to estimate the prevalence of side effects of modern temporary and permanent methods;\n\n- to assess the level of satisfaction of husbands and wives with various methods, and to explore the role of contraceptives in motivating others to try various methods;\n\n- to construct sociodemographic profile of traditional and modern contraceptive users.","coll_dates":[{"start":"1985","end":"1985","cycle":""}],"nation":[{"name":"Sri Lanka","abbreviation":"LKA"}],"geog_coverage":"The coverage of the survey was restricted to 17 Districts in the West, South and Central regions of Sri Lanka and included only those respondents (women) to the CPS82 who were still currently married and under 50 years of age in 1985.","analysis_unit":"Individules\n\nThis survey was a follow-up survey of the 1982 Contraceptive Prevalence Survey (CPS82) respondents and a subsample of their husbands. In CPS 82 all ever-married women 15-49 years old living in housing units one of which is defined as a place of residence separate from the other places of residence and with an independent access. (One or more households could occupy one housing units). The population living in places other than housing units such as institutions were excluded.","universe":"Respondents of CPS82 who were still currently married women and under 50 years of age in 1985.","data_kind":"Sample survey data [ssd]","notes":"The scope of the survey were:\n\n- use of traditional contraceptive methods in Sri Lanka, use of modern temporary methods; \n\n- depth of knowledge about traditional and modern contraceptive methods;\n\n- attitudes towards family planning, consistency of husband and wife's reporting of contraceptive use;\n\n- contraceptive decision making, fertility desires and methods used;\n\n- patterns of method switching from temporary to permanent methods,\n\n- prevalence of side effects of modern temporary and permanent methods;\n\n- level of satisfaction of husbands and wives with various methods, \n\n- role of contraceptives in motivating others to try various methods;"},"method":{"data_collection":{"data_collectors":[{"name":"Department of Census and Statistics","abbreviation":"DCS","affiliation":"Ministry of Finance and Planning"}],"sampling_procedure":"Female sample\nThe 1985 SLCS was a follow-up survey of respondents to the 1982 CPS and a subsample of their husbands. The sampling procedures used in the 1982 CPS are outlined in Sri Lanka Contraceptive Prevalence Survey Report: 1982. The sample was a nationally representative probability sample drawn from a two stage design. In the first stage, the country was stratified into 2 strata: urban and\nrural. A sample of census blocks was drawn from the urban and rural strata with probability proportional to the stratum population which was defined as the female population age 15-49. The required number of census blocks within each stratum was then selected from among the 24 administrative districts being proportional to the stratum population within the district.\n\nThe second stage consisted of selecting households from up-dated lists of housing units - In urban census blocks, a systematic sample of 15 housing units was selected from lists of such units. In the rural census blocks, clusters of approximately ten housing units were formed and one cluster was\nselected at random from each block. Whenever there was more than one household per unit, all households in every housing unit were selected into the sample. Unfortunately, due to socio-political problems in some northern and eastern districts, seven districts in that area of the country were excluded from the follow-up study.\n\nThe sample for the 1985 SLCS was defined to consist of all CPS respondents meeting the following criteria: a) living in the sample districts; b) married at the time of 1982 CPS and at the time of 1985 survey; c) less than 50 years of age. In addition to the seven districts in the north and the east, two census blocks were also excluded, one because of flooding during the fieldwork stage, and the other -because it had been submerged in the construction of the Kothmale reservoir. As a result of this selection procedure the women in the SLCS sample have necessarily been married for at least 3 years and are 18 or more years of age.\n\nMale sample\nWithin every census block included in the follow-up survey an attempt was made to interview every third female respondent's husband. Because some husbands were unable to be contacted after two return visits, only about one-fourth of the female respondents' husbands were actually\ninterviewed,  instead of the one-third originally planned. \n\nNote on Contraceptive Prevalence Survey 1982 (CPS82)\n\nThe sample was a nationally representative probability sample drawn from a two stage design. In the first stage, a sample of Census Blocks was drawn from the predetermined strata. In the second stage a sample of housing units was drawn from each selected Census Block. All ever-married women aged 15-49 who lived in the selected housing units or who spent the\nprevious night in the unit were interviewed in detail.\n\nFirst Stage Selection\n\nThe country was stratified into 2 strata as urban and rural areas. It was decided to select a sample of about 4,500 respondents spread out in 540 Census Blocks. A Census Block is an area assigned to an enumerator at the 1981 Census of Population and Housing for the purpose of enumeration. The Survey estimates were required at the national level and hence it was decided to allocate the sample proportional to the stratum population which was defind as the female population aged 15-49. This made it necessary to select 90 Census Blocks from the Urban Stratum and 450 from the rural stratum. The required number of blocks within each stratum was then selected from among the 24 administrative districts, the number selected from each district being proportional to the stratum population within the district. \n\nSecond Stage Selection\nThe Second' Stage consisted of selecting households from lists of housing units. These lists were obtained from the Pre-listing Forms prepared for the 1981 Census and were updated by the procedure outlined in the next section. The procedure for selection of households was as follows. \n\nIn the urban Census Blocks, a systematic sample of 15 housing units was selected from a list of such units. That is, starting from a randomly selected unit every unit at the end of an interval equal to one fifteenth the number of units in the  block was selected in to the sample. In the rural Census Blocks, clusters of approximately ten housing units were formed and one cluster was selected at random from each block. All households in every housing unit whenever there was more than one in a unit were selected into the Sample. \n\nListing of Housing Units\n\nThe target population of the survey was all ever-married women 15-49 years old living in housing units. A housing unit was defined as a place of residence and with an independent access. One or more households could occupy one housing unit.\n\nThe population living in places other than housing units such as institutions were excluded. The effect of this exclusion the survey estimates was considered to be small as the population living in non-housing units at he 1981 census was a very small proportion of approximately 2 per cent. The sample frame for the survey was the prelisting Forms of the 1981 Census. A prelisting form was prepared for each Census Block and it contained a list of all housing units and non-housing units in the Census Block. The Pre-listing Forms of the selected Census Blocks were updated by the range Statistical Investigators of the Department. These officers were also the ones who prepared and later updated the lists initially for the Census and were quite familiar with the updating procedures. However, they were given specific instructions on updating by asking to delete the demolished and vacant units and to insert in the proper place any new units that had come up since the Census.\n\nWhile the Survey was going on, it was found that some selected housing units were vacant, some were non-existent, and some could not be located by their addresses. However, the proportion of such units was quite small, only 2.7% and is unlikely to have caused a bias in the selection procedure.","coll_mode":["Face-to-face [f2f]"],"research_instrument":"The questionnaire has two main sections:\n\n1. For female respondents\n2. For male partners of the female respondents\n\nThe Questionnaire for the female respondents covered aspects such as:-\n\nBasic details on demography, education, employment, ethnicity and religion of both the respondent and her female partner\nHer biological details, pregnancy details\nAwareness and usage of contraceptive methods\nHusband-wife communation (relations)\n\n  The questionnaire for the male partners covered aspects such as:-\n \nBasic details on demography, education, employment, ethnicity and religion of both male and female partners\nAwareness and usage of contraceptive methods\nHusband-wife communation (relations)","coll_situation":"Phase 1\n\nThe survey had two phases. The first phase was a qualitative study consisting of a series of unstructured. in-depth interviews with married women and men. An exploratory study was carried out prior to the major\nsurvey to determine a suitable approach for assessing knowledge attitudes and use patterns of contraceptives. This study was an anthropological inquiry into the subject of contraceptives and the associated semantics  to find an appropriate starting point for a conversation on the subject  paths of progress. etc. The study was designed in consultation with an anthropologist and a team of senior officers of the Department comprised of two statisticians who functioned as core team members  two team  supervisors and several interviewers with considerable experience in previous fertility surveys. \n\nThese officers spent several days in selected localities interviewing people in free conversation guided by predetermined themes. There was no structured questionnaire. General information was obtained from the approximately 200 respondents on knowledge and attitudes toward various family planning methods and practices as well as their contraceptive decision making and behaviour. The qualitative phase also unveiled local expressions commonly used to refer to methods such as periodic abstinence (\"being careful\") and withdrawal (\"moving out\"). These interviews led to the discovery that many couples do not think of traditional methods as methods per se but as habits or practices that originated in their daily routine and not from information or counseling provided by health professionals. Issues and common terminology used in family planning discussions that were identified in the qualitative study (Phase One) were then incorporated into the main survey questionnaire.\n\nPhase 2\nThe second phase was the follow-up of selected women and a sample of their husbands from the 1982 CPS. The 1985 SLCS, carried out by the Department of Census and Statistics (DCS) in collaboration  with FHI , generated a wide variety of opportunities to explore various aspects of contraceptive behavior. Interviewing both wives and husbands offered the opportunity to compare a woman's fertility awareness, behavior and reporting with that of her spouse. Furthermore, because the 1985 SLCS was also a follow-up of female respondents from the 1982 CPS, there was essentially a built-in panel study in which changes in attitudes, fertility desires, and contraceptive and fertility behavior of the same women\ncould be observed over a three-year period. The 1985 follow-up interviews of the CPS respondents also allowed us to compare the reported use of traditional and modern methods for the same women obtained from two very different data collection instruments. Special modules were designed for each contraceptive  method so that very detailed method-specific information could be obtained from respondents. Information was obtained on the respondents' knowledge of a method  how it worked; how to correctly use it; knowledge of and experience with side effects; satisfaction with a method; reasons for using; not using or discontinuing a method; perceived advantages; the extent and patterns of husband wife family planning communication and decision making; and method switching patterns and method failures.\n\nIn the WFS and CPS, knowledge and use were measured by asking the respondent what methods\nthey had heard of, if any, and what methods they had used or were using at the time. This was usually followed by  a probing: each method not mentioned by a respondent was then referred to by the interviewer by name of method, only, in the CPS, but with a short, descriptive statement in the WFS, and the respondent was asked if she had heard of it and, if so, whether she had ever used it. The SLCS team felt that this may not be the best way to elicit information on contraceptive behavior that may have spanned many years. Furthermore, it had been observed that the measurement of prevalence,\nparticularly of traditional methods, differed from one survey to another. \n\nThe results of the qualitative interviews served as the basis for designing the survey instrument for the second phase. The main survey interviews commenced with a general inquiry of usual background characteristics of the woman, moving gradually to the subject of pregnancy and delaying pregnancy. At this point she was asked if she expected to have any (more) children in the future, thereafter, designed to ascertain the respondent's status with respect to i) current use, ii) past use, and iii) intended future use of contraception. Women who did not want more children and those who wanted more but later were\nasked what they were doing to delay or prevent pregnancy. Past use was identified by asking each woman whether at any time in the past she did anything to delay or prevent a pregnancy. Finally, women were asked a hypothetical question: What would you do, if the need arises in the future, to delay or prevent a pregnancy?\n\nThis information was gathered in the background section of the questionnaire, at the end of which all methods the respondent had used in the past, was currently using, expecting to use, and never had used were known as a result of these preliminary but probing questions. This information was recorded in a chart indicating use status with respect to each method. This chart was printed on the inside front cover of the questionnaire and served as a guide for the rest of the interview. The remainder of the interview consisted of a series of questions on contraceptive methods: the pill, IUD, condom, injection, female sterilization, male sterilization, withdrawal, rhythm, abstinence, plus other practices named by the respondent. \n\nThe section for each method was structured into three segments: (1) never users, (2) current users, and (3) past users. The interviewer, by reference to the Use Status Chart, directed the respondent to ,the segment relevant to her for each method. The sequence of questions under segments for never use, current use or past use began by reaffirming that particular use status. The sequence for never users was initiated by inquiring whether she had ever heard of the method. If yes, this was followed by a question which\nprobed whether she had at any time or even for a short period used ,that method. If, after probing, it was discovered that the respondent had actually used the methods, the interviewer shifted to the appropriate use status category (i.e., current or past use) and proceeded from there. The remaining questions progressed in the following sequence: source of  information, source of supply, how to use the method, how the method prevents conception, who advised her to use the method, duration of use, side effects\nexperienced and remedial action taken, knowledge of other side effects, reasons for selection of method, accessibility and availability, intention to continue or discontinue, expected future use, pregnancy while using,  respondent and spouse's satisfaction with the method, and role as a motivator\nof others.","act_min":"The survey organization was headed by a National Director who was the Director of the Department of Census and Statistics. A Deputy Director of the Department served as Project Manager and an Assistant Director as the\nAssistant Project Manager. A core staff of three statisticians assisted in the organization and implementation of all survey activities from the design to the publication of the results. Other staff were added as necessary.\nField work was carried out by 25 interviewers organized in five teams, with each team led by a supervisor. All interviewers were Statistical Investigators of the Department; the large majority of them had interviewing\nexperience from either the WFS or the CPS. Technical assistance was provided by FHI research staff and consultants in the design of the questionnaires and the data analysis."},"analysis_info":{"response_rate":"There were actually 3,022 eligible respondents, i.e., currently married women below 50 years of age, married at the time of 1982 CPS and resident in the 17 districts covered in the survey. Of these, interviews were completed for 2,310 women, 76 percent of the eligible respondents. The following is a breakdown of the follow-up efforts in the 17 Districts included in the survey: \n\n                                                                                Number                (Percent)\nCompleted interview\t\t\t2310\t\t76.4%\nRefused\t\t        \t\t                20\t\t0.7%\nNot at home\t\t\t\t203\t\t6.7%\nLeft to reside elsewhere\t\t\t389\t\t12.9%\nOther (inaccessible due to floods;\t                100\t\t3.3%\nhospitalization, etc)\nTotal\t\t\t\t\t3022\t\t100%\n\n(A total of 577 husbands were interviewed.)"}},"data_access":{"dataset_use":{"conf_dec":[{"txt":"Under the Census ordinance, micro data cannot be released with identifications for public use. Procedures are in place to ensure that information relating to any particular individual person, household or undertaking will be kept strictly confidential and will not be divulged to external parties. Information on individual or individual Household\/establishment will not be divulged or published in such a form that will facilitate the identification of any particular person or establishment as the data have been collected under the Census ordinance, according to which the information at individual level cannot be divulged and such information is strictly\nconfidential.","required":"yes","form_no":"","uri":""}],"contact":[{"name":"Director General (Department of Census and Statistics)","affiliation":"","email":"dgcensus@sltnet.lk","uri":"http:\/\/www.statistics.gov.lk\/"}],"cit_req":"Department of Census and Statistics, Sri Lanka Contraceptive Survey 1985 [SLCS1985], Version 1.0 of the public use dataset (October,2009), provided by the National Data Archive, Data Processing Division, www.statistics.gov.lk","conditions":"The dataset has been anonymized and is available as a Public Use Dataset. It is  accessible to all for statistical and research purposes only, under the following terms and conditions:\n\n1. The data and other materials will not be redistributed or sold to other individuals, institutions, or organizations without the written agreement.\n \n2. The data will be used for statistical and scientific research purposes only. They will be used solely for reporting of aggregated information, and not for investigation of specific individuals or organizations.\n \n3. No attempt will be made to re-identify respondents, and no use will be made of the identity of any person or establishment discovered inadvertently. \n \n4. No attempt will be made to produce links among datasets provided by the Department  or among data from the Department and other datasets that could identify individuals or organizations. \n\n5. Any books, articles, conference papers, theses, dissertations, reports, or other publications that employ data obtained from the Department will cite the source of data in accordance with the Citation Requirement provided with each dataset. \n\n6. An electronic copy of all reports and publications based on the requested data will be sent to the Department  \n\nThe following rules apply to micro data released by the the Department of Census and Statistics.\n\n* Only the request of Government Institutions, Recognized Universities, Students, and selected international agencies are entertained. However, the Data useres are required to strictly adhere to the term stipulated in the agreement form.\n\n* All the data request should be made to Director General (DG) of the DCS as teh sole authority of releasing data is vested with the DG of the DCS. The DCS of Sri Lanka reserves sole right to approve or reject any data request made depending on the confidential nature of the data set and intended purpose of the study or analysis.\n\n* Request for micro data should be made through the agreement form designed by DCS for this purpose (From D.R.1). The agreement form should be filled in triplicate and the Study\/project proposal should accompany the filled agreement form. If requests are made fro the micro data of more than one survey, a separete agreement should be signed.\n\n* If the data request is from a student a letter frome the respective Dept. Head\/Dean\/Supervisor, recommending the issue of data, should also be accompanied.\n\n* If the request is approved only 25% of the data file is released at the first stage. The release of the total data file is considered only after reviewing the draft report prepared on the basis of the 25% sample data file.\n\n* The released Data file should be used only for the specific study\/Analysis mentioned in the agreement form and shall not be used for any other purpose without the prior approval of the Director general of the DCS. Moreover, Copies of the micro-data file, obtained from the DCS, shall not be giving to anyone else without the prior written approval of the Director General of the DCS.\n\n* The draft report of the Study\/Analysis should be submitted to the DCS and the concurrence of the DG of the DCS, should be obtained before publishing it. Once published, a copy of the final report should be submitted to the DCS.\n\nNote - [Department = The Department of Census and Statistics (DCS)]\nSource : http:\/\/www.statistics.gov.lk\/databases\/data%20dissemination\/DataDissaPolicy_2007Oct26n.pdf","disclaimer":"The Department of Census and Statistics bears no responsibility for any results or interpretations arising from the secondary use of the data."}}},"schematype":"survey"}