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Magnitude of substance use and associated factors among pregnant women attending antenatal care at jimma town public health facilities, jimma zone, oromia regional state, southwest Ethiopia, 2017

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dc.contributor.author Lalisa Ayele
dc.contributor.author Fekadu Yadessa
dc.contributor.author Dagmawit Birhanu
dc.date.accessioned 2020-12-14T07:28:05Z
dc.date.available 2020-12-14T07:28:05Z
dc.date.issued 2017-06
dc.identifier.uri http://10.140.5.162//handle/123456789/3455
dc.description.abstract Background: Use of substance such as alcohol, khat leaves and tobacco have long been recognized as one of the leading causes of human suffering and become one of the rising major public health and socioeconomic problem worldwide. There was no studies conducted to investigate the prevalence and associated factors of substance use among pregnant women in the study area. Objective: Toassess the magnitude of substance use and associated factors among pregnant women attending antenatal care in Jimma Town public health facilities, southwest Ethiopia, 2017. Methods: Facility based cross sectional study design was conducted among pregnant women in Jimma Town public health facilities from March 10 to April 10/2017.A systematic random sampling technique was used to select a total of 296 study participants. Data was collected by interviewer administered structured questionnaire after pretest was done. The collected data was cleaned, coded and entered in to Epi data version 3.1 and exported to and analyzed using SPSSversion 21 statistical package. Multivariate logistic regressions models was fitted to control the effect of confounding variables. Adjusted Odds ratios calculated with 95% confidence intervals and α =5% with significant level of P<0.05. Results: The overall substance use prevalence was found to be 37.9 %.Factors associated with substance use among pregnant women were education status (being able to read and write) with (AOR= .091 95% CI: (.014, .574)), respondent’s husband occupational status being others (AOR=.188 95% CI:(.036, .974)), gestational age being second trimester(AOR= 3.325 95% CI: (1.298, 8.251)), and pregnant women who didn’t have a family history of substance use(AOR= .122 95% CI: (.066, .228)). Conclusion and recommendation: The overall prevalence of substance use among the pregnant women in this study was high. The study also revealed that educational status, family history of substance use, occupational status and gestational age were found to be associated with substance use. Health care providers and concerned bodies have to educate and counsel pregnant women and families about harmfulness of substance use for minimize its prevalence and associated factors of substance use. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.subject Substance use en_US
dc.subject pregnant women en_US
dc.subject magnitude en_US
dc.subject Jimma en_US
dc.subject Ethiopia en_US
dc.title Magnitude of substance use and associated factors among pregnant women attending antenatal care at jimma town public health facilities, jimma zone, oromia regional state, southwest Ethiopia, 2017 en_US
dc.type Thesis en_US


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