The health sector in Mansa says modern family planning methods have dropped in the area because people preferred practicing traditional methods of child spacing.
This came to light yesterday during the Behavioral Change Communication (BCC) re-orientation workshop for Community Based Distributors (CBD) and Safe Motherhood Action Groups (SMAGs) which was organized by UNFPA in Mansa yesterday.
Giving a presentation on the importance of Family Planning, Senama Clinic Health Center staffer Marriet Mwale said that people are not in support of modern family planning methods which are a big challenge for the health institution.
Mrs. Mwale said that most women were not allowed to practice modern family planning by their spouses and resorted to traditional methods such as taking of marijuana seeds while others were using concoctions to prevent pregnancies.
She said that there were a lot of myths and beliefs surrounding the use of modern family planning which included the fear of contracting the HIV/AIDS virus because communities believe that injectable contraceptives contain the virus that causes AIDS.[quote]
She further said people also believe that contraceptive pills causes barrenness in women, continuous menstrual periods and that the pills allegedly caused cancer.
She added that on the use of condoms as a mode of contraceptive couples were not keen because they felt that there was no sexual satisfaction and that rural people believed that condoms were for those who are infected with the HIV/AIDS virus.
Mrs. Mwale explained that Senama Clinic with a catchment area of over 25 000 people has had about 754 women accessing antenatal clinic services between January and August 2009 adding that a total of 148 had tested HIV positive.
Mrs. Mwale said that 25% of the women accessed modern family planning adding the rest shunned the practices of family planning.
And Mansa UNFPA program officer Joyce Chabala said there was need to sensitize the communities on the importance and benefits of family planning.
Mrs. Chabala family planning reduced the risk of maternal deaths and that government wanted had put in place the policy of family planning in the health sector because women had the right to good health before, during and after giving birth.
ZANIS