Factors Influencing Utilisation of Family Planning Services at Fort Portal Regional Referral Hospital, Kabarole District in Western Uganda
Family Planning was defined by the World Health Organization as a voluntary and informed decisionby an individual or couple on the number of children to have and when to have them. According to the2013 WHO facts sheet on Family Planning, “it was achieved mainly through the use of variouscontraceptive methods and treatment of involuntary infertility. The intervention for family planningreveals a contraceptive prevalence of 43. 1% which was way below the national target of 50% by 2020.This leaves 4 in 10 sexually active Ugandan women not using any form of contraception, including 3 in10 who express a desire to delay childbearing. This study intended to assess factors influencing theutilization of family planning services at Fort Portal Regional Referral Hospital, Western Uganda. Across-sectional, descriptive and analytical hospital-based study design was used to get 174 men andwomen of the reproductive age group at Fort Portal Regional Referral Hospital based on the Fischer etal., (1990) formula and the targeted 100% response rate was obtained however due to knowledge gaps,not all questions were answered 100% but a valid percentage was considered for the questions answered.Self-administered questionnaires were used, data was entered and reviewed for faults using MicrosoftExcel, and after transferred to STATA version 20 for analysis, presented in frequency and percentagecharts and tables with P-values and Odds ratios and their respective Confidence intervals wherenecessary. According to the findings, the proportion of people who use contraceptives was 44.91% ofthe participants at Fort Portal Regional Referral Hospital in Western Uganda. In multivariate analysis,socio-demographic factors like the education level of respondents that was to say tertiary had a P-valueof 0.004[COR(CI; 95%);1.00 (65-3.09)], place of residence that was to say urban had a P-value of0.003[COR(CI; 95%); 1.94 (1.35-4.92)], obstetric factors like history of abortion had a P-value of0.001[COR(CI; 95%); 2.15 (1.04-4.51)], and medical factors like HIV had a P-value of 0.028[COR(CI;95%); 1.94 (1.35-4.92)], and were significant and considered for the discussion because they had a P-valueof less than or equal to 0.05. The utilization of family planning services at Fort Portal Regional ReferralHospital remains low at 44.91% in comparison to the national target which is 50% as per Uganda.Similarly, socio-demographic factors like level of education and place of residency, obstetric factors likehistory of abortion and medical factors like HIV significantly influence the utilization of family planningservices at Fort Portal Regional Referral Hospital in Western Uganda.Keywords: Family Planning services, Contraceptive methods, Childbearing, Women