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Reproductive Health Matters
An international journal on sexual and reproductive health and rights
Volume 6, 1998 - Issue 11: Women's health services
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Original Articles

Postinor use among young women in Southwestern Nigeria: A research note

Pages 107-114 | Published online: 01 May 1998

References

  • The manufacturer is Gedeon Richter Ltd, Budapest, Hungary. See Seregely G, and Vero T, 1981. Postcoital contraception with 0.75 mg d-norgestrel (Postinor). Therapia Hungarica. 29(1):31–3.
  • N. Nogc, C. Ellertson, Y. Surarang. Knowledge and attitudes about emergency contraception among health workers in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam. International Family Planning Perspectives. 23(2): 1997; 6872.
  • Havanon N, Kanchanasinith K, Potter L. Study of Postinor use by drugstore clients. (Unpublished, undated study in Thailand.
  • C. Ellertson, B. Winikoff, E. Armstrong. Expanding access to emergency contraception in developing countries. Studies in Family Planning. 26(5): 1995; 251–263.
  • Task Force on Post-ovulatory Methods for Fertility Regulation. Postcoital contraception with levonorgestrel during the periovulatory phase of the menstrual cycle. Contraception. 36(3): 1987; 275–286.
  • C. He, Y. Shi, J. Xu. A multicenter clinical study of two types of levonorgestrel tablets administered for Postcoital contraception. International Journal of Gynecology and Obstetrics. 36: 1991; 43–48.
  • After realising that some village women had used Postinor, we began asking women if they had heard of Postinor as part of the survey. Of the 29 women who had heard of Postinor, 8 women had post-secondary education whereas only 10 of the 249 women who had not heard of it had post-secondary educatio.
  • G. Seregely. Results of a multicentre trial of Postinor. Therapia Hungarica. 30(2): 1982; 72–78.
  • P.C. Ho, M.S.W. Kwan. A prospective randomized comparison of levonogestrel with the Yuzpe regimen in Postcoital contraception. Human Reproduction. 8: 1993; 389–392.
  • WHO (forthcoming.
  • Data on marital status was missing for two wome.
  • One women said she had been using Postinor for four months; four others said they had used it from two to four years; none reported problems with Postinor except one woman, who had experienced bleeding the first time she used i.
  • M. Farkas, G. Apro, M. Sas. Clinico-pharmacological examination of Postinor (0.75mg d-norgestrel). Therapia Hungarica. 29(1): 1981; 22–30. This paper argues that Postinor is particularly suitable for nulliparous young women as the IUD is not recommended for them and there is no post-pill amenorrhoea associated with its postcoital us.
  • For example, one woman who had missed a period went to a pharmacy to purchase M&B 7/60 tablets ‘to confirm’ (as she put it) whether she was pregnant. The pharmacist recommended that she take Postinor instead, which she di.
  • Recent issues of two Nigerian women’s magazines at the time of the interviews, Poise and Hints, contained no advertisements for Postinor, nor were there promotional displays in the pharmacies I visite.
  • Havanon et al. ([31 above) found that friends were the main source of Postinor information among Thai men and women interviewed in Chou Buri Province. In Hungary, Gedeon Richter officials believe that information about Postinor among young women is spread there mainly by word of mouth. S. Camp. Postinor-the unique method of emergency contraception developed in Hungary. Se. Planned Parenthood in Europe. 24(2): 1995; 23–24.
  • A. Buckley. Yoruba Medicine. 1985; Clarendon Press: Oxford.
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  • C. Chouwen Reproductive health seeking behaviour and preference status of contraceptive and health care providers among adolescents in South Western Nigeria (abstract) International Conference on AIDS. 7–12 July, Vancouver 1996
  • E.P. Renne. The pregnancy that doesn’t stay: the practice and perception of abortion by Ekiti Yoruba women. Social Science and Medicine. 42(4): 1996; 483–494.
  • A. Glasier, E. Ketting, V. Palan. Case studies in emergency contraception from six countries. International Family Planning Perspectives. 22(2): 1996; 60.
  • J. Caldwell, P. Caldwell. Marital status and abortion in sub-Saharan Africa. C. Bledsoe, G. Pison. Nuptialityin Sub-Saharan Afiica: Current Changes and Impact on Fertility. 1994; Clarendon Press: Oxford, 274–295.
  • F. Coeytaux. Induced abortion in sub-Saharan Africa: what we do and do not know. Studies in Family Planning. 19(3): 1988; 186–190.
  • F. Okonofua, A. Ilumoka. Prevention ofMorbidity and Mortality from Unsafe Abortion in Nigeria. 1993; Population Council: New York.
  • P. Olusanya. Evolution and status of family planning in Nigeria,. Developments in Family Planning Policies and Programmes in Africa. 1989; University of Ghana: Legon.
  • R. Pittin. The control of reproduction: principles and practice in Nigeria. Review of African Political Economy. 35: 1986; 40–53.
  • J. Caldwell, I. Orubuloye, P. Caldwell. Fertility decline in Africa: a new type oftransition?. Population and Development Review. 18: 1992; 211–242.
  • A. Olukoya. Pregnancy termination: results of a community-based study in Lagos, Nigeria. International Journal of Gynecology and Obstetrics. 25(1): 1987; 41–46.
  • For beliefs about the dangers associated with particular contraceptives by Ekiti Yoruba women and men, se. E.P. Renne. Condom use and the popular press in Nigeria. Health Transition Review. 3(1): 1993; 41–56.
  • Renne. Local and institutional interpretations of IUDs in Southwestern Nigeria. Social Science and Medicine. 44(8): 1997; 1141–1148.
  • E. Weisberg. Fertility after discontinuation of oral contraceptives. For a discussion of the higher susceptibility of young women with irregular menstrual cycles to post-pill amenorrhoea, se. Clinical Reproduction and Fertility. 1: 1984; 261–272.
  • S. Becker, K. Feyisetan, P. Makinwa-Adebusoye. The effect of the sex of interviewers on the quality of data in a Nigerian family planning questionnaire. Studies in Family Planning. 26(4): 1995; 233–240.
  • I. Okagbue. Pregnancy termination and the law in Nigeria. Studies in Family Planning. 21: 1990; 197–208.
  • P. Makinwa-Adebusoye, S. Singh, S. Audam. Nigerian health professionals’ perceptions about abortion practice. International Family Planning Perspectives. 23(4): 1997; 155–161.
  • Consortium for Emergency Contraception. Update on emergency contraception, October 1997. Emergency Contraception Newsletter. 1997. (Internet.

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