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An examination of the barriers to and benefits from collaborative couple contraceptive use in Rwanda.

Hilary M SchwandtAngel BoulwareJulia CoreyAna HerreraEthan HudlerClaudette ImbabaziIlia KingJessica LinusInnocent ManziMadelyn MerrittLyn MezierAbigail MillerHaley MorrisDieudonne MusemakweliUwase MusekuraDivine MutuyimanaChimene NtakarutimanaNirali PatelAdriana ScanteianuBiganette-Evidente ShemezaMadi StapletonGi'anna Sterling-DonaldsonChantal UmutoniLyse UweraMadeleine ZeilerSeth Feinberg
Published in: Reproductive health (2021)
Family planning providers at the community and clinic levels encourage collaborative contraceptive use among couples and some Rwandan couples communicate well about family planning use. Despite the positives, women are expected to source family planning information, share that information with their male partners, seek out family planning services, and use family planning. If more Rwandan male partners accepted use, used male methods of contraception, and participated even more in the work it takes to use family planning, the potential for sustained, and even enhanced, contraceptive use in Rwanda could be realized.
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