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Table 5 Wealth-based inequalities in contraceptive use in endline and post-endline survey, according to MSS and GSM voucher programmes

From: Assessing the sustainability of two independent voucher-based family planning programs in Pakistan: a 24-months post-intervention evaluation

 

Coverage, (%)

Inequality assessment

Concentration index (x100)

Q1 (Poorest)

Q5 (Richest)

SII (Q5: Q1, % points)

RII (Q5:Q1)

MSS – single purpose voucher

Endline (2015)

  Modern method user

90.2 (83.7-94.2)

100

0.9 (-9.0 to 10.9)

1.0 (0.9 to 1.1)

-2.4 (-4.2 to -0.5)

  Traditional use

1.5 (0.38-5.9)

0

-2.3 (-5.8 to 1.1)

0.2 (-0.1 to 0.6)

-40.6 (-121.2 to 40.0)

Post-endline (2017)

  Modern method user

52.9 (41.0-64.6)

46.3 (34.6-58.3)

-9.4 (-27.8 to 0.1)

0.8 (0.5 to 1.1)

-10.0 (-15.8 to -4.2)

  Traditional use

NA

NA

4.5 (-4.2 to 13.1)

1.9 (-0.5 to 4.4)

15.3 (-10.0 to 40.6)

GSM – multipurpose voucher

Endline (2015)

  Modern method user

97.4 (83.5-99.7)

79.8 (72.0-85.9)

-15.7 (-27.2 to -4.1)

0.8 (0.7 to 0.9)

-6.3 (-8.7 to -3.9)

  Traditional use

0.00

2.3 (0.8-7.0)

-0.8 (-5.5 to 4.2)

0.8 (-0.2 to 1.9)

10.4 (-22.5 to 43.3)

Post-endline (2017)

  Modern method user

53.8 (41.6-65.6)

58.7 (46.1-70.3)

10.4 (-8.3 to 29.0)

1.2 (0.8 to 1.6)

-3.6 (-9.3 to -2.0)

  Traditional use

23.0 (14.3-35.0)

20.6 (12.3-32.5)

-5.6 (-21.1 to 9.9)

0.8 (0.2 to 1.3)

-0.3 (-12.4 to 11.8)

  1. SII Slope index of inequality, RII Relative index inequality, 95% CI 95% Confidence interval
  2. All equity analysis was adjusted for base and endline survey points