TY - JOUR ID - 42841 TI - Determinants of Fertility in Rural Women of Fars Province: Actual and Ideal Fertility and Fertility Intention JO - Journal of Health Sciences & Surveillance System JA - JHSSS LA - en SN - 2345-2218 AU - Javadi, Afshan AU - Ahmadi, Aliyar AU - Moradi, Fariba AU - Balaghi, Zohreh AU - Zarei, Nooshin AD - Health- vice chancellor, Shiraz University of medical sciences, Shiraz, Iran AD - Dept. of Sociology and Social Planning, Shiraz University, Shiraz, Iran AD - Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran AD - Health- vice chancellor, Shiraz University of Medical Science, Shiraz, Iran AD - Shiraz HIV/AIDS Research Center, Institute of Health, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences, Shiraz, Iran Y1 - 2017 PY - 2017 VL - 5 IS - 3 SP - 116 EP - 122 KW - Fertility intention KW - Ideal fertility KW - Actual fertility KW - Rural-women DO - N2 - Background: During the last two decades, fertility has declined to replacement level in rural areas of Iran. The current study investigated the determinant factors of actual and ideal fertility, and fertility intention in rural women of Fars province.Method: This is a cross-sectional study. The sample comprised 1301 rural married women aged 15 to 49 years in Fars province. Data were gathered in 2015 using structured questionnaires. Statistical analysis was run on STATA software, version 12.0. The semi-partial correlation was run to show the unique effect of each variable while controlling all the other variables. Finally, a multiple regression model was run with a significance level of 0.05. Results: The means(±SD) of actual and ideal fertility were 2.11±(1.32) and 2.81±(0.96), respectively, and for fertility intention it was 2.92±)1.00(. Age was the most determinant factor of actual, ideal fertility and fertility intention. The second effective factor was age at first birth. The determination coefficient for the actual fertility model showed that 62.1% of the variance in actual fertility was explained by age, age at first birth, woman’s education, and use of contraceptive methods. For ideal fertility and fertility intention, about 16.2% and 27.5% of the variance were explained by the independent variables, respectively.Conclusion: As a result of the rise in education and social position of younger women, the opportunity cost of having a child is more effective than ever. Therefore, fertility incentive policies could not be effective in increasing fertility, even in among rural population. UR - https://jhsss.sums.ac.ir/article_42841.html L1 - https://jhsss.sums.ac.ir/article_42841_6f0cb7779e692785ce793b4eb8336c68.pdf ER -