CHILDLESSNESS AND SOCIO-CULTURAL
IMPACT ON MARRIED COUPLES
A CASE STUDY OF IDAH COMMUNITY IN
KOGI STATE
ABSTRACT
The research is an in-depth analysis
of childlessness and socio-cultural impact on married couples in idah urban
community of Kogi State. The study explored ways of reducing pressure both from
the family and the society as a whole with particular reference to examining
the existing causes and effects of infertility in the society. The instrument
for data collection used for this research was questionnaire. The sampling
techniques used for this study was cross-sectional survey research design. One
hundred (100) respondents were randomly selected. The data collected were
analyzed using tables and percentages. From the analysis of the data, it was
found that programmers‟ like marriage forum in idah urban community could help
reduce feeling of inferiority complex among childless couples. Negative
attitude of childless couples towards child adoption and the significant
relationship between childless couples and leadership role were found. The
findings from the study necessitated certain recommendations which include the
fact that childless couples should seek for medical treatment jointly instead
of allowing one partner to carry the burden alone among others.
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND TO THE STUDY
In idah urban community, as in most other parts of the
country, procreation is one of the major functions of the family. Every man
take a wife apparently to have children with them, where this main purpose for
marriage is not forth coming into fulfillment, it is then result to tension in
most cases which lead to misunderstanding and disputes in the family. In
traditional igala society, many wives try to ensure the procreation of children
to its fullest limit.
For most of history, childlessness has been regarded
as great personal tragedy involving much emotional pain and grief, especially
when it is resulted from failure to conceive or from the death of a child
(Mail, Charlene, 1986). Before conception was well understood, childlessness
was usually blamed on the woman and this in itself added to the high level
negative emotional and social effects of childlessness. Some wealthy families
also adopted children as a means of providing heirs incase of childlessness or
where no son had been born, the monetary incentives offered by
westerners desire for children is so strong that a commercial market in the
child laundering business exists (McCurry, 2005).
1.2 STATEMENT OF PROBLEM
Throughout the world and particularly
in African societies, igala land not exempted, the word “childlessness” sends a
cold signal to the ears of listener and a sense of pity is immediately aroused
in the mind. In igala land, children are regarded as great treasure to their
parents, relations and their immediate community. Many people suffer from
childlessness for so many reasons such as drug abuse, hard drugs effect,
contraception, numerous abortions, and genetically inherited sickness and in
most cases, psychological problems.
The number of childless couples is
tremendously on the increase, this is evident to the fact that attempts to
initiate a move which would have been directed towards adoption is taken with
serious resistance in some places mostly by couples without even a child.
Meanwhile, most couples are childless as a result of the degree of their
waywardness while they were youths or younger and unmarried, such as illicit
use of drugs in order to avoid pregnancy (Ugwuanyi, 1999).
In idah urban community,
childlessness is echoed by the fact that most couples are not aware of the
prevalence of medical treatment; this therefore makes them not to seek medical
assistance for such form of ailment. According to Nwapa (2004), some couples
attribute their problem of childlessness to the supernatural, the hope in God
that gives children to remember them at the appropriate time while some couples
usually fall back to the fact that adoption, they are comforted for being
biological infertile, they no longer want to know the cause of their
infertility and solve it or get rid of it Hales, (2000).
According to Dike (2013), the police
have smashed a suspected syndicate whose alleged stock in trade was defrauding
desperate barren women through false miracle babies. He also narrated the agony
of a 61year old barren woman who travel to port Harcourt to consult miracle
workers God was using to bless the barren and make them fruitful, they told her
to pay #1.5 million, she paid the money and was given some seed to eat, after
eating it, she began to stool. It took about nine months before the miracle workers
told her that God had answered her prayers, this is the plight of childless
woman.
This study is therefore intended to
carry out a survey to find out what childlessness means and the social problems
associated with childlessness in Idah urban community.
1.3 RESEARCH QUESTIONS
These research questions will guide
the study
i. Are childless couples in Idah
urban community aware of the medical treatment of infertility?
ii. To what extent have childless
couples sort for medical solution to their problems in Idah community?
iii. What are the factors that have
affected the fertility of couples in Idah urban community?
iv. What has been the attitude of
childless couples towards child adoption as a way out of their problems?
v. What is the socio-cultural impacts
of childlessness couples are on marries couples in Idah urban community?
1.4 OBJECTIVES OF THE STUDY
The main purpose of this study
includes:
i. To know if childless coupled in
idah urban community are aware of medical treatment for infertility.
ii. To find out the extent to which
childless couples sort for medical solutions to their problems in idah urban
community.
iii. To examine those factors that
are responsible for infertility of couples in Idah community.
iv. To find out what has been the
attitude of childless couples towards child adoption as a form of solution to
their problems.
v. To determine the socio-cultural
impact of childlessness on married couples in Idah urban community and the
socio-cultural situation of the society at large.
1.5 SIGNIFICANCE OF THE STUDY
These research work has both
practical and theoretical significance.
PRATICAL SIGNIFICANCE
This study will be of great practical
significance to the couples and the entire society revealing to the prevalence
of medical solutions to the childlessness which can be handled by experts in
the medical field, also be enlightened enough to seek medical solutions to
their problem and do away with superstitious belief. It will also make the
society to learn to accept childless couples as they are and as respected
members in the society.
THEORITICAL SIGNIFICANCE
Other researchers in the same topic
will find this work valuable. This study will add to the existing body of
knowledge and create room for further research where necessary on the
socio-cultural and economic impact on married couples. It will also provide
necessary and vital data on how childlessness creates problems in the family
and society at large. It will also be a good guide to future couples who may
find it difficult to conceive and bear their own children.
1.6 DEFINITIONS OF CONCEPTS
i. Adoption: A non-biological
child of a family but legally accepted as a member of that family.
ii. Childless: The inability
to conceive and bear a child for married couples. It may have personal, social
and or political significance (Peter, N. 2010). They are two distinguishable
types of childlessness, voluntary and involuntary, voluntary childlessness is
described as childfree, it is a consequence of having made a decision not to
produce. To be childless not by choice is defined as involuntary childlessness
(Miall Charlene, 1986).
iii. Contraception: It refers
to a drug, device or practice used to prevent a woman from becoming pregnant.
iv. Couple: This refers to a
man and woman united in marriage.
v. Culture: According to
Edward Tylor (1871), culture is that complex whole which includes knowledge,
belief, art, law, morals, customs and any other capabilities and habits
acquired by man as a member of society.
vi. Fertility: The ability to
conceive after sexual intercourse.
vii. Infertility: The
inability to conceive after a period of 12months of uncontrollable sexual
intercourse (Billings, 2000).
viii. Inheritance: This refers
to an ownership of certain property after the death of the original owner.
ix. Linage: The series of
families that one belongs to or descends from.
x. Sexual Intercourse: The
physical activity of sex played by couples in order for them to procreate.
xi. Surrogate Mother: This
refers to where one act as, serve as or a mother substitute. A woman who bears
a child for another person, often for pay, either through artificial
insemination or by carrying until birth another mother‟s surgical operation.
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