Zambia Sexual Behavior Survey 2009
General Info
Original or alternative title
Zambia Sexual Behaviour Survey (ZSBS) 2009
Provider
Coverage type
Country
Time period covered
June, 2009 - July, 2009
Data type
Survey:
Community - Cross-sectional - Household - Individual - Interview - Nationally representative - Urban-rural representative
Summary
The 2009 Zambia Sexual Behavior Survey (ZSBS) was the 5th of this series conducted in Zambia. The four previous ZSBS surveys were conducted in 1998, 2000, 2003, and 2005. The objective of the survey was to obtain national estimates for various indicators related to HIV, AIDS and STD program monitoring.
Two questionnaires were used, one for households and one for individuals. The household sample included 2,500 households of which 2,316 were enumerated. A total of 2,074 male and 2,206 female interviews were conducted. Males between the ages of 15 and 59 years and females between the age of 15 and 49 were eligible.
Keywords
Age at first sex, Alcohol use, Antenatal care, Birth certificates, Circumcision, Condoms, Counseling, Disability, Education, Electricity, Employment, Ethnicity, Family composition, Family planning, Family size, Female circumcision, Fertility, Health care use, Health literacy, Health promotion, Household deaths, Housing materials, Illicit drug use, Injections, Insecticide-treated bednets, Intimate partner violence, Literacy, Marital status, Mass media, Military service, Occupations, Pain, Parental survival, Pharmacies, Pregnancy, Private health facilities, Public health facilities, Religion, Reproductive and sexual risk factors, STDs, Sanitation, School enrollment, Sexual behavior, Sexual violence, Siblings, Summary birth history, Teachers, Telephones, Traditional medicine, Transportation, VCT, Water supply
Citation
Contributors
Suggested citation
Central Statistical Office (Zambia), MEASURE Evaluation Project, Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina, Ministry of Health (Zambia), University of Zambia, Zambian National AIDS Council. Zambia Sexual Behavior Survey 2009.