# Beyond individual choice: Exploring pathways linking couple dynamics with Unintended Pregnancy and Birth in India

**Authors:** Monika Lakhotia, Bhaswati Das, Rajesh Raushan, Rajesh Raushan, Rajesh Raushan

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0344370 · PLOS One · 2026-03-23

## TL;DR

The study explores how relationship dynamics between couples in India affect unintended pregnancies and births, highlighting the roles of gender norms and violence.

## Contribution

This study introduces a novel framework linking couple dynamics, health autonomy, and intimate partner violence to unintended pregnancy outcomes in India.

## Key findings

- Wives' health autonomy significantly reduces the risk of unintended pregnancies and births.
- Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) increases the likelihood of unintended pregnancies and births.
- Husbands' regressive sexual attitudes indirectly raise UPB by limiting wives' autonomy.

## Abstract

Couple power dynamics are known to influence sexual agency and reproductive health, yet this negotiation process within marital relationships remains empirically underexamined in India’s public health discourse. This study investigates Unintended Pregnancy and Birth (UPB) as an outcome associated with relational systems involving husbands’ sexual attitudes (normative context), wives’ health autonomy (negotiated agency), and Intimate Partner Violence (IPV; structural constraint). Using a sample of 19,896 couples from NFHS-5 (2019−21), we conducted bivariate and multivariate logistic regressions to identify patterns of UPB. Subsequently, a Generalized Structural Equation Model (GSEM) was used to test the mediating role of wives’ health autonomy on the pathway between husbands’ attitudes and UPB. To explore the moderating role of IPV between wives’ health autonomy and UPB, we used an interaction term. Findings show that overall, 8.30% of pregnancies and births are unintended. While wives’ health autonomy significantly reduces the risk of UPB, IPV act as the persistent structural constraint that elevates UPB. Furthermore, husbands’ regressive sexual attitudes, reflecting a normative climate of sexual entitlement, indirectly increased the likelihood of UPB by significantly restricting wives’ health autonomy. These findings highlight how intimate power asymmetries and normative constraints shape reproductive experiences. Addressing UPB, which reflects compromised autonomy and gender control, requires gender-transformative approaches that go beyond individual interventions to challenge inequitable norms, engage both partners and strengthen agency within intimate relationships to support reproductive well-being.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** violent (MESH:D001523), Sexual violence (MESH:D050035), Unintended Pregnancy and (MESH:D011254), failure of reproductive control (MESH:C536209), unintended birth (MESH:D000014), sexually transmitted infection (MESH:D012749), abortion (MESH:D000026), IPV (MESH:C563733), neonatal death (MESH:D066087), ACADEMIC EDITOR (MESH:D007859)
- **Chemicals:** PONE-D-25-63031R1 (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13008048/full.md

## References

45 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13008048/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13008048