大海捞针:利用来自两个撒哈拉以南非洲地区的受访者驱动的抽样数据,探索对人工流产安全性进行分类的替代操作方法。

IF 1.9 3区 医学 Q2 DEMOGRAPHY
Onikepe O Owolabi,Clémentine Rossier,Rachidatou Compaore,Caron Kim,Bela Ganatra,Ramatou Ouedraogo,Moussa Zan,Martin Bangha,Adama Baguiya,
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本研究旨在描述两地妇女堕胎的情况,探索更细致的堕胎安全分类方法,并研究堕胎安全与自我报告的健康结果之间的关系。我们分析了内罗毕贫民窟 551 名妇女和卡亚(Kaya)农村地区 479 名 15-49 岁妇女在研究前三年内报告的最近一次堕胎或唯一一次堕胎的数据,这些数据是通过受访者驱动的抽样调查获得的。根据最宽松的安全分类,安全堕胎的比例极低(内罗毕为 8%,布基纳法索为 5%)。很大一部分妇女报告使用了不明药片,我们推测这可能是药物流产。尽管报告有副作用的安全堕胎妇女比例较低,但更多的妇女报告了暗示感染的副作用,并就其症状寻求治疗。重要的是,我们应探索并逐步实现更细致的全球安全分类,以更准确地反映与不同方法相关的风险,并能反映妇女获得全面人工流产护理的情况及其对妇女健康的影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Searching for Needles in a Haystack: Exploring Alternative Operational Approaches to Classify the Safety of Induced Abortions Using Respondent-Driven Sampling Data From Two Sub-Saharan African Settings.
This study aims to describe the circumstances under which women obtained abortions in two sites, explore more nuanced approaches to classify abortion safety and examine the relationship between safety and self-reported health outcomes. We analyze data on the most recent abortion or only abortion reported by 551 women in Nairobi slums and 479 women in rural Kaya ages 15-49 years within the three years preceding the study, recruited via respondent-driven sampling. Using the most liberal safety classification, there were very few safe abortions (8 percent in Nairobi and 5 percent in Burkina Faso). A significant proportion of women reported using unidentified pills which we hypothesize may be medication abortion. Although a smaller proportion of women with safe abortions reported side effects, more of them reported side effects suggestive of infections and sought care for their symptoms. It is important that we explore and move towards more nuanced global safety classifications that more accurately reflect the risk associated with different methods and can capture women's access to comprehensive abortion care and its impact on their health.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.00
自引率
9.50%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: Studies in Family Planning publishes public health, social science, and biomedical research concerning sexual and reproductive health, fertility, and family planning, with a primary focus on developing countries. Each issue contains original research articles, reports, a commentary, book reviews, and a data section with findings for individual countries from the Demographic and Health Surveys.
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