尼日利亚西南部私营卫生保健提供者对年轻妇女避孕措施的偏见。

IF 4.4 3区 医学 Q1 Social Sciences
Maia Sieverding, Eric Schatzkin, Jennifer Shen, Jenny Liu
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引用次数: 35

摘要

背景:保健提供者在向青少年和年轻成年妇女提供避孕药具方面的偏见可能限制妇女获得避孕方法。方法:2016年6月,对尼日利亚西南部52家私营卫生保健机构和个人提供者各进行两次神秘客户访问。在一次访问中,神秘客户描绘了一个未婚,未婚的青少年,而在另一次访问中,客户描绘了一个有两个孩子的已婚成年妇女。在随后的深度访谈中,研究人员阅读了描述具有相同个人资料的假想客户的小短文,并询问他们将如何与每个客户互动。对神秘客户互动的描述性分析与访谈数据的专题分析相结合。结果:在更大比例的已婚档案访问比未婚档案访问,神秘客户报告说,提供者曾询问过去的避孕使用和方法偏好;相反的是,关于提供者使用的副作用,以劝阻客户实行避孕。在深入访谈中,提供者表达了对使用激素避孕药的未婚女性生育能力下降的担忧。提供者通常建议未婚客户使用避孕套、紧急避孕和避孕药,已婚客户使用长效避孕方法。各种背景的提供者通常解释限制避孕方法是为了保护年轻的未婚客户不损害其生育能力。结论:在尼日利亚西南部,向青少年和年轻成年妇女提供避孕药具的提供者偏见可能会影响护理质量和方法选择。减少提供者偏见的干预措施应超越技术培训,以解决导致提供者实施无证据限制的潜在社会文化信仰。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Bias in Contraceptive Provision to Young Women Among Private Health Care Providers in South West Nigeria.

Context: Health care providers' biases regarding the provision of contraceptives to adolescent and young adult women may restrict women's access to contraceptive methods.

Methods: Two mystery client visits were made to each of 52 private-sector health care facilities and individual providers in South West Nigeria in June 2016. In one visit, the mystery client portrayed an unmarried, nulliparous adolescent, and in the other, the client portrayed a married adult woman with two children. During subsequent in-depth interviews, providers were read vignettes describing hypothetical clients with these same profiles, and were asked how they would interact with each. Descriptive analyses of mystery client interactions were combined with thematic analyses of the interview data.

Results: In greater proportions of married-profile visits than of unmarried-profile visits, mystery clients reported that providers had asked about past contraceptive use and method preference; the opposite was true in regard to providers' using side effects to dissuade clients from practicing contraception. In in-depth interviews, providers expressed concerns about fertility loss among unmarried women who used hormonal contraceptives. Providers more commonly recommended condoms, emergency contraception and the pill for unmarried clients, and longer-acting methods for married clients. The restriction of methods was typically explained by providers of various backgrounds in terms of protecting younger, unmarried clients from damaging their fertility.

Conclusions: Provider bias in the provision of contraceptives to adolescent and young adult women in South West Nigeria may affect quality of care and method choice. Interventions to reduce provider bias should go beyond technical training to address the underlying sociocultural beliefs that lead providers to impose restrictions that are not based on evidence.

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