Objectives: To study clinician perspectives on the feasibility of incorporating family planning services within office-based addiction treatment (OBAT) clinics. We sought to understand the unique facilitators of and barriers to the integration of contraceptive services within the OBAT model with a goal to support the design and implementation of a program tailored to meet the reproductive health needs of patients with substance use disorder.
Methods: After obtaining institutional review board approval, we conducted qualitative semistructured interviews with OBAT clinicians (registered nurses, advanced practice registered nurses, and physicians) at a tertiary-care safety-net hospital.
Objectives: A preimplementation study to examine the context of, and barriers and facilitators to, providing early pregnancy loss care in one emergency department (ED), to inform implementation strategies to improve ED-based early pregnancy loss care.
Study Design: We recruited a purposive sample of participants and conducted semistructured individual qualitative interviews focused on caring for patients experiencing pregnancy loss in the ED until saturation was reached. For analysis, we used framework coding and directed content analysis.
Objective: To explore Black women's lived experiences of racism and the associated effects on reproductive health decisions and the reproductive health care experience.
Methods: We recruited participants through social media and community outreach. We conducted semi-structured individual interviews focusing on Black women's lived experiences of racism and their effects on reproductive health.