AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how women in Burkina Faso perceive the quality of family planning services and how this influences their willingness to use these services.
  • Respondents identified key factors affecting service quality, such as a welcoming atmosphere, effective communication, timely service, and confidentiality.
  • Despite some poor quality experiences, many women, particularly young and unmarried ones, chose to pursue family planning methods actively, demonstrating their commitment to health despite potential stigma.

Article Abstract

This qualitative study from Burkina Faso explores community-level perceptions of family planning (FP) service quality among FP users and non-users. It examines how perspectives on service quality may influence women's motivation to seek modern methods from health facilities. For this study, twenty focus group discussions were undertaken with non-users and current users of modern FP including unmarried, sexually active women ages 15-19 and 20-24 and ever married women ages 15-24 and 25+ in Bobo Dioulasso and Banfora, Burkina Faso. The findings demonstrate that respondents prioritized a welcoming environment, positive provider-client exchanges, the full provision of information (especially about side-effects), a pain-free experience, a short waiting time, and privacy and confidentiality. Poor service quality did not, in general, reduce women's demand or need to use a FP method. Some women who were reluctant to use formal health services used a non-facility-based method (calendar method, withdrawal, condoms or abstinence). Importantly, many unmarried, younger women and adolescents, who were more likely to be stigmatized by providers, exhibited agency by proactively seeking a method despite the potential for a negative experience. They prioritized their health and wellbeing over and above any interpersonal barriers they were likely to encounter. Incorporating strategies to improve the quality of FP services based on locally defined elements of quality should be a specific programmatic goal. These strategies can be identified through quality assessments employing a woman-centered lens. Women who visit facilities can be encouraged to share their positive experiences with their networks to improve community-level perspectives of facility quality. Improving service quality can attract new users, especially adolescents, and retain those who have already adopted a FP method. Through these multi-pronged actions, women's (and community) expectations and experience of quality can improve. This, in turn, may lead to greater client satisfaction and associated higher FP prevalence.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10065260PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001780DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

service quality
20
burkina faso
12
quality
10
qualitative study
8
family planning
8
planning service
8
women ages
8
service
6
women
5
method
5

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!