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Self-reported follow-up care needs can be met in both facility and self-managed abortion: Evidence from low- and middle-income countries. | LitMetric

Self-reported follow-up care needs can be met in both facility and self-managed abortion: Evidence from low- and middle-income countries.

Contraception

Health Systems & Policy, OHSU-PSU School of Public Health, Portland, OR, United States; Oregon Health and Science University, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Portland, OR, United States; Insituto Nacional de Salud Publica (INSP), Centro de Investigacion en Salud Poblacional (CISP), Cuernavaca, Mexico.

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to understand the follow-up care behavior of individuals who either self-managed medication abortions or received care from facilities in low-and-middle-income countries, focusing on person-centered care.
  • Using thematic analysis from 67 in-depth interviews, researchers classified participants based on whether their follow-up care needs were met, analyzing factors from the Anderson model of health services utilization.
  • Findings indicate that while 88% of participants had their needs met, various personal experiences, support systems, and knowledge significantly influenced their decision to seek follow-up care, with negative health system experiences serving as barriers for some.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To understand in-facility follow-up care-seeking behavior among both people who self-managed medication abortions and those who obtained facility-managed care in low-and-middle-income countries. We explore factors that contribute to meeting individual self-reported follow-up care needs, core to person-centered care.

Study Design: We conducted a qualitative, codebook thematic analysis of 67 in-depth interviews conducted with people who self-managed medication abortions or obtained facility-managed medication abortion care. We first classified individuals as having their follow-up care needs met (not seeking care when the participant felt confident that additional care was not warranted or desired or receiving care if it was desired) or not. Our a priori analytic domains came from the Anderson model of health services utilization - predisposing, enabling, or need factors (perceived and evaluated need for health services) that contributed to having follow-up care needs met or not. We also describe emergent themes within each domain.

Results: Most participants (n=59, 88%) had their follow-up care needs met; half (n=33, 49%) sought follow-up care in a facility. Prior birth or abortion experiences emerged as predisposing factors for having follow-up care needs met. Having accompaniment support (from activists or hotlines who provide abortion guidance outside of clinical settings), knowing what to expect, and information sources were key enabling factors for having follow-up care needs met. Need factors included flexible follow-up care guidelines. Those who did not have their follow-up care needs met described predisposing negative health system experiences; enabling factors including health system challenges, stigma from providers, and legal risk; and need factors of required follow-up care guidelines.

Conclusions: Medication abortion follow-up care experiences are diverse, and individual needs can be met both in and outside of health facilities. Understanding prior experiences, enabling accompaniment support, and considering flexible follow-up care guidelines can support meeting individual follow-up care needs, which is essential to person-centered abortion care.

Implications: Follow-up care needs, essential to ensuring access to high-quality abortion services, can be met in both self-managed and in-facility medication abortion models. Policies that require follow-up care when it is not needed or desired by the person can reinforce ideas that self-managed abortion is not safe or effective, despite existing evidence.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.contraception.2024.110700DOI Listing

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