1. Providers, Unmarried Young Women, and Post-Abortion Care in Kenya.
- Author
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Izugbara, Chimaraoke O., Egesa, Carolyne P., Kabiru, Caroline W., and Sidze, Estelle M.
- Subjects
ABORTION ,WOMEN ,FERTILITY ,TEENAGE pregnancy ,ADOLESCENT gynecology ,ATTITUDE (Psychology) ,FOCUS groups ,GYNECOLOGY ,HEALTH services accessibility ,MEDICAL personnel ,NURSES ,PHYSICIANS ,PREGNANT women ,QUESTIONNAIRES ,SINGLE people ,QUALITATIVE research - Abstract
Young women and girls in Kenya face challenges in access to abortion care services. Using in-depth and focus group interviews, we explored providers' constructions of these challenges. In general, providers considered abortion to be commonplace in Kenya; reported being regularly approached to offer abortion-related care and services; and articulated the structural, contextual, and personal challenges they faced in serving young post-abortion care (PAC) patients. They also considered induced abortion among young unmarried girls to be especially objectionable; stressed premarital fertility and out-of-union sexual activity among unmarried young girls as transgressive of respectable femininity and proper adolescence; blamed young women and girls for the challenges they reported in obtaining PAC services; and linked these challenges to young women's efforts to conceal their failures related to gender and adolescence, exemplified by pre-marital pregnancy and abortion. This study shows how providers' distinctive emphasis that young abortion care-seekers are to blame for their own difficulties in accessing PAC may add to the ongoing crisis of post-abortion care for young women and adolescent girls in Kenya. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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