Inzama, Wilfred, Kaye, Dan K., Kayondo, Simon P., and Nsanja, John P.
Subjects
*ABORTION statistics, *HEALTH information systems, *ABORTION, *DILATATION & curettage, *ABORTION clinics, *HIGH-income countries
Abstract
Globally, 25% of pregnancies end up in induced abortion, the majority of which are unsafe. Abortion is safe when conducted according to WHO recommendations. The objective of the present study was to identify gaps in the data published on abortion and make recommendations to the Ministry of Health, Uganda. The search strategy included PubMed, Google Scholar articles (from October 2020 to May 2021) on unsafe abortion in Uganda, reviewed data from the Association of Obstetricians and Gynecologists of Uganda (AOGU) members' baseline survey (2019), Health Management Information System (HMIS) summary data (2015–2016 to 2019–2020), and the Uganda Demographic and Heath Survey (DHS) report (2011, 2016). From the 200 articles and national health surveys identified, 37 articles and two national representative surveys met our criteria: prevalence, factors, estimating cost of induced abortion, and complications associated with safe and unsafe abortion in both low‐ and high‐income countries. There are many unsafe abortions in restrictive environments. Abortion is one of the leading causes of maternal and morbidity. Physicians favor dilatation and curettage over manual vacuum aspiration and medical methods for the evacuation of retained products. Several gaps still exist in the published articles, HMIS data, and DHS data, leading to missed opportunities for data to inform policy and practice. Synopsis: While the Government of Uganda should ensure that women have safe and affordable access to contraceptives, abortion services, and post‐abortion care, there are marked gaps in the available published data on abortion to inform policy and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
*ABORTION, *COUNSELING, *ABORTION statistics, *CROSS-sectional method, *CONTRACEPTION, *TOBACCO use
Abstract
To investigate factors associated with multiple induced abortions. A multi-centre cross-sectional survey among abortion-seeking women (n = 623;14-47y) in Sweden, 2021. 'Multiple abortions' was defined as having had ≥2 induced abortions. This group was compared to women with a previous experience of 0-1 induced abortion. Regression analysis was conducted to determine independent factors associated with multiple abortions. 67.4% (n = 420) reported previous experience of 0-1 abortion, and 25.8% (n = 161) ≥2 abortions (42 women chose to not respond). Several factors were associated with multiple abortions, but when adjusted in the regression model, the following factors remained; parity ≥1 (OR = 2.96, 95%CI [1.63, 5.39]), low education (OR = 2.40, 95%CI [1.40, 4.09]), tobacco use (OR = 2.50, 95%CI [1.54, 4.07]) and exposure to violence over the last year (OR = 2.37, 95%CI [1.06, 5.29]). More women in the group who had 0-1 abortion (n = 109/420) believed they could not become pregnant at the time of conception, compared to women who had ≥2 abortions (n = 27/161), p=.038. Mood swings, as a contraceptive side-effect, were more often reported among women with ≥2 abortions (n = 65/161), compared to those with 0-1 abortion (n = 131/420), p=.034. Multiple abortions is associated with vulnerability. Sweden provides high quality and accessible comprehensive abortion care; however, counselling must be improved both to achieve contraceptive adherence and identify and address domestic violence. Seeking multiple abortions is common in Sweden, and is associated with parity, low education, tobacco use, and exposure to violence. Although Sweden provides high quality and accessible comprehensive abortion care, counselling must be adaptable and address specific needs in vulnerable groups. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Hurley, Emily A., Goggin, Kathy, Piña-Brugman, Kimberly, Noel-MacDonnell, Janelle R., Allen, Andrea, Finocchario-Kessler, Sarah, and Miller, Melissa K.
Background: Individuals with substance use disorders (SUD) have disproportionately high rates of unintended pregnancy. Reducing harm associated with this risk and its biopsychosocial consequences requires evidence-based, non-coercive interventions that ensure access to contraception for individuals who choose to prevent pregnancy. We examined feasibility and impact of SexHealth Mobile, a mobile unit-based intervention that aimed to increase access to patient-centered contraceptive care for individuals in SUD recovery programs. Methods: We conducted a quasi-experimental study (enhanced usual care [EUC] followed by intervention) at three recovery centers with participants (n = 98) at risk for unintended pregnancy. EUC participants were offered printed information on community locations where they could access contraception care. SexHealth Mobile participants were offered same-day, onsite clinical consultation on a medical mobile unit and contraception if desired. The primary outcome was use of contraception (hormonal or intrauterine device) at one-month post-enrollment. Secondary outcomes were at two-weeks and three-months. Confidence in preventing unintended pregnancy, reasons for non-use of contraception at follow-up, and intervention feasibility were also assessed. Results: Participants (median age = 31, range 19–40) enrolled in the intervention period were almost 10 times more likely to be using contraception at one-month (51.5%) versus the those enrolled in the EUC period (5.4%) (unadjusted relative risk [URR] = 9.3 [95%CI: 2.3–37.1]; adjusted relative risk [ARR] = 9.8 [95%CI: 2.4–39.2]). Intervention participants were also more likely to be using contraception at 2-weeks (38.7% vs. 2.6%; URR = 14.3 [95%CI: 2.0–104.1]) and three-months (40.9% vs. 13.9%; URR = 2.9 [95% CI: 1.1–7.4]). EUC participants reported more barriers (cost, time) and less confidence in preventing unintended pregnancies. Mixed-methods feasibility data indicated high acceptability and feasible integration into recovery settings. Conclusions: Mobile contraceptive care based on principles of reproductive justice and harm reduction reduces access barriers, is feasible to implement in SUD recovery settings, and increases contraception use. Expanding interventions like SexHealth Mobile may help reduce harm from unintended pregnancies among individuals in SUD recovery. Trial Registration NCT04227145. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Japan, having had the longest isolationist policy in the world, is averse to options, such as migration to increase the population. What kinds of pronatalist policies to increase fertility and lower the population's age are ethical? Two questions can be raised: is it ethical for the government to intercede, and is it ethical for individuals to exercise this choice? In addition to the gradually decreasing birth rate, Japan is faced with the challenge of a possible sharp decline in the birth rate in 5 years. Astrology and superstition have influenced the sex preference of a child in Japan, and in 1966, there was a 26% drop in the birth rate. It was the year of Hinoeuma, occurring at 60-year intervals, and women born that year are believed to have a potentially dangerous 'headstrong temperament' and murder their husbands. Abortion rates spiked that year, and many forged the birth date of their child. The next Hinoeuma is in 2026. Although the bioethical debate about pronatalism exists in the literature, there is no literature addressing the question of sex selection in the context of a decreasing population. This paper argues that even if the Japanese government's current pronatalist approach is ethically warranted, it should not extend to sex selection since it would promote misogyny and stereotypical gender roles. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
At the same time, most programs focus more on indicators that measure health status, service provision or utilization, or the success of reproductive health interventions at the subnational level (WHO, [40]). Data for these indicators come from nationally representative surveys such as the Demographic and Health Surveys and Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys, but not all countries conduct these surveys on a regular basis or conduct them using the same population (e.g., exclusion of unmarried youth), and there are limitations to the measures derived from them (e.g., the fixed age range). In August of 2021, the Editorial Committee of I Studies in Family Planning i put out a call for abstracts for a special issue focused on indicators in sexual and reproductive health and rights. Another prevalent theme in the papers in this special issue involves the need for better measurement of psychosocial and socioecological factors that influence sexual and reproductive health-related behaviors. [Extracted from the article]
Objectives. To describe minors' use of judicial bypass to access abortion and the percentage of bypass petitions denied in Florida and Texas. Methods. Data were derived from official state statistics on judicial bypasses and abortions by age in Texas and Florida; abortions in Texas among minor nonresidents were estimated. In addition, judicial bypass petitions as a percentage of abortions received by minors and judicial bypass denials as a percentage of petitions were calculated. Results. Between 2018 and 2021, minors received 5527 abortions in Florida and an estimated 5220 abortions in Texas. Use of judicial bypass was stable at 14% to 15% in Florida and declined from 14% to 10% in Texas. Among petitions for judicial bypass, denials increased in Florida from 6% to a maximum of 13% and remained stable in Texas at 5% to 7%. Conclusions. Minors' use of judicial bypass in Texas and Florida is substantial. The percentage of denials is higher and increasing in Florida. Public Health Implications. Minors who need confidential abortion care may now be forced to seek judicial bypass far from home. Parental involvement laws in states that do not ban abortion will compound barriers to abortion care. (Am J Public Health. 2023;113(3):316–319. https://doi.org/10.2105/10.2105/AJPH.2022.307173) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Background: Abortion-related complications contribute to preventable maternal mortality, accounting for 9.8% of maternal deaths globally, and 15.6% in sub-Saharan Africa. High-quality postabortion care (PAC) can mitigate the negative health outcomes associated with unsafe abortion. While the expanded Global Gag Rule policy did not prohibit the provision of PAC, other research has suggested that over-implementation of the policy has resulted in impacts on these services. The purpose of this study was to assess health facilities' capacity to provide PAC services in Uganda and PAC and safe abortion care (SAC) in Ethiopia during the time in which the policy was in effect. Methods: We collected abortion care data between 2018 and 2020 from public health facilities in Ethiopia (N = 282) and Uganda (N = 223). We adapted a signal functions approach to create composite indicators of health facilities' capacity to provide basic and comprehensive PAC and SAC and present descriptive statistics documenting the state of service provision both before and after the GGR went into effect. We also investigate trends in caseloads over the time-period. Results: In both countries, service coverage was high and improved over time, but facilities' capacity to provide basic PAC services was low in Uganda (17.8% in 2019) and Ethiopia (15.0% in 2020). The number of PAC cases increased by 15.5% over time in Uganda and decreased by 7% in Ethiopia. Basic SAC capacity increased substantially in Ethiopia from 66.7 to 82.8% overall, due in part to an increase in the provision of medication abortion, and the number of safe abortions increased in Ethiopia by 9.7%. Conclusions: The findings from this analysis suggest that public health systems in both Ethiopia and Uganda were able to maintain essential PAC/SAC services during the GGR period. In Ethiopia, there were improvements in the availability of safe abortion services and an overall improvement in the safety of abortion during this time-period. Despite loss of partnerships and potential disruptions in referral chains, lower-level facilities were able to expand their capacity to provide PAC services. However, PAC caseloads increased in Uganda which could indicate that, as hypothesized, abortion became more stigmatized, less accessible and less safe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Texas counties with greater abortion-rate declines had more publicly funded contraceptive clinics and served more contraceptive clients than counties with lower abortion-rate declines. OBJECTIVE: To evaluate how the availability of contraceptive services was associated with a change in the abortion rate before and after Texas' legislative changes to the family planning budget in 2011 and abortion access in 2013. METHODS: In this cross-sectional study, we obtained 2010 and 2015 data on contraceptive provision (number of publicly funded clinics and number of contraceptive clients served per 1,000 reproductive-aged women) from the Guttmacher Institute and county-level abortion data from the Texas Department of State Health Services. We categorized counties as having an abortion rate that increased or declined less than the national rate between 2010 and 2015 (low-decline counties) compared with those having an abortion rate that declined equal to or greater than the national rate between 2010 and 2015 (high-decline counties). We evaluated differences in contraceptive provision between high-decline and low-decline counties and evaluated county characteristics (racial and ethnic composition, unemployment, poverty, uninsured, education, distance to an abortion clinic, deliveries covered by Medicaid, and Catholic hospital marketplace dominance) as potential confounders. RESULTS: Of 157 counties that had at least one contraceptive clinic in either 2010 or 2015, 49 were low-decline counties and 108 were high-decline counties. Although the total number of publicly funded family planning clinics increased by 10.8%, there was a 4.7% decrease in the total number of contraceptive clients served statewide. Compared with low-decline counties, high-decline counties had a higher median number of contraceptive clients served per 1,000 women aged 18–44 years (31.9 vs 60.7, P <.05) in 2015. Between 2010 and 2015, the abortion rate decreased 19.7% for each 1.0% increase in contraceptive clients served. CONCLUSION: Texas counties with higher abortion-rate declines had more publicly funded contraceptive clinics and served more contraceptive clients than counties with lower declines, which may indicate the importance of greater access to publicly funded contraceptive services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
This cohort study analyzes suicide rates among reproductive-aged women from 1974 to 2016 to determine their association with state-level legislative policies surrounding abortion and restricted access to reproductive care. Key Points: Question: Are state-level legislative policies surrounding abortion or restricted access to reproductive care related to women's suicide rates in the United States? Findings: In this longitudinal ecologic study with a difference-in-differences analysis, the enforcement of laws restricting access to abortion and reproductive care from 1974 to 2016 was associated with suicide rates among reproductive-aged women but not women of postreproductive age. Meaning: Restrictions to reproductive care represent a macro-level risk factor for suicide among reproductive-aged women, which may have implications for suicide prevention strategies in this population, particularly as the issue remains at the center of divisive debate in the United States. Importance: Many states in the United States enforce restrictions to reproductive care, with access to abortion remaining a highly divisive issue. Denial of abortion is linked with heightened stress and anxiety among reproductive-aged women. However, no studies have tested whether access to reproductive care is linked to suicide. Objective: To evaluate whether state-level restrictions in access to reproductive care in the United States were associated with suicide rates among reproductive-aged women from 1974 to 2016. Design, Setting, and Participants: A longitudinal ecologic study with a difference-in-differences analysis assessed whether annual changes in the enforcement of state-level restrictions to reproductive care were related to annual state-level suicide rates vs rates of death due to motor vehicle crashes. Duration of follow-up varied between different states (range, 4-40 years), contingent on the first year that restrictions were implemented. Models controlled for year and state fixed effects and other relevant demographic and economic factors. Analyses were conducted between December 2021 and January 2022. Exposures: Targeted Regulation of Abortion Providers (TRAP) laws index measuring state-year–level restrictions to reproductive care. Main Outcomes and Measures: Annual state-level suicide rates and motor vehicle crash death rates among reproductive-aged women (ages 20-34 years; target group) vs women of postreproductive age (ages 45-64 years; control group). Results: Twenty-one US states enforced at least 1 TRAP law between 1974 and 2016. Annual rates of death by suicide ranged from 1.4 to 25.6 per 100 000 women of reproductive age to 2.7 to 33.2 per 100 000 women of postreproductive age during the study period (1974-2016). Annual motor vehicle crash death rates among women of reproductive age ranged from 2.4 to 42.9 per 100 000. Enforcement of TRAP laws was associated with higher suicide rates among reproductive-aged women (β = 0.17; 95% CI, 0.03 to 0.32; P =.02) but not women of postreproductive age (β = 0.06; 95% CI, –0.11 to 0.24; P =.47) nor to deaths due to motor vehicle crashes (β = 0.03, 95% CI, –0.04 to 0.11; P =.36). Among reproductive-aged women, the weighted average annual-state level suicide death rate when no TRAP laws were enforced was 5.5 per 100 000. Enforcement of a TRAP law was associated with a 5.81% higher annual rate of suicide than in pre-enforcement years. Findings remained significant when using alternative, broader indices of reproductive care access and different age categorizations. Conclusions and Relevance: In this study with a difference-in-differences analysis of US women, restrictions on access to reproductive care from 1974 to 2016 were associated with suicide rates among reproductive-aged women. Given the limitations of the ecologic design of this study, further research is needed to assess whether current factors affecting access to reproductive care services are related to suicide risk among women of reproductive age and to inform suicide prevention strategies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
This book review discusses "Abortion pills go global: Reproductive freedom across borders" by Sydney Calkin. The author examines the movement of medication abortion (MA), also known as abortion pills, across physical and metaphorical borders, and its impact on abortion rights and access. Calkin explores the geography of abortion and the laws governing abortion in different states and countries, drawing on interviews with activists, providers, lawyers, and politicians. The book focuses on the circulation of MA in the United States, Poland, Ireland, and Northern Ireland, highlighting its transformative potential and the challenges faced in accessing safe and effective abortions. While the book primarily focuses on majority-white countries in the Global North, it provides valuable insights into abortion politics, pharmaceutical circulation, and comparative policy. [Extracted from the article]
Objective: We evaluated whether the Massachusetts COVID-19 vaccine lottery increased vaccine uptake. Methods: We analyzed data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention COVID-19 Vaccine Tracker to identify total number of adults aged 18 to 64 who received at least first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine or who were fully vaccinated in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Jersey, and Vermont during the study period of March 6 –July 31, 2021. Each of the five states contributed 148 days of a daily report on cumulative number of vaccinated people, comprising 740 state-days as the total sample size. We conducted multivariable, state-day level difference-in-differences (DID) regression using a negative binomial regression model that compared the change in outcomes for Massachusetts to those of four geographically adjacent comparison states without the lotteries, before and after the Massachusetts vaccine lottery announcement (June 15, 2021). Our analyses controlled for key state-level characteristics obtained from the American Community Survey as well as day fixed-effects to capture secular trends in the outcomes. Results: Massachusetts COVID-19 vaccine lottery was not associated with a significant increase in the number of adults aged 18 to 64 who were fully vaccinated or received at least one dose of the vaccine, compared with other states [Full dose, incidence rate ratio (IRR): 1.04, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.97 to 1.11, P > 0.05; At least one dose, IRR: 0.99, 95% CI: 0.93 to 1.06, P > 0.05]. Conclusions: There was insufficient evidence to conclude that Massachusetts COVID-19 vaccine lottery was associated with increased number of adult COVID-19 vaccinations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Levander, Ximena A., Foot, Canyon A., Magnusson, Sara L., Cook, Ryan R., Ezell, Jerel M., Feinberg, Judith, Go, Vivian F., Lancaster, Kathryn E., Salisbury-Afshar, Elizabeth, Smith, Gordon S., Westergaard, Ryan P., Young, April M., Tsui, Judith I., and Korthuis, P. Todd
Background: Women who use drugs (WWUD) have low rates of contraceptive use and high rates of unintended pregnancy. Drug use is common among women in rural U.S. communities, with limited data on how they utilize reproductive, substance use disorder (SUD), and healthcare services. Objective: We determined contraceptive use prevalence among WWUD in rural communities then compared estimates to women from similar rural areas. We investigated characteristics of those using contraceptives, and associations between contraceptive use and SUD treatment, healthcare utilization, and substance use. Design: Rural Opioids Initiative (ROI) — cross-sectional survey using respondent-driven sampling (RDS) involving eight rural U.S. regions (January 2018–March 2020); National Survey on Family Growth (NSFG) — nationally-representative U.S. household reproductive health survey (2017–2019). Participants: Women aged 18–49 with prior 30-day non-prescribed opioid and/or non-opioid injection drug use; fecundity determined by self-reported survey responses. Main Measures: Unweighted and RDS-weighted prevalence estimates of medical/procedural contraceptive use; chi-squared tests and multi-level linear regressions to test associations. Key Results: Of 855 women in the ROI, 36.8% (95% CI 33.7–40.1, unweighted) and 38.6% (95% CI 30.7–47.2, weighted) reported contraceptive use, compared to 66% of rural women in the NSFG sample. Among the ROI women, 27% had received prior 30-day SUD treatment via outpatient counseling or inpatient program and these women had increased odds of contraceptive use (aOR 1.50 [95% CI 1.08–2.06]). There was a positive association between contraception use and recent medications for opioid use disorder (aOR 1.34 [95% CI 0.95–1.88]) and prior 6-month primary care utilization (aOR 1.32 [95% CI 0.96–1.82]) that did not meet the threshold for statistical significance. Conclusion: WWUD in rural areas reported low contraceptive use; those who recently received SUD treatment had greater odds of contraceptive use. Improvements are needed in expanding reproductive and preventive health within SUD treatment and primary care services in rural communities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Objectives: In 2016 the Port Moresby General Hospital in Papua New Guinea introduced a midwife led postpartum contraception service to educate patients and provide contraceptive implants. This study examines the factors that were associated with immediate postpartum uptake of the implants.Study Design: We conducted a cross-sectional study of patients on the hospital postnatal ward who gave birth between March 2017 and January 2018. Patients aged 16-45 who had a vaginal birth with a singleton, live baby not requiring admission to the special care nursery were eligible for inclusion and invited to complete a survey prior to discharge.Results: Of 2082 patients approached, all consented to participate in the survey. Of those completing the survey, 531 (25.5%) chose to have the contraceptive implant provided immediately postpartum. Excluding patients who chose tubal ligation (n = 330), in multivariable analysis, higher odds of implant uptake was associated with no prior contraception use compared to prior use (aOR 1.38; 95% CI 1.07 -1.77), unplanned pregnancy compared to planned (aOR 1.37, 95% CI 1.07-1.79), and having received antenatal education about the implant compared to no information (AOR 1.65, 95% CI 1.23-2.10).Conclusions: Antenatal education about the contraceptive implant impacted on likelihood of immediate postpartum method uptake. Patients who had no prior use of contraception and those with unplanned pregnancies were also more likely to request the implants, suggesting that the midwife-led postpartum service is successfully reaching patients with a previous unmet need for contraception.Implications: This study demonstrates successful delivery of a postpartum implant program in a setting where community access to contraception is limited. Antenatal information and education can support implant uptake and that the program provides the opportunity for birth spacing and limiting in patients with a previous unmet need. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
ABORTION statistics, PRIVACY, SAFETY, PATIENT advocacy, HEALTH services accessibility, MEDICAL care, INTERVIEWING, SOCIAL stigma, QUALITATIVE research, MEDICAL ethics, MATERNAL mortality
Abstract
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REPRODUCTIVE rights, ROE v. Wade, ABORTION clinics, ABORTION statistics, ACCESS to justice, REPRODUCTIVE health, GYNECOLOGIC care
Abstract
The ongoing assault on abortion care in the United States culminating in the Supreme Court decision that overturned Roe v Wade calls for concerted national action to address the major gaps in care and training that will ensue. We write this call to action to our community of obstetrician–gynecologists to prioritize advocacy for access to abortion care. Professional health organizations understand the importance of access to contraception and abortion care as the foundation for reproductive health, autonomy, and empowerment. As restrictions proliferate, patients are encountering significant challenges in accessing care; all in our community who provide obstetrical and gynecologic care need to step up to ensure adequate and equitable patient care and provider training. In this Clinical Opinion, we outline current professional organization evidence-based support for comprehensive reproductive health care including abortion care, without interference by politics, strategies to proactively prevent further restrictions, and actions to mitigate the harm that will be caused by further restrictions to abortion care. We must all speak up, be visible in our support, and take any and every opportunity to advocate for abortion care as an integral part of comprehensive reproductive medical care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Luis Alvarado-Socarras, Jorge, Amaya-Castellanos, Claudia, Fabián Manrique-Hernández, Edgar, Ruíz-Rodríguez, Myriam, Bracho-Fernández, Jackeline, Díaz-Páez, Daniela, and Tenza, Fernando
Subjects
MEDICAL personnel, MEDICAL care, HEALTH facilities, HIGH-risk pregnancy, PREGNANCY complications, REPRODUCTIVE health services, ABORTION statistics, RECURRENT miscarriage, SYPHILIS
HEALTH & Nutrition Examination Survey, ABORTION statistics
Abstract
Background: The performance requirements for hemoglobin (Hb) A1c analysis have been questioned as analytic methods have improved. We developed a statistical simulation that relates error to the clinical utility of an oft-used laboratory test, as a means of assessing test performance expectations. Methods: Finite mixture modeling of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention—National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2017–2020 Hb A1c data in conjunction with Monte Carlo sampling were used to model and simulate a population prior to the introduction of error into the results. The impact of error on clinical utility was assessed by categorizing the results using the American Diabetes Association (ADA) diagnostic criteria and assessing the sensitivity and specificity of Hb A1c under various degrees of error (bias and imprecision). Results: With the current allowable total error threshold of 6% for Hb A1c measurement, the simulation estimated a worst case between 50% and 60% for both test sensitivity and specificity for the non-diabetic category. Similarly, sensitivity and specificity estimates for the pre-diabetic category were 30% to 40% and 60% to 70%, respectively. Finally, estimates for the diabetic category yielded values of 80% to 90% for sensitivity and >90% for specificity. Conclusions: Bias and imprecision greatly affect the clinical utility of Hb A1c for all patient groups. The simulated error demonstrated in this modeling impacts 3 critical applications of the Hb A1c in diabetes management: the capacity to reliably screen, diagnostic accuracy, and utility in diabetes monitoring. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
In Italy gynecologists can claim consciousness objection when requested to provide abortion; as described by the latest data analysis, 70% of them decide to not provide this kind of medical procedure. Psychological and sociological research studies about abortion are usually related to the construct of "abortion stigma" and they are mostly focused on women's experiences rather than on providers' ones. The present study tries to understand the subjective perspective of physicians in relation to abortion and to consciousness objection to better understand the emotional dynamics taking part in their workplace and job's emotional experience. Structured interviews were administered to 19 gynecologists and trainees in Gynecology to explore their feelings connected to their work with a focus on voluntary interruption of pregnancy and the choice of being or not an objector. Since it is an exploratory study, we decided to employ Emotional Text Analysis to analyze the entire textual corpus of interviews to explore their affective symbolization. Statistical multidimensional analyses were conducted to detect thematic domains (clusters) and latent factors organizing the contraposition between them, considered as a mirror of emotional dynamics part of the context. We found out five clusters, referring to different emotional dimensions: the representation of undesired pregnancy as something unmanageable; the role of consciousness objection in defining physicians' professional identities; the role of manhood power on women's pregnancy; the emotional detachment needed to deal with abortion and the representation of consciousness objection as an instrument of power. All the results are discussed based on the previous literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Background: Firearms cause the most suicides (60%) and homicides (36%) in the US. The high lethality and availability of firearms make them a particularly dangerous method of attempted violence. The aim of this study was to study US trends in firearm suicide and homicide mortality and years of potential life lost before age 75 (YPLL-75) between 1981 and 2020. Methods: Data in this cross-sectional study were collected between 1981 and 2020 from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC)'s WISQARS database for fatal injury and violence. Data from the US population were considered for all age groups and were divided by racial groups and sex for analysis. Results: Those most heavily impacted by firearm homicide were Black, with homicide age-adjusted death rates almost seven times higher than White people. A spike in firearm homicide deaths occurred between 2019 and 2020, with Black people having the largest increase (39%). White people had the highest rates of firearm suicide, and suicide death rates increased between 2019 and 2020. Increases in homicide and suicide YPLL-75 between 2011 and 2020 had most heavily impacted minority populations. Men had a firearm suicide rate that was seven times higher than women, and a firearm homicide rate that was five times higher than women. Conclusion: This study demonstrated that Black and White men were most impacted by firearm deaths, and that firearm homicide and suicide rates increased between 2019 and 2020 for all racial groups except Asian/Pacific Islander. Our results suggest that prevention efforts should focus on specific demographic factors and articulate the urgency to mitigate firearm-related deaths in the US. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
The availability of a variety of modern contraceptive methods is necessary but insufficient to provide a high-quality contraceptive service to postabortion clients. Women, especially young women, must be empowered to make informed choices about which methods they receive, including whether to use contraception following an abortion service. In this study, we conducted 2,488 client exit interviews with abortion clients after their induced abortion service or postabortion care visit in Ipas-supported health facilities in eight countries: Argentina, Bolivia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Mexico, Nepal, Nigeria, and Uganda. We evaluated the quality of postabortion contraceptive counseling across two domains of contraceptive counseling: information exchange and interpersonal communication. We measured the association between these quality elements and two outcomes: 1) client-perceived choice of contraceptive method and 2) whether or not the client received a modern contraceptive method. We examined these relationships while adjusting for sociodemographic and confounding variables, such as the client feeling pressure from the provider to accept a particular method. Finally, we determined whether associations identified differ by age group: under 25 and 25+. Information exchange and interpersonal communication both emerged as important counseling domains for ensuring that clients felt they had the ability to choose a contraceptive method. The domain of information exchange was associated with having received a contraceptive method for all abortion clients, including young abortion clients under 25. Nearly 14% of clients interviewed reported pressure from the provider to accept a particular contraceptive method; and pressure from the provider was significantly associated with a client's perception of not having a choice in selecting and receiving a contraceptive method during her visit to the facility. Improving interpersonal communication, strengthening contraceptive information exchange, and ensuring clients are not pressured by a provider to accept a contraceptive method, must all be prioritized in postabortion contraceptive counseling in health facilities to ensure postabortion contraceptive services are woman-centered and rights-based for abortion clients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Abebe, Bontu Aschale, Abdissa, Gizachew, Ganfure, Gemechu, and Mossisa, Maru
Subjects
HEALTH facilities, MEDICAL care, ABORTION clinics, ABORTION statistics, CONTRACEPTION, CONTRACEPTIVES, FAMILY planning services
Abstract
Background. The World Health Organization recommends the use of effective contraception for the prevention of unintended pregnancy and unsafe abortion. The main aim of postabortion contraceptive services is to prevent recurrent pregnancy and ultimately mitigate the associated maternal mortality. Objective. To assess postabortion contraceptive utilization (PACU) and postabortion contraceptive preferences (PACP) and the associated factors among women receiving abortion care services in Ambo town, Oromia Region, Western Ethiopia. Methods. A cross-sectional study was conducted at the health facilities in Ambo town from 22 July to 24 September 2021. The data was collected using a structured questionnaire. Bivariate and multivariable logistic regression was done to determine the factors associated with postabortion contraceptive utilization and preferences. Results. Out of 388 participants who were included in the final analysis, 262 (67.5%) had utilized postabortion contraceptives of which 173 (66%) received contraceptive methods of their primary preference. The multivariate logistic regression showed that cohabiting couples showed lower utilization (AOR = 0.15 ; 95% CI: 0.06-0.21; p value = 0.004) than married ones and planning to have an additional child within 1-3 years (AOR = 7.41 ; 95% CI: 2.18-11.41; p value = 0.005) or after 3-5 years (AOR = 6.67 : 95% CI: 5.12-10.18; p value = 0.033) was identified to be significantly associated with postabortion contraceptive utilization. Having a secondary education level (AOR = 3.06 ; 95% CI: 1.54-6.07; p value = 0.001) and having experience of domestic violence (AOR = 2.19 ; 95% CI: 1.27-3.81; p value = 0.005) were significantly associated with unsatisfied postabortion contraceptive preference. Conclusions and Recommendations. About two-thirds of the women who were given abortion services received postabortion contraceptives whereas almost two-thirds of them received a contraceptive method of their primary preference. Marital status, duration before additional child planned, and being counseled on contraceptive determined postabortion contraceptive utilization. Having a secondary education level and having experienced domestic violence were significantly associated with unsatisfied PACP. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
To investigate whether contraceptive service uptake (including current contraceptive use), unmet need for contraception, unintended pregnancy, preferences for service provision, and providers among female adolescents living with HIV (ALHIV) vary with HIV-acquisition route, that is, perinatal HIV acquisition vs horizontal HIV acquisition. Mixed methods including exit and in-depth interviews Multicenter, public sector primary health care facilities, Cape Town, South Africa Sexually experienced female ALHIV aged 14-19 years (n = 303) including both peri/postnatally infected ALHIV (pALHIV) and horizontally infected ALHIV (hALHIV) and health care providers involved in HIV care and treatment services (n = 19) Current contraceptive use, unintended pregnancy, and preferences for service provision and providers The association between HIV-acquisition route and current use of any contraceptive method (aOR = 1.23; 95% CI, 0.52-2.92) and unintended pregnancy (aOR = 1.02; 95% CI, 0.39-2.67) was not significant. In contrast, pALHIV had significantly decreased odds of receiving dual-method contraception (aOR = 0.02; 95% CI, 0.00-0.38) and significantly increased odds of preferences for younger providers (aOR = 4.45; 95% CI, 2.84-6.97), female providers (aOR = 5.11; 95% CI, 1.25-20.91), and standalone youth clinics (aOR = 7.01; 95% CI, 2.39-20.55) compared with female hALHIV. Qualitative findings indicate that provider positive attitudes, as opposed to judgmental attitudes, encourage pALHIV acceptance of care from any provider regardless of, for example, the provider's age. Current contraceptive use and unintended pregnancies were similar between pALHIV and hALHIV, but the 2 distinct groups of ALHIV were heterogeneous in terms of dual-method contraception and preferences for type of clinic model and providers. Promoting positive provider attitudes could improve ALHIV's contraceptive uptake. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Jasper, Brittany, Stillerova, Tereza, Anstey, Christopher, and Weaver, Edward
Subjects
*ABORTION statistics, *EVALUATION of medical care, *PREMATURE infants, *ACADEMIC medical centers, *CONFIDENCE intervals, *DURATION of pregnancy, *RETROSPECTIVE studies, *PERINATAL death, *COMPARATIVE studies, *VAGINA, *DISEASE prevalence, *DESCRIPTIVE statistics, *EMERGENCY medical services, *STAY-at-home orders, *ODDS ratio, *CESAREAN section, *DELIVERY (Obstetrics), *COVID-19 pandemic, *LONGITUDINAL method, *EVALUATION
Abstract
Background: Preventative strategies for preterm birth are lacking. Recent evidence proposed COVID‐19 lockdowns may have contributed to changes in preterm birth. Aims: To determine the prevalence of preterm birth and birth outcomes during and after the COVID‐19 lockdown at the Sunshine Coast University Hospital and the overall state of Queensland, Australia. Methods: Retrospective cohort analysis of all births in Queensland including the Sunshine Coast University Hospital, during two epochs, April 1–May 31, 2020 (lockdown) and June 1–July 31, 2020 (post‐lockdown), compared to antecedent calendar‐matched periods in 2018–2019. Prevalence of preterm birth, stillbirth, and late terminations were examined. Results: There were 64 989 births in Queensland from April to July 2018–2020. At the Sunshine Coast University Hospital, there was a significantly higher chance of birth at term during both lockdown (odds ratio (OR) 1.81, 95% CI 1.17, 2.79; P = 0.007) and post‐lockdown (OR 2.01, 95% CI 1.27, 3.18; P = 0.003). At the same centre, prevalence of preterm birth was 5.5% (30/547) during lockdown, compared to 9.1% (100/1095) in previous years, a 40.0% relative reduction (P = 0.016). At this centre during lockdown, emergency caesareans concurrently decreased (P < 0.01) and instrumental vaginal births increased (P < 0.01). In Queensland overall, there was a nonsignificant decrease in the prevalence of preterm birth during lockdown. Conclusions: There is a link between lockdown and a reduction in the prevalence of preterm birth on the Sunshine Coast. The cause is speculative at present, although increased influenza vaccination rates, decreased transmission of infections, and improved air quality may have been favourable in reducing preterm birth. Further research is needed to determine a causal link. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Lindberg, Laura D., Maddow‐Zimet, Isaac, Mueller, Jennifer, and VandeVusse, Alicia
Subjects
*ABORTION statistics, *ABORTION in the United States, *PUBLIC health laws, *RESEARCH methodology, *SURVEYS, *RANDOMIZED controlled trials, *COMPARATIVE studies, *QUALITY assurance, *DESCRIPTIVE statistics, *LOGISTIC regression analysis, *SEXUAL health, *REPRODUCTIVE health
Abstract
Context: Abortions are substantially underreported in surveys due to social stigma, compromising the study of abortion, pregnancy, fertility, and related demographic and health outcomes. Methods: In this study, we evaluated six methodological approaches identified through formative mixed‐methods research to improve the measurement of abortion in surveys. These approaches included altering the placement of abortion items in the survey, the order of pregnancy outcome questions, the level of detail, the introduction to the abortion question, and the context of the abortion question, and using graduated sensitivity. We embedded a preregistered randomized experiment in a newly designed online survey about sexual and reproductive health behaviors (N = 6536). We randomized respondents to experimental arms in a fully crossed factorial design; we estimated an average treatment effect using standardized estimators from logistic regression models, adjusted for demographic covariates associated with reporting. Results: None of the experimental arms significantly improved abortion reporting compared to the control condition. Conclusion: More work is needed to improve reporting of abortion in future surveys, particularly as abortion access becomes increasingly restricted in the United States. Despite this study's null results, it provides a promising path for future efforts to improve abortion measurement. It is proof of concept for testing new approaches in a less expensive, faster, and more flexible format than embedding changes in existing national fertility surveys. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Keywords: determinants; magnitude; unsafe abortion; Zambia EN determinants magnitude unsafe abortion Zambia 979 982 4 11/15/22 20221201 NES 221201 Unsafe abortion is a public health problem that is disproportionately higher in sub-Saharan Africa, where approximately 77% of all abortions are unsafe. /td>
Reference
0.62-1.82
Yes
184 (64.8)
50 (65.8)
1.07
Aware that abortion is legal in Zambia
Yes
138 (48.4)
17 (22.1)
Reference
Reference
No
147 (51.6)
60 (77.9)
3.15
1.99-7.85
2.88
1.23-9.77
Hospital-level factors
Easy access to abortion services?. [Extracted from the article]
Minor girls in Africa face challenges in accessing high‐quality contraceptive and abortion services because laws and policies are not child‐friendly. Many countries maintain restrictive laws, policies, or hospital practices that make it difficult for minors to access contraception and safe abortion even when the pregnancy would risk their life or health. Further, the clinical guidelines on contraceptive and abortion care are silent, vague, or ambiguous regarding minors' consent. African states should remedy the situation by ensuring that clinical guidelines integrate child rights principles and standards articulated in child rights treaties to enable health providers to facilitate full, unencumbered access to contraceptive and abortion care for minor girls. A sample of clinical guidelines is analyzed to demonstrate the importance of explicit, consistent, and unambiguous language about children's consent to ensure that healthcare workers provide sexual and reproductive health care in a manner that respects child rights. Synopsis: African countries should integrate child rights principles in clinical guidelines and protocols to provide high‐quality contraceptive and abortion care for minor girls. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Rashid, Zenab H., O'Connell, Mary Beth, and Yang, Kai
Subjects
DRUGSTORES, CONTRACEPTION, UNPLANNED pregnancy, MEDICAL practice, CHAIN stores, ABORTION statistics
Abstract
Introduction: A public health initiative in the United States is to lower the country's 45% unintended pregnancy rate. Although pharmacist‐prescribed contraception is beneficial, implementation is low. Enhancing motivators and overcoming barriers could increase implementation. Objectives: To quantify the motivating factors and barriers to pharmacist‐prescribed contraception and compare them by interest in implementing contraception prescribing. Methods: The Theoretical Domains Framework was used to create an investigator‐developed 41‐item survey. Surveys were mailed to all Michigan independent pharmacies and chain pharmacies granting permission. Descriptive and nonparametric analyses were conducted. Results: Survey response rate was 11% (N = 147). Pharmacies were independent (39.5%), small independent group (2‐4 stores, 21.8%), large independent group (≥5 stores, 8.8%), national chain (15%), and two grocery store chains (15%). Top motivators to implement this service were to increase scope of practice, patient access to contraception, and pharmacy revenue. Top pharmacist, financial, resource, and safety barriers were contraception knowledge gaps, lack of financial reimbursement, lack of physicians to create a collaborative practice agreement, and increased liability, respectively. Pharmacies wanting to implement this service (n = 85) were early change adopters (P <.001), wanted to implement more direct patient care (P <.001), could create collaborative practice agreements (P <.001), had needed resources (P <.001), and were motivated by competition (P <.001) than pharmacies not wanting to implement this service (n = 61). They also felt their patients would value (P <.001) and use (P <.001) pharmacist‐prescribed contraception. Geographical location, city size, pharmacy type, and prescription volume did not significantly differ between pharmacies wanting to implement or not this service. Conclusion: Pharmacies wanting to implement pharmacist‐prescribed contraception service had more positive attitudes, and better knowledge, skills, and resources than those not wanting to implement the service. Many implementation barriers existed requiring solutions and advocacy efforts by community pharmacy staff, organizations, and colleges to increase implementation of this service in community pharmacies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
PHYSICIANS, INSTITUTIONALIZED persons, STATE laws, ABORTION statistics, ABORTION
Abstract
Physicians who participate in abortion and medically assisted death in the United States work at the margins of institutionalized medicine. What motivates them to engage in such "dirty work"? This article uses ethnographic materials from two recent projects to analyze physicians' roles as gatekeepers to contested medical services. Abortion and medically assisted death share many similarities: They are both deeply stigmatized practices that are heavily restricted in many U.S. jurisdictions, and which many physicians are reluctant to participate in for moral, religious, or professional reasons. They both also confer medicine with the power to govern life and death decisions through the apparatus of state law. However, state laws operate quite differently on physicians in these two cases, with different outcomes. This comparative analysis demonstrates how dirty work in medicine enrolls the agency and subjectivity of physicians in distinctive ways that may be eclipsed by totalizing biopolitical frameworks. [abortion, medical aid in dying, physicians, agency, biopolitics, United States] [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Rader, Benjamin, Upadhyay, Ushma D., Sehgal, Neil K. R., Reis, Ben Y., Brownstein, John S., and Hswen, Yulin
Subjects
*ABORTION clinics, *TRAVEL time (Traffic engineering), *WOMEN'S health, *AMERICAN Community Survey, *CHILDBEARING age, *ABORTION statistics, *ABORTION laws, *CROSS-sectional method
Abstract
Importance: Abortion facility closures resulted in a substantial decrease in access to abortion care in the US.Objectives: To investigate the changes in travel time to the nearest abortion facility after the Dobbs v Jackson Women's Health Organization (referred to hereafter as Dobbs) US Supreme Court decision.Design, Setting, and Participants: Repeated cross-sectional spatial analysis of travel time from each census tract in the contiguous US (n = 82 993) to the nearest abortion facility (n = 1134) listed in the Advancing New Standards in Reproductive Health database. Census tract boundaries and demographics were defined by the 2020 American Community Survey. The spatial analysis compared access during the pre-Dobbs period (January-December 2021) with the post-Dobbs period (September 2022) for the estimated 63 718 431 females aged 15 to 44 years (reproductive age for this analysis) in the US (excluding Alaska and Hawaii).Exposures: The Dobbs ruling and subsequent state laws restricting abortion procedures. The pre-Dobbs period measured abortion access to all facilities providing abortions in 2021. Post-Dobbs abortion access was measured by simulating the closure of all facilities in the 15 states with existing total or 6-week abortion bans in effect as of September 30, 2022.Main Outcomes and Measures: Median and mean changes in surface travel time (eg, car, public transportation) to an abortion facility in the post-Dobbs period compared with the pre-Dobbs period and the total percentage of females of reproductive age living more than 60 minutes from abortion facilities during the pre- and post-Dobbs periods.Results: Of 1134 abortion facilities in the US (at least 1 in every state; 8 in Alaska and Hawaii excluded), 749 were considered active during the pre-Dobbs period and 671 were considered active during a simulated post-Dobbs period. Median (IQR) and mean (SD) travel times to pre-Dobbs abortion facilities were estimated to be 10.9 (4.3-32.4) and 27.8 (42.0) minutes. Travel time to abortion facilities in the post-Dobbs period significantly increased (paired sample t test P <.001) to an estimated median (IQR) of 17.0 (4.9-124.5) minutes and a mean (SD) of and 100.4 (161.5) minutes. In the post-Dobbs period, an estimated 33.3% (sensitivity interval, 32.3%-34.8%) of females of reproductive age lived in a census tract more than 60 minutes from an abortion facility compared with 14.6.% (sensitivity interval, 13.0%-16.9%) of females of reproductive age in the pre-Dobbs period.Conclusions and Relevance: In this repeated cross-sectional spatial analysis, estimated travel time to abortion facilities in the US was significantly greater in the post-Dobbs period after accounting for the closure of abortion facilities in states with total or 6-week abortion bans compared with the pre-Dobbs period, during which all facilities providing abortions in 2021 were considered active. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) recommend a third dose of COVID-19 vaccine for pregnant women, although data regarding effectiveness during pregnancy are lacking. This national, population-based, historical cohort study of pregnant women in Israel, delivering between August 1, 2021 and March 22, 2022, aims to analyze and compare the third and second doses' vaccine effectiveness in preventing COVID-19-related hospitalizations during pregnancy during two COVID-19 waves (Delta variant in the summer of 2021 and Omicron, BA.1, variant in the winter of 2022). Time-dependent Cox proportional-hazards regression models estimate the hazard ratios (HR) and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for COVID-related outcomes according to vaccine dose, and vaccine effectiveness as 1-HR. Study includes 82,659 and 33,303 pregnant women from the Delta and Omicron waves, respectively. Compared with the second dose, the third dose effectively prevents overall hospitalizations with SARS-CoV-2 infections, with estimated effectiveness of 92% (95% CI 83–96%) during Delta, and enhances protection against significant disease during Omicron, with effectiveness of 92% (95% CI 26–99%), and 48% (95% CI 37–57%) effectiveness against hospitalization overall. A third dose of the BNT162b2 mRNA COVID-19 vaccine during pregnancy, given at least 5 months after the second vaccine dose, enhances protection against adverse COVID-19-related outcomes. Data on the effectiveness of a third dose of COVID-19 vaccine in pregnant women are limited. In this observational study, the authors report that a third dose of the BNT162b2 mRNA COVID-19 vaccine during pregnancy enhances protection against maternal adverse COVID-19-related outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Effective contraception can prevent unintended pregnancies, however there is an unmet need for effective contraception in Australia. Despite their being a range of contraceptive methods available, access to these remains equitable and uptake of the most effective methods is low. There is an opportunity to reduce the rate of unintended pregnancies in Australia by improving the uptake of effective contraception for those who desire this. Improving access will require increasing consumer health literacy about contraception, as well as the option of telehealth as a mode of service delivery, and stronger investment in contraceptive services through appropriate reimbursement for providers. There is also a need to test new models of care to increase access to and use of effective contraception in Australia, including nurse and midwifery-led models of contraceptive care and pharmacy involvement in contraceptive counseling. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Mifepristone medication abortion was first approved in China and France more than 30 years ago and is now used in more than 60 countries worldwide. It is a highly safe and effective method that has the potential to increase population access to abortion in early pregnancy, closer to home. In both Canada and the United States, the initial regulations for distribution, prescribing, and dispensing of mifepristone were highly restricted. However, in Canada, where mifepristone was made available in 2017, most restrictions on the medication were removed in the first year of its availability. The Canadian regulation of mifepristone as a normal prescription makes access possible in community primary care through a physician or nurse practitioner prescription, which any pharmacist can dispense. In this approach, people decide when and where to take their medication. We explore how policy-maker-engaged research advanced reproductive health policy and facilitated this rapid change in Canada. We discuss the implications of these policy advances for self-management of abortion and demonstrate how in Canada patients "self-manage" components of the abortion process within a supportive health care system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Sexual activity and fertility can resume shortly after childbirth, but there are barriers to contraceptive access in the postpartum period. Unintended pregnancy and short interpregnancy intervals (of less than one year) can increase the risk of obstetric and neonatal complications. The antenatal period presents an opportunity to discuss contraceptive options, many of which can be safely initiated immediately after childbirth. Successful delivery of a postpartum contraception program requires an adequate number of maternity staff trained to provide the full range of methods. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Most incarcerated women are of reproductive age, and more than a third of women will have an abortion during their reproductive years. Although women are the fastest growing population in Canadian prisons, no one has studied the effect of their incarceration on access to abortion services. Studies outside of Canada indicate rates of abortion are higher among people experiencing incarceration than in the general population, and that abortion access is often problematic. Although international standards for abortion care among incarcerated populations exist, there conversely appear to be no Canadian guidelines or procedures to facilitate unintended pregnancy prevention or management. Barriers to abortion care inequitably restrict people with unintended pregnancy from attaining education and employment opportunities, cause entrenchment in violent relationships, and prevent people from choosing to parent when they are ready and able. Understanding and facilitating equitable access to abortion care for incarcerated people is critical to address structural, gender-, and race-based reproductive health inequities, and to promote reproductive justice. There is an urgent need for research in this area to direct best practices in clinical care and support policies capable to ensure equal access to abortion care for incarcerated people. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
An abortion is a procedure defined by termination of pregnancy, most commonly performed in the first or second trimester. There are several means of classification, but the most important includes whether the abortion was maternally "safe" (performed in a safe, clean environment with experienced providers and no legal restrictions) or "unsafe" (performed with hazardous materials and techniques, by person without the needed skills, or in an environment where minimal medical standards are not met). Complication rates depend on the procedure type, gestational age, patient comorbidities, clinician experience, and most importantly, whether the abortion is safe or unsafe. Safe abortions have significantly lower complication rates compared to unsafe abortions. Complications include bleeding, retained products of conception, retained cervical dilator, uterine perforation, amniotic fluid embolism, misoprostol toxicity, and endometritis. Mortality rates for safe abortions are less than 0.2%, compared to unsafe abortion rates that range between 4.7-13.2%. History and physical examination are integral components in recognizing complications of safe and unsafe abortions, with management dependent upon the diagnosis. This narrative review provides a focused overview of post-abortion complications for emergency clinicians. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Introduction: The potential disruption in antiretroviral therapy (ART) services in Africa at the start of the COVID‐19 pandemic raised concern for increased morbidity and mortality among people living with HIV (PLHIV). We describe HIV treatment trends before and during the pandemic and interventions implemented to mitigate COVID‐19 impact among countries supported by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) through the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR). Methods: We analysed quantitative and qualitative data reported by 10,387 PEPFAR‐CDC‐supported ART sites in 19 African countries between October 2019 and March 2021. Trends in PLHIV on ART, new ART initiations and treatment interruptions were assessed. Viral load coverage (testing of eligible PLHIV) and viral suppression were calculated at select time points. Qualitative data were analysed to summarize facility‐ and community‐based interventions implemented to mitigate COVID‐19. Results: The total number of PLHIV on ART increased quarterly from October 2019 (n = 7,540,592) to March 2021 (n = 8,513,572). The adult population (≥15 years) on ART increased by 14.0% (7,005,959–7,983,793), while the paediatric population (<15 years) on ART declined by 2.6% (333,178–324,441). However, the number of new ART initiations dropped between March 2020 and June 2020 by 23.4% for adults and 26.1% for children, with more rapid recovery in adults than children from September 2020 onwards. Viral load coverage increased slightly from April 2020 to March 2021 (75–78%) and viral load suppression increased from October 2019 to March 2021 (91–94%) among adults and children combined. The most reported interventions included multi‐month dispensing (MMD) of ART, community service delivery expansion, and technology and virtual platforms use for client engagement and site‐level monitoring. MMD of ≥3 months increased from 52% in October 2019 to 78% of PLHIV ≥ age 15 on ART in March 2021. Conclusions: With an overall increase in the number of people on ART, HIV programmes proved to be resilient, mitigating the impact of COVID‐19. However, the decline in the number of children on ART warrants urgent investigation and interventions to prevent further losses experienced during the COVID‐19 pandemic and future public health emergencies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Shireman, Hannah, McHugh, Ashley, Connelly, Ramey, Srinivasulu, Silpa, Sumberg, Annie, Moy, Amy, Stulberg, Debra, and Janiak, Elizabeth
Subjects
*PRIMARY care, *ABORTION, *TECHNICAL assistance, *ABORTION statistics
Abstract
Quantify primary care provider requests for abortion training and technical assistance (TA) and availability of programs to support abortion provision. We reviewed requests for training and TA from four programs focused on capacity building for abortion care. Collectively, these programs serve every region of the United States. Between January 1, 2021 – September 30, 2022, the programs received 207 requests for training and/or TA from individuals and organizations in 30 states. Approximately 60% of requests went unfulfilled due to programs' capacity constraints. Unmet demand for training and TA to integrate abortion into primary care is significant. Increasing the availability of training and TA could increase the abortion workforce and improve access to care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Mandelbaum, Ava D., Nacev, Erin C., Fuerst, Megan F., Colwill, Alyssa, Ramanadhan, Shaalini, and Rodriguez, Maria
Subjects
*ABORTION statistics, *ABORTION clinics, *ELECTRONIC health records, *ABORTION, ROE v. Wade
Abstract
Evaluate the impact of the Dobbs vs Jackson decision on abortion care at an academic center in Oregon, a state with no legal restrictions on abortion. Electronic health records from patients who received an abortion at Oregon's largest tertiary hospital were utilized to compare the years before and after Dobbs. Monthly average abortions increased from 57.8 pre- Dobbs to 77.1 post- Dobbs (p = 0.001). This trend was associated with an increased proportion of out-of-state patients (14.3% vs 9.5%, p = 0.004) presenting with gestational duration ≥26 weeks (23.6% vs 3.7% in-state, p < 0.001). The Dobbs decision resulted in increased utilization of hospital-based abortion care in a protective state. This study reflects the critical role of protective states such as Oregon in preserving access to abortion services and the need for continued support to alleviate the impact of nationwide barriers to reproductive healthcare. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Equitable and safe access to abortion and contraception is essential to protecting reproductive autonomy. Despite this, barriers to access remain. Nonclinical support people, may be able to facilitate access to abortion and contraception services and care, but evidence on the scope and efficacy of doulas in abortion and contraception care is lacking. The aim of this scoping review was to synthesize what is known about the role of doulas in abortion and contraception care. We followed the Joanna Briggs Institute methodology for scoping reviews. A clinical librarian performed an initial search of all relevant databases. Three reviewers independently screened the titles and abstracts for assessment against the inclusion and exclusion criteria. The populations of interest included doulas, and/or untrained birth attendants and birth companions, and patients who use doula services. The concept of interest was the doula and the context was access to abortion or contraception. Our review identified relevant studies conducted in different countries, published between 1976 and 2023. Studies broadly focused on three key themes: doulas performing procedural abortions, doulas supporting abortion care, and doulas supporting contraception. Outcomes of interest included client outcomes, barriers to access, doula training, and attitudes. Doulas have the potential to improve client satisfaction and mitigate barriers to accessing abortion and contraception services. Further research is needed to identify the training needs of doulas, the potential for their integration into interdisciplinary care teams, and the role in supporting medication abortion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
PRO-choice activists, REPRODUCTIVE health services, RIGHT to health, ABORTION, MEDICAL humanities, ABORTION laws, REPRODUCTIVE rights, ABORTION clinics, ABORTION statistics
Abstract
"Lawful Sins: Abortion Rights and Reproductive Governance in Mexico" by Amy E. Alterman explores the complexities of abortion access in Mexico City, despite the landmark legalization of abortion in 2007. The book examines how gender, religious, economic, and medical factors contribute to disparities between abortion rights and public access. Singer's ethnographic research includes interviews with abortion patients and providers, as well as observations in clinics. The book argues that while legal rights are important, they do not guarantee equitable access to abortion, and highlights the need for a reproductive governance framework to understand and address these issues. The book is relevant to the current landscape of abortion rights in the United States and offers potential strategies for abortion networks. [Extracted from the article]
These two dimensions of abortion-related stigma continue to be evident in major political and legal shifts that negatively impact abortion access. This international collection of papers from contexts with variable social and legal restrictions on abortion, offers progressive insights into community activism, abortion-related healthcare, and community attitudes, including how women perceive abortion and value abortion care. Debates about human rights, the sanctity of life and the rights of the unborn continue to play out internationally, often placing women seeking abortion in the crosshairs of politicians, faith leaders, community members and others who consider abortion a moral ill rather than a health need. [Extracted from the article]
In Europe, there is a dearth of studies on abortion-related mobilities within countries where abortion is legal. In France, 18% of women seek abortion care outside their department of residence care. Most of these flows take place within Île-de-France region. This paper aims at providing novel insights into the motives and experiences of women traveling within France and particularly within the Île-de-France region for abortion care. It draws upon official abortion statistics as well as quantitative and qualitative data collected in three Parisian hospitals during a five-year European research project on barriers to legal abortion and abortion travel. Despite governmental efforts to facilitate access to abortions over the past decades, our findings show that various barriers exist for why women do not find services in their department of residence (lack of services or access to preferred methods, quality of care, long waiting times). However, most of our study participants report coming to Paris as a convenience and use commuting as a strategy to overcome obstacles in receiving abortion care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Cleland, Kelly, Kumar, Bhavik, Kakkad, Nikita, Shabazz, Jasmine, Brogan, Nicola R., Gandal-Powers, Mara K., Elliott, Robyn, Stone, Rebecca, and Turok, David K.
Abortion and contraception are essential components of reproductive healthcare. As 26 states are likely to severely restrict access to abortion following the Supreme Court decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization, access to emergency contraception will be more important than ever. Existing barriers to emergency contraception - including cost, obstacles to over-the-counter purchase, low awareness and availability of the most effective options, myths about safety and mechanism of action - already substantially limit access. Proactive solutions include public information campaigns; healthcare provider education about all emergency contraceptive options, including IUDs and advance provision of emergency contraceptive pills; innovative service delivery options such as vending machines and community distribution programs; and policy initiatives to ensure insurance coverage, eliminate pharmacy refusals, and support all service delivery options. In addition, we urge the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to approve updated labeling to align with the best available evidence that oral contraceptive pills work before ovulation and do not prevent implantation of a fertilized egg, as this language contributes to public confusion and access barriers. In the face of extreme limits on reproductive healthcare, now is the time to expand and protect access to emergency contraception so that everyone has the possibility of preventing pregnancy after unprotected sex or sexual assault. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Objective: Prior work shows that ads related to abortion services often feature crisis pregnancy centers instead of abortion providers. We investigated whether a change in Google's advertising policy that required advertisers to disclose whether they provided abortion services increased the proportion of ads facilitating abortion self-referral.Study Design: We used a standardized protocol to search online for abortion services before, during, and after the policy change; we performed searches in August 2016 to June 2017, June 2019, and October 2019, respectively, using Google, Bing, and Yahoo search engines. We performed searches for the 25 most populous U.S. cities and the 43 state capitals not already included. We classified up to the first 5 ads as facilitating abortion referral, hindering abortion referral, or providing neutral content. We compared search engine results using a chi-square test.Results: Among ads returned by Google, those shown after the policy change were significantly more likely to facilitate abortion self-referral (66.7% vs. 44.2%; p = 0.003) and slightly less likely to hinder abortion self-referral (33.3% vs. 40.6%; p = 0.33) compared to before the change. These findings were reversed for ads shown by Bing and Yahoo; ads returned after the change were significantly less likely to facilitate abortion self-referral (24.6% vs. 32.8%; p = 0.01) and significantly more likely to hinder self-referral (28.3% vs. 21.6%; p = 0.03) compared to before the change.Conclusion: A policy requiring advertisers to disclose whether they provide abortion services was associated with increasing the proportion of ads facilitating self-referral. Similar policies should be considered by all search engines.Implications: While the internet is a convenient source of information that individuals often use to locate abortion providers, the information may not actually lead searchers to services. Search engines should consider restricting abortion-related advertising to organizations that provide abortion services in order to ensure that individuals searching online for abortion services are able to locate services in a direct and timely manner. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
The article discusses the estetrol/drospirenone pill as a new choice of combined hormonal contraception. Topics include the potentially low environmental impact, low metabolic profile, limited effect on haemostasis and low impact on hepatic and breast tissue; the potential benefit as a contraceptive in patients aged under 50 years who are experiencing menopausal symptoms; and the performance of the estetrol/drospirenone pill in relation to combined hormonal methods.
Aim: Increasing access to long-acting modern contraceptives (LMAC) is one of the key factors in preventing unintended pregnancy and protecting women's health rights. However, the availability and accessibility of health facilities and their impacts on LAMC utilisation (implant, intrauterine devices, sterilisation) in low- and middle-income countries is an understudied topic. This study aimed to examine the association between the availability and readiness of health facilities and the use of LAMC in Bangladesh.Methods: In this survey study, we linked the 2017/18 Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey data with the 2017 Bangladesh Health Facility Survey data using the administrative-boundary linkage method. Mixed-effect multilevel logistic regressions were conducted. The sample comprised 10,938 married women of 15-49 years age range who were fertile but did not desire a child within 2 years of the date of survey. The outcome variable was the current use of LAMC (yes, no), and the explanatory variables were health facility-, individual-, household- and community-level factors.Results: Nearly 34% of participants used LAMCs with significant variations across areas in Bangladesh. The average scores of the health facility management and health facility infrastructure were 0.79 and 0.83, respectively. Of the facilities where LAMCs were available, 69% of them were functional and ready to provide LAMCs to the respondents. The increase in scores for the management (adjusted odds ratio (aOR), 1.59; 95% CI, 1.21-2.42) and infrastructure (aOR, 1.44; 95% CI, 1.01-1.69) of health facilities was positively associated with the overall uptake of LAMC. For per unit increase in the availability and readiness scores to provide LAMC at the nearest health facilities, the aORs for women to report using LAMC were 2.16 (95% CI, 1.18-3.21) and 1.74 (95% CI, 1.15-3.20), respectively. A nearly 27% decline in the likelihood of LAMC uptake was observed for every kilometre increase in the average regional-level distance between women's homes and the nearest health facilities.Conclusion: The proximity of health facilities and their improved management, infrastructure, and readiness to provide LAMCs to women significantly increase their uptake. Policies and programs should prioritise improving health facility readiness to increase LAMC uptake. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Introduction: Despite the advances in modern health care, maternal morbidity and mortality remain major problems in Ethiopia. Repeat-induced abortion is an indispensable contributor to this problem. Even though there are adverse effects on health, a significant proportion of Ethiopian women procure more than one abortion during their reproductive lifetime. This study aimed to determine the prevalence and associated factors of repeat-induced abortion in South Ethiopia, in 2020. Methods: An institution-based cross-sectional study design and a systematic random sampling technique were used to collect data from 410 samples of women. Data were collected using pre-tested and semi-structured interviewer-administered questionnaires. The data were coded and entered into EpiData version 4.6.2.0 before being exported to Statistical Package for Social Sciences (SPSS) version 26 for analysis. Variables with a p-value of less than 0.05 in binary logistic regressions were exported into multivariate logistic regression analysis. Finally, variables with a p-value of less than 0.05 in the multivariate logistic regression analysis were used to declare statistical significance. Result: The prevalence of repeat-induced abortion was found to be 35.4% (95% confidence interval = 30.7–40). Not facing a complication in prior abortion care, having more than two partners in the last 12 preceding months, perceiving abortion procedure as non-painful, having a sexual debut before the age of 18 years, and consuming alcohol have higher odds of repeat-induced abortion when compared with their counterparts. Conclusion: The prevalence of repeat-induced abortion in Hawassa city is high compared to studies conducted in other parts of Ethiopia. Not facing complications during previous abortion care, perceiving the abortion procedure as non-painful, alcohol consumption, having multiple sexual partners, and having a sexual debut before the age of 18 years are found to increase the chance of repeat-induced abortion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Maternal near-miss (MNM) refers to a woman who nearly died but survived a complication that occurred during pregnancy, childbirth, or within 42 days of termination of pregnancy. Studies in Ethiopia showed an inconsistent proportion of MNM across time and in different setups. This study is aimed at assessing the magnitude, trends, and correlates of MNM at three selected hospitals in North Shewa Zone, Central Ethiopia. A hospital-based cross-sectional study was conducted among 905 mothers who gave birth from 2012 to 2017 in three hospitals using the WHO criteria for MNM. Medical records of the study subjects were selected using a systematic sampling technique. Data were retrieved using a pretested data extraction tool. Association between MNM and independent variables was assessed by using a binary logistic regression model. An odds ratio with a 95% confidence interval (CI) and p value of <0.05 were used to declare the level of significance. Of the 905 medical records reviewed, the prevalence of MNM was 14.3% (95 % CI = 11.9 − 16.6) and similar over the last six years (2012-2017). The magnitude of life-threatening pregnancy complications was found to be 12.7%; severe preeclampsia (31%) and postpartum hemorrhage (26%) account for the highest proportion. Admission at a higher level of obstetric care like referral hospital (AOR = 4.85 ; 95% CI: 1.82-12.94) and general hospital (AOR = 3.76 ; 95% CI: 1.37-10.33), not using partograph for labor monitoring (AOR = 1.89 ; 95% CI: 1.17-3.04), history of abortion (AOR = 2.52 ; 95% CI: 1.18-5.37), and any other pregnancy complications (AOR = 6.91 ; 95% CI: 3.89-12.28) were factors significantly associated with higher MNM. Even though lower than the national figure, the proportion of MNM in the study area was very high, and there were no significant changes over the last six consecutive years. Giving special emphasis to women with prior history of pregnancy complications, hypertensive disorders of pregnancy, and obstetric hemorrhage with strict and quick management protocols and the use of partograph for labor monitoring are recommended to reduce the burden of severe maternal outcomes in the study area and Ethiopia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]