1. Evaluation of a Training for Health and Social Service Providers on Abortion Referral-Making
- Author
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O’Donnell, Jenny, Holt, Kelsey, Nobel, Kristin, and Zurek, Melanie
- Subjects
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Human Society ,Reproductive Medicine ,Social Work ,Contraception/Reproduction ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Health Services ,Health and social care services research ,8.1 Organisation and delivery of services ,Reproductive health and childbirth ,Good Health and Well Being ,Abortion ,Induced ,Adult ,Female ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Health Personnel ,Humans ,Program Evaluation ,Referral and Consultation ,Unintended pregnancy ,Abortion referrals ,Coordination of care ,Workforce development ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Studies in Human Society ,Public Health ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences ,Human society - Abstract
Purpose Engaging trusted care providers and empowering them with information and skills about abortion is a critical opportunity to improve coordination of care for women seeking abortion, if and when these services are needed. Description Provide, a nonprofit that works in partnership with health and social service providers to build a health system that is equipped to respond to women's health care needs around abortion, launched a referrals training program in 2013. To assess the effectiveness of this training program, we conducted an evaluation of satisfaction with training and the impact of the intervention on provider knowledge of safety of abortion, self-efficacy to provide abortion referrals, and intention to provide pregnancy options counseling and referrals in the future. Assessment Approximately 90% of participants were "very satisfied" with their training experience. Results show significant increase in intention to provide non-judgmental pregnancy options counseling and referrals for abortion care after participants went through training. Post-training, significantly more reported that they would present all pregnancy options without judgment or bias (94 vs. 82%, p
- Published
- 2018