Holcombe Sarah Jane, Berhe Aster, Cherie Amsale
Bixby Associate Fellow, University of California, Berkeley, 17 University Hall, Berkeley, CA 94720.
Stud Fam Plann. 2015 Mar;46(1):73-95. doi: 10.1111/j.1728-4465.2015.00016.x.
In 2005, Ethiopia liberalized its abortion law and subsequently authorized midwives to offer abortion services. Using a 2013 survey of 188 midwives and 12 interviews with third-year midwifery students, this cross-sectional research examines midwives' attitudes toward abortion to understand their decisions about service provision. Most midwives were willing to provide abortion services. This willingness was positively and significantly related to clinical experience with abortion, but negatively and significantly related to religiosity, belief that providers have the right to refuse to provide services, and care of patients from periurban as opposed to rural areas. No significant relationship was found with perceptions of abortion stigma, years of work as a midwife, or knowledge of the law. Interview data suggest complex dynamics underlying midwives' willingness to offer services, including conflicts between professional norms and religious beliefs. Findings can inform Ethiopia's efforts to reduce maternal mortality through task-shifting to midwives and can aid other countries that are confronting provider shortages and high levels of maternal mortality and morbidity, particularly due to unsafe abortion.
2005年,埃塞俄比亚放宽了堕胎法,随后授权助产士提供堕胎服务。本横断面研究利用2013年对188名助产士的调查以及对三年级助产专业学生的12次访谈,考察助产士对堕胎的态度,以了解他们关于服务提供的决定。大多数助产士愿意提供堕胎服务。这种意愿与堕胎临床经验呈正相关且显著相关,但与宗教信仰、认为提供者有权拒绝提供服务以及照顾城市周边地区而非农村地区的患者呈负相关且显著相关。在对堕胎污名的认知、助产士工作年限或法律知识方面未发现显著关系。访谈数据表明,助产士提供服务意愿背后存在复杂的动态因素,包括职业规范与宗教信仰之间的冲突。研究结果可为埃塞俄比亚通过将任务转移给助产士来降低孕产妇死亡率的努力提供参考,并可帮助其他面临提供者短缺以及孕产妇死亡率和发病率高的国家,特别是由于不安全堕胎导致这些问题的国家。