Corneli Amy, Lemons Ansley, Otieno-Masaba Rose, Ndiritu John, Packer Catherine, Lamarre-Vincent Jesse, Dulli Lisa
FHI 360, Durham, NC, United States.
FHI 360, Durham, NC, United States.
Contraception. 2016 Jul;94(1):34-9. doi: 10.1016/j.contraception.2016.03.004. Epub 2016 Mar 11.
Female sex workers (FSWs) need access to contraceptive services, yet programs often focus on HIV prevention and less on the broader sexual and reproductive health needs of FSWs. We aimed to identify barriers to accessing contraceptive services among FSWs and preferences for contraceptive service delivery options among FSWs and health care providers (HCPs) in order to inform a service delivery intervention to enhance access to and use of contraceptives for FSWs in Kenya.
Twenty focus group discussions were conducted with FSWs and HCPs in central Kenya.
Three barriers were identified that limited the ability of FSWs to access contraceptive services: (1) an unsupportive clinic infrastructure, which consisted of obstructive factors such as long wait times, fees, inconvenient operating hours and perceived compulsory HIV testing; (2) discriminatory provider-client interactions, where participants believed negative and differential treatment from female and male staff members impacted FSWs' willingness to seek medical services; and (3) negative partner influences, including both nonpaying and paying partners. Drop-in centers followed by peer educators and health care facilities were identified as preferred service delivery options.
FSWs may not be able to regularly access contraceptive services until interpersonal (male partners) and structural (facilities and providers) barriers are addressed. Alternative delivery options, such as drop-in centers coupled with peer educators, may be an approach worth evaluating.
An unsupportive clinic infrastructure, discriminatory provider-client interactions and negative partner influences are barriers to FSWs accessing the contraception services they need. Alternative service delivery options, such integrating contraceptive service delivery at drop-in centers designed for FSWs and information delivery through peer educators, might provide improved access and better service quality to FSWs seeking contraception.
女性性工作者需要获得避孕服务,但相关项目往往侧重于艾滋病毒预防,而较少关注女性性工作者更广泛的性健康和生殖健康需求。我们旨在确定女性性工作者在获取避孕服务方面的障碍,以及女性性工作者和医疗保健提供者对避孕服务提供方式的偏好,以便为一项服务提供干预措施提供信息,以增加肯尼亚女性性工作者获得和使用避孕药具的机会。
在肯尼亚中部与女性性工作者和医疗保健提供者进行了20次焦点小组讨论。
确定了三个限制女性性工作者获得避孕服务能力的障碍:(1)不支持的诊所基础设施,包括诸如等待时间长、费用、营业时间不便以及被认为是强制性的艾滋病毒检测等阻碍因素;(2)歧视性的医患互动,参与者认为女性和男性工作人员的负面和差别待遇影响了女性性工作者寻求医疗服务的意愿;(3)伴侣的负面影响,包括无偿和有偿伴侣。随到随诊中心,其次是同伴教育者和医疗保健机构被确定为首选的服务提供方式。
在人际(男性伴侣)和结构(设施和提供者)障碍得到解决之前,女性性工作者可能无法定期获得避孕服务。替代的提供方式,如随到随诊中心与同伴教育者相结合,可能是一种值得评估的方法。
不支持的诊所基础设施、歧视性的医患互动和伴侣的负面影响是女性性工作者获得所需避孕服务的障碍。替代的服务提供方式,例如在为女性性工作者设计的随到随诊中心整合避孕服务提供,并通过同伴教育者提供信息,可能会为寻求避孕的女性性工作者提供更好的获取途径和更高的服务质量。