Messinger Chelsea Jordan, Mahmud Ilias, Kanan Sushama, Jahangir Yamin Tauseef, Sarker Malabika, Rashid Sabina Faiz
Yale College, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA.
James P Grant School of Public Health, BRAC University, 5th Floor, (Level-6), icddr,b Building, 68 ShahidTajudin Ahmed Sharani, Mohakhali, Dhaka, 1212, Bangladesh.
Reprod Health. 2017 Jan 14;14(1):7. doi: 10.1186/s12978-016-0274-1.
As many as one-third of all pregnancies in Bangladesh are unplanned, with nearly one-half of these pregnancies ending in either menstrual regulation (MR) or illegal clandestine abortion. Although MR is provided free of charge, or at a nominal cost, through the public sector and various non-profits organizations, many women face barriers in accessing safe, affordable MR and post-MR care. Mobile health (mHealth) services present a promising platform for increasing access to MR among low-income women at risk for clandestine abortion. We sought to investigate the knowledge, attitudes and practices regarding mHealth of both MR clients and formal and informal sexual and reproductive healthcare providers in urban and rural low-income settlements in Bangladesh.
A total of 58 interviews were conducted with MR clients, formal MR providers, and informal MR providers in four low-income settlements in the Dhaka and Sylhet districts of Bangladesh. Interview data was coded and qualitatively analysed for themes using standard qualitative research practices.
Our findings suggest that low-income MR clients in Bangladesh have an inadequate understanding of how to use their mobile phones to obtain health service information or counselling related to MR, and correspondingly low levels of formal or informal mHealth service utilization. Few were aware of any formal mHealth services in place in their communities, despite the fact that providers stated that hotlines were available. Overall, MR clients expressed positive opinions of mHealth services as a means of improving women's access to affordable and timely MR. Formal and informal MR providers believed that mobile phones had benefits with respect to information dissemination and making appointments, but emphasized the necessity of in-person consultations for effective sexual and reproductive healthcare.
We report low utilization yet high acceptability of mHealth services among low-income MR clients in Bangladesh. Expanding formal and informal mHealth services targeted towards MR - and increasing publicity of these services in low-income communities - may help increase timely access to accurate MR information and formal providers among women at risk for clandestine abortion. While expanding formal and informal mHealth services for SRHR in Bangladesh may be useful in disseminating information about MR and connecting women with formal providers, in-person visits remain necessary for adequate treatment.
在孟加拉国,多达三分之一的怀孕是意外怀孕,其中近一半以月经调整(MR)或非法秘密堕胎告终。尽管通过公共部门和各种非营利组织免费或以名义成本提供MR,但许多妇女在获得安全、负担得起的MR及MR后护理方面面临障碍。移动健康(mHealth)服务为增加面临秘密堕胎风险的低收入妇女获得MR的机会提供了一个有前景的平台。我们试图调查孟加拉国城乡低收入住区中MR服务对象以及正规和非正规性与生殖健康护理提供者对mHealth的知识、态度和做法。
在孟加拉国达卡和锡尔赫特地区的四个低收入住区,共对MR服务对象、正规MR提供者和非正规MR提供者进行了58次访谈。使用标准定性研究方法对访谈数据进行编码并对主题进行定性分析。
我们的研究结果表明,孟加拉国低收入MR服务对象对如何使用手机获取与MR相关的健康服务信息或咨询了解不足,相应地,正规或非正规mHealth服务的利用率较低。尽管提供者表示设有热线,但很少有人知道其社区中有任何正规的mHealth服务。总体而言,MR服务对象对mHealth服务作为改善妇女获得负担得起的及时MR的手段表达了积极看法。正规和非正规MR提供者认为手机在信息传播和预约方面有好处,但强调面对面咨询对于有效的性与生殖健康护理的必要性。
我们报告称,孟加拉国低收入MR服务对象对mHealth服务的利用率较低,但接受度较高。扩大针对MR的正规和非正规mHealth服务,并在低收入社区提高这些服务的知名度,可能有助于增加面临秘密堕胎风险的妇女及时获取准确的MR信息和正规提供者的机会。虽然在孟加拉国扩大针对性与生殖健康及权利的正规和非正规mHealth服务可能有助于传播有关MR的信息并将妇女与正规提供者联系起来,但面对面就诊对于充分治疗仍然是必要的。