Independent Consultant Sarah Castle Consultancy Ltd, 37 Warren St, Fitzrovia, London, W1T 6AD, UK.
CARE International USA, Atlanta, USA.
BMC Womens Health. 2019 Jul 24;19(1):104. doi: 10.1186/s12905-019-0793-3.
Achieving the unfinished agenda towards sexual and reproductive health and rights requires overcoming remaining barriers to contraceptive uptake, which can be method-specific. Women's uptake of the IUD is poor across sub-Saharan Africa. The objective of this paper is to identify the reasons for comparatively high IUD use observed in a CARE project in DRC, together with the programmatic characteristics which facilitated uptake.
Qualitative data were collected in 2015 as part of a reproductive health project in the DRC. Using purposive sampling, 15 focus group discussions took place with IUD users, users of other methods and non-users of modern contraception as well as their male partners. Eighteen in-depth interviews were conducted with health providers, project staff, community health workers and local stakeholders to capture a range of experiences. Data were analyzed using content theory approach and contextualized through a review of routine monitoring data.
In an area with practically no previous IUD use, 38,662 new FP clients were served during the first 5 years of the project and 82% (31,569) chose long-acting or permanent methods. Over 10,000 clients chose an IUD, representing 30% of the total FP clients. Key informants expressed mainly positive views about the IUD and quality of service. Concerns related to method insertion, which some perceived as too intimate or shameful. Findings indicate that this uptake reflects effective supply chains, good provider training and supervision and multiple communication strategies including those which target men. Community engagement was enhanced by local stakeholders' participation in sensitization and quality assurance as well in analysis of data for decision-making.
The findings of the paper showed that by involving local stakeholders in addressing structural and socio-cultural barriers to women's free access to FP, programs can positively influence quality of service and method mix as well as knowledge and attitudes surrounding FP use and thus improve the uptake of FP in general and IUDs in particular, even in conflict-affected settings. A Theory of Change for enhancing IUD provision within family planning programs is suggested.
实现性健康和生殖健康权利方面尚未完成的议程,需要克服避孕药具使用方面仍然存在的障碍,这些障碍可能因方法而异。在撒哈拉以南非洲地区,宫内节育器的使用普及率仍然很低。本文旨在找出在 CARE 组织在刚果民主共和国开展的一个项目中观察到宫内节育器使用率较高的原因,以及促进使用率提高的项目特征。
2015 年,在刚果民主共和国的一个生殖健康项目中收集了定性数据。采用目的抽样法,与宫内节育器使用者、其他方法使用者和现代避孕方法未使用者及其男性伴侣进行了 15 次焦点小组讨论。与卫生服务提供者、项目工作人员、社区卫生工作者和当地利益攸关方进行了 18 次深入访谈,以了解各种经验。使用内容理论方法进行数据分析,并通过审查常规监测数据进行背景分析。
在一个几乎没有之前宫内节育器使用的地区,该项目的前 5 年共服务了 38662 名新的计划生育客户,其中 82%(31569 名)选择了长效或永久方法。超过 10000 名客户选择了宫内节育器,占总计划生育客户的 30%。主要知情人对宫内节育器和服务质量表示了积极的看法。与方法插入相关的担忧,一些人认为这种方法过于亲密或羞耻。研究结果表明,这种使用率反映了有效的供应链、良好的提供者培训和监督,以及多种沟通策略,包括针对男性的策略。当地利益攸关方参与了宣传和质量保证,以及数据分析决策,这增强了社区参与。
本文的研究结果表明,通过让当地利益攸关方参与解决妇女自由获得计划生育服务的结构性和社会文化障碍,可以积极影响服务质量和方法组合,以及围绕计划生育使用的知识和态度,从而提高计划生育的总体使用率,特别是宫内节育器的使用率,即使在受冲突影响的环境中也是如此。建议提出了一个改变理论,以增强计划生育方案中宫内节育器的供应。