Women's Health Research Unit, School of Public Health and Family Medicine, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Department of International Public Health, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, UK.
Reprod Health. 2019 Nov 6;16(1):159. doi: 10.1186/s12978-019-0830-6.
In recent decades there have been great improvements in the reproductive health of women in low- and middle-income countries and increases in the use of modern contraceptive methods. Nonetheless, many women are not able to access information, contraceptive technologies and services that could facilitate preventing unintended pregnancies and planning the number and timing of desired pregnancies. In South Africa, the contraceptive prevalence rate is 64.6%. However, this relatively high contraceptive prevalence rate masks problems with quality contraceptive service delivery, equitable access, and women's ability to correctly and consistently, use contraceptive methods of their choice. This study set out to understand the specific family planning and contraceptive needs and behaviours of women of reproductive age in South Africa, through a lived experience, multisensory approach.
Participatory qualitative research methods were used including body mapping workshops amongst reproductive aged women recruited from urban and peri urban areas in the Western Cape South Africa. Data including body map images were analysed using a thematic analysis approach.
Women had limited biomedical knowledge of the female reproductive anatomy, conception, fertility and how contraceptives worked, compounded by a lack of contraceptive counseling and support from health care providers. Women's preferences for different contraceptive methods were not based on a single, sensory or experiential factor. Rather, they were made up of a composite of sensory, physical, social and emotional experiences underscored by potential for threats to bodily harm.
This study highlighted the need to address communication and knowledge gaps around the female reproductive anatomy, different contraceptive methods and how contraception works to prevent a pregnancy. Women, including younger women, identified sexual and reproductive health knowledge gaps themselves and identified these gaps as important factors that influenced uptake and effective contraceptive use. These knowledge gaps were overwhelmingly linked to poor or absent communication and counseling provided by health care providers. Body mapping techniques could be used in education and communication strategies around sexual and reproductive health programmes in diverse settings.
近几十年来,中低收入国家的女性生殖健康状况有了很大改善,现代避孕方法的使用率也有所提高。尽管如此,许多女性仍然无法获得信息、避孕技术和服务,这使得她们难以预防意外怀孕并规划期望怀孕的数量和时间。在南非,避孕普及率为 64.6%。然而,这个相对较高的避孕普及率掩盖了优质避孕服务提供、公平获得以及女性正确和持续使用她们选择的避孕方法的能力方面存在的问题。本研究旨在通过亲身体验的多感官方法,了解南非育龄妇女的具体计划生育和避孕需求及行为。
采用参与式定性研究方法,包括在南非西开普省城市和城市周边地区招募的育龄妇女进行身体绘图工作坊。使用主题分析方法对包括身体绘图图像在内的数据进行分析。
女性对女性生殖解剖学、受孕、生育能力以及避孕药具如何发挥作用的生物医学知识有限,再加上缺乏来自卫生保健提供者的避孕咨询和支持。女性对不同避孕方法的偏好不是基于单一的、感官的或体验性的因素。相反,它们由感官、身体、社会和情感体验的组合组成,这些体验受到对身体伤害的潜在威胁的影响。
本研究强调需要解决有关女性生殖解剖学、不同避孕方法以及避孕药具如何发挥作用以防止怀孕的沟通和知识差距问题。包括年轻女性在内的女性自身都认识到性与生殖健康知识的差距,并将这些差距视为影响采用和有效避孕的重要因素。这些知识差距与卫生保健提供者提供的沟通和咨询不佳或缺失密切相关。身体绘图技术可以用于各种环境中的性与生殖健康计划的教育和沟通策略。