Warwick Medical School, University of Warwick, Coventry, UK.
Eur J Contracept Reprod Health Care. 2021 Oct;26(5):429-438. doi: 10.1080/13625187.2021.1934440. Epub 2021 Jun 15.
Review evidence is lacking about how contraception is affected by severe social disruption, such as that caused by the COVID-19 pandemic. The purpose of this scoping review was to explore the impact of natural and man-made disasters on contraception in OECD member countries.
Manual searches and systematic searches in six electronic databases were conducted with no language restrictions. All articles were screened by at least two researchers. The data were analysed thematically.
108 articles were included. Most focussed on the Zika virus outbreak ( = 50) and the COVID-19 pandemic ( = 28). Four key themes were identified: importance of contraception during disasters, impact of disasters on contraceptive behaviour, barriers to contraception during disasters and ways of improving use of contraception during disasters. Despite efforts to increase access to contraception including by transforming ways of delivery, barriers to use meant that unmet need persisted.
To prevent adverse health outcomes and reduce health costs as a result of failure to have access to contraception during disasters, there is a need to intensify efforts to remove barriers to use. This should include increasing access and information on methods of contraception and their side effects (e.g., menstrual suppression) and making contraception freely available.
关于避孕措施如何受到严重社会动荡(如 COVID-19 大流行)影响的证据尚缺乏。本范围综述的目的是探讨自然灾害和人为灾害对经合组织成员国避孕措施的影响。
手动搜索和在六个电子数据库中进行系统搜索,不限制语言。由至少两名研究人员对所有文章进行筛选。对数据进行主题分析。
共纳入 108 篇文章。大多数文章集中在寨卡病毒爆发( = 50)和 COVID-19 大流行( = 28)。确定了四个关键主题:灾害期间避孕的重要性、灾害对避孕行为的影响、灾害期间避孕的障碍以及改善灾害期间避孕措施的方法。尽管努力增加避孕措施的可及性,包括改变提供方式,但使用障碍意味着未满足的需求仍然存在。
为了防止因在灾害期间无法获得避孕措施而导致不良健康后果和增加卫生保健成本,需要加紧努力消除使用障碍。这应包括增加对避孕方法及其副作用(例如,月经抑制)的获取和信息,并免费提供避孕措施。