Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 615 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 62501, USA.
College of Medicine, University of Ibadan, Queen Elizabeth II Road, Agodi, Ibadan, Nigeria.
Health Policy Plan. 2021 Aug 12;36(7):1077-1089. doi: 10.1093/heapol/czab068.
Postabortion care (PAC) is an essential component of emergency obstetric care (EmOC) and is necessary to prevent unsafe abortion-related maternal mortality, but we know little regarding the preparedness of facilities to provide PAC services, the distribution of these services and disparities in their accessibility in low-resource settings. To address this knowledge gap, this study aims to describe PAC service availability, evaluate PAC readiness and measure inequities in access to PAC services in seven states of Nigeria and nationally in Côte d'Ivoire. We used survey data from reproductive-age women and the health facilities that serve the areas where they live. We linked facility readiness information, including PAC-specific signal functions, to female data using geospatial information. Findings revealed less than half of facilities provide basic PAC services in Nigeria (48.4%) but greater PAC availability in Côte d'Ivoire (70.5%). Only 33.5% and 36.9% of facilities with the capacity to provide basic PAC and only 23.9% and 37.5% of facilities with the capacity to provide comprehensive PAC had all the corresponding signal functions in Nigeria and Côte d'Ivoire, respectively. With regard to access, while ∼8 out of 10 women of reproductive age in Nigeria (81.3%) and Côte d'Ivoire (79.9%) lived within 10 km of a facility providing any PAC services, significantly lower levels of the population lived <10 km from a facility with all basic or comprehensive PAC signal functions, and we observed significant inequities in access for poor, rural and less educated women. Addressing facilities' service readiness will improve the quality of PAC provided and ensure postabortion complications can be treated in a timely and effective manner, while expanding the availability of services to additional primary-level facilities would increase access-both of which could help to reduce avoidable abortion-related maternal morbidity and mortality and associated inequities.
流产后护理(PAC)是紧急产科护理(EmOC)的重要组成部分,对于防止不安全流产相关的孕产妇死亡是必要的,但我们对设施提供 PAC 服务的准备情况、这些服务的分布以及在资源匮乏环境下获得这些服务的差异知之甚少。为了填补这一知识空白,本研究旨在描述 PAC 服务的可及性,评估 PAC 的准备情况,并衡量尼日利亚七个州和科特迪瓦全国 PAC 服务获得方面的不平等。我们使用来自育龄妇女和为她们居住地区提供服务的卫生机构的调查数据。我们使用地理空间信息将设施准备情况信息(包括 PAC 特定的信号功能)与女性数据联系起来。研究结果显示,在尼日利亚,不到一半的设施提供基本的 PAC 服务(48.4%),而在科特迪瓦,PAC 的可及性更高(70.5%)。在尼日利亚和科特迪瓦,只有 33.5%和 36.9%的有能力提供基本 PAC 的设施以及只有 23.9%和 37.5%的有能力提供全面 PAC 的设施拥有所有相应的信号功能。在获得方面,虽然尼日利亚(81.3%)和科特迪瓦(79.9%)约有 80%的育龄妇女居住在提供任何 PAC 服务的设施 10 公里范围内,但居住在有基本或全面 PAC 所有信号功能的设施 10 公里范围内的人口比例明显较低,而且我们观察到贫困、农村和受教育程度较低的妇女在获得服务方面存在显著的不平等。解决设施的服务准备情况将提高所提供的 PAC 质量,并确保能够及时有效地治疗流产后并发症,而将服务扩展到更多的初级保健设施将增加获得服务的机会——这两者都有助于减少可避免的流产相关孕产妇发病率和死亡率以及相关的不平等。