Australian Centre for Public and Population Health Research, Faculty of Health, University of Technology Sydney, PO Box 123, Sydney, NSW, 2007, Australia.
Jhpiego, 1615 Thames St, Baltimore, MD, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2022 Jun 7;22(1):757. doi: 10.1186/s12913-022-07916-4.
Self-care is the ability of individuals, families, and communities to promote health, prevent disease, maintain health, and manage illness and disability with or without a health care provider. In resource-constrained settings with disrupted sexual and reproductive health (SRH) service coverage and access, SRH self-care could play a critical role. Despite SRH conditions being among the leading causes of mortality and morbidity among women of reproductive age in humanitarian and fragile settings, there are currently no reviews of self-care interventions in these contexts to guide policy and practice.
We undertook a scoping review to identify the design, implementation, and outcomes of self-care interventions for SRH in humanitarian and fragile settings. We defined settings of interest as locations with appeals for international humanitarian assistance or identified as fragile and conflict-affected situations by the World Bank. SRH self-care interventions were described according to those aligned with the Minimum Initial Services Package for Reproductive Health in Crises. We searched six databases for records using keywords guided by the PRISMA statement. The findings of each included paper were analysed using an a priori framework to identify information concerning effectiveness, acceptability and feasibility of the self-care intervention, places where self-care interventions were accessed and factors relating to the environment that enabled the delivery and uptake of the interventions.
We identified 25 publications on SRH self-care implemented in humanitarian and fragile settings including ten publications on maternal and newborn health, nine on HIV/STI interventions, two on contraception, two on safe abortion care, one on gender-based violence, and one on health service provider perspectives on multiple interventions. Overall, the findings show that well-supported self-care interventions have the potential to increase access to quality SRH for crisis-affected communities. However, descriptions of interventions, study settings, and factors impacting implementation offer limited insight into how practical considerations for SRH self-care interventions differ in stable, fragile, and crisis-affected settings.
It is time to invest in self-care implementation research in humanitarian settings to inform policies and practices that are adapted to the needs of crisis-affected communities and tailored to the specific health system challenges encountered in such contexts.
自我保健是指个人、家庭和社区在无需医疗保健提供者的情况下促进健康、预防疾病、保持健康以及管理疾病和残疾的能力。在资源有限且性健康和生殖健康(SRH)服务覆盖和获取受到干扰的情况下,SRH 自我保健可能发挥关键作用。尽管 SRH 状况是人道主义和脆弱环境中育龄妇女死亡和发病的主要原因之一,但目前没有关于这些情况下自我保健干预措施的审查来指导政策和实践。
我们进行了范围界定审查,以确定人道主义和脆弱环境中 SRH 自我保健干预措施的设计、实施和结果。我们将感兴趣的环境定义为有国际人道主义援助呼吁的地方,或被世界银行确定为脆弱和冲突影响的情况。SRH 自我保健干预措施是根据与危机中的生殖健康最低初始服务包一致的措施来描述的。我们根据 PRISMA 声明使用关键词在六个数据库中搜索记录。使用预先确定的框架分析每个纳入文件的结果,以确定有关自我保健干预措施有效性、可接受性和可行性的信息、自我保健干预措施的获取地点以及与促进和接受干预措施相关的环境因素。
我们确定了 25 篇关于人道主义和脆弱环境中 SRH 自我保健的出版物,其中 10 篇关于孕产妇和新生儿健康,9 篇关于艾滋病毒/性传播感染干预措施,2 篇关于避孕,2 篇关于安全堕胎护理,1 篇关于性别暴力,1 篇关于卫生服务提供者对多项干预措施的看法。总体而言,研究结果表明,支持良好的自我保健干预措施有可能增加危机影响社区获得优质 SRH 的机会。然而,干预措施的描述、研究环境以及影响实施的因素提供的关于稳定、脆弱和危机影响环境中 SRH 自我保健干预措施的实际考虑因素的见解有限。
现在是时候在人道主义环境中投资于自我保健实施研究了,以告知适应危机影响社区需求并针对此类环境中遇到的特定卫生系统挑战进行调整的政策和实践。