Department of Global Health and Development, The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, 15-17 Tavistock Place, London, WC1H 9SH, UK.
Independent Consultant.
Stud Fam Plann. 2022 Dec;53(4):575-593. doi: 10.1111/sifp.12210. Epub 2022 Aug 22.
Sierra Leone was highly impacted by the 2014-2016 West Africa Ebola outbreak, with 3,955 recorded deaths. Already stressed maternal health services were deeply affected by the outbreak due to fears of viral transmission, reallocation of maternity staff, and broader policies to stop transmission including travel restrictions. This research sought to explore women's perspectives on delaying pregnancy during the Ebola outbreak using family planning methods. Qualitative data collection took place in Kambia District in 2018 and included 35 women participants, with women who were either family planning users or nonusers at the time of the outbreak. Women reported a variety of reasons for choosing to take or not to take family planning during the outbreak, which we categorized as proximal (directly related to the outbreak) or distal (not directly outbreak related). Proximal reasons to take family planning included to avoid interacting with health care spaces where Ebola could be transmitted, to avoid the economic burden of additional children in a time when economic activities were curtailed and to return to school when education resumed postoutbreak. Distal reasoning included gender roles affecting women's decision making to seek family planning, concerns related to the physiological side effects of family planning, and the economic burden of paying for family planning. Women's perspectives for choosing to take or not take family planning during the Sierra Leone Ebola crisis had not been explored prior to this paper. Using the lens of family planning to consider how women choose to access health care in an outbreak gives us a unique perspective into how all health care interactions are impacted by a generalized outbreak of Ebola, and how outbreak responses struggle to ensure such services remain a priority.
塞拉利昂在 2014-2016 年西非埃博拉疫情中受到严重影响,记录的死亡人数为 3955 人。由于担心病毒传播、产科工作人员重新分配以及包括旅行限制在内的更广泛的阻止传播政策,已经承受压力的孕产妇保健服务受到疫情的严重影响。本研究旨在探讨妇女在埃博拉疫情期间通过计划生育方法延迟怀孕的看法。2018 年,在坎比亚区进行了定性数据收集,包括 35 名女性参与者,其中一些女性在疫情爆发时是计划生育使用者,而另一些女性则不是。女性报告了在疫情期间选择采取或不采取计划生育措施的各种原因,我们将这些原因分为近端(直接与疫情相关)和远端(与疫情不直接相关)。采取计划生育措施的近端原因包括避免与可能传播埃博拉病毒的医疗保健场所互动,避免在经济活动受到限制的时期因额外子女而产生经济负担,以及在疫情后恢复学业时重返学校。远端原因包括性别角色影响妇女寻求计划生育的决策、对计划生育生理副作用的担忧,以及支付计划生育费用的经济负担。在此之前,尚未探讨塞拉利昂埃博拉危机期间妇女选择采取或不采取计划生育措施的观点。从计划生育的角度来看待妇女在疫情期间选择获取医疗保健的方式,使我们能够从独特的视角了解所有医疗保健互动如何受到埃博拉广泛爆发的影响,以及疫情应对措施如何努力确保这些服务仍然是优先事项。