Health Systems Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council, Cape Town, South Africa.
Health Systems Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council, Cape Town, South Africa; Department of Psychology, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa.
Contraception. 2024 Feb;130:110307. doi: 10.1016/j.contraception.2023.110307. Epub 2023 Oct 18.
We investigated the coverage of contraception services (excluding condoms) to prevent unintended pregnancy among young women and girls aged 15 to 24 years who were beneficiaries of one of the two largest combination HIV and pregnancy prevention program in South Africa.
We invited 2160 randomly sampled beneficiaries who were living in six of the 12 program districts across six provinces to participate in a telephone survey. We created pregnancy prevention coverage cascades and conducted univariate and multivariable analyses to identify key barriers and facilitators associated with each step of the cascade.
We achieved a response rate of 23.8%, resulting in 515 respondents, of whom 303 had sex in the 6 months before the survey. Of this subsample, 80.4% had access to contraception services, 60.6% had access and motivation to use contraceptives, and 21.9% had access to, motivation to use, and effectively used contraceptives. Distance to travel to services and not ever being offered contraceptives by health workers were access barriers, while low pregnancy risk perception was a barrier to motivation.
Most respondents had access to and were motivated to use contraceptives other than condoms but were not effectively using them. Having been offered contraceptives facilitated better access, while distance to the services was a barrier, suggesting the importance of improving supply-side interventions, such as increasing the number and accessibility of spaces where Sexual and Reproductive Health (SRH) services are offered. We recommend longitudinal behavioral counseling for young people, especially adolescents, as well as risk reduction and information-tailored interventions.
Pregnancy prevention cascades are a promising tool to monitor progress toward universal access to contraception services and to identify barriers that need to be addressed to achieve the effective use of contraceptives.
我们调查了避孕服务(不包括避孕套)的覆盖范围,以预防年龄在 15 至 24 岁的年轻女性和女孩的非意愿妊娠,这些女性和女孩是南非两个最大的艾滋病毒和妊娠预防综合项目之一的受益者。
我们邀请了随机抽样的 2160 名受益者,他们居住在六个省份的 12 个项目区中的六个,参加了一项电话调查。我们创建了妊娠预防覆盖级联,并进行了单变量和多变量分析,以确定与级联的每一步相关的主要障碍和促进因素。
我们的回应率为 23.8%,有 515 名受访者,其中 303 名在调查前 6 个月有过性行为。在这个子样本中,80.4%的人能够获得避孕服务,60.6%的人有获得和使用避孕的动机,21.9%的人能够获得、有使用避孕的动机并有效地使用了避孕措施。前往服务的距离和卫生工作者从未提供过避孕措施是获得的障碍,而对怀孕风险的低认知是动机的障碍。
大多数受访者能够获得并愿意使用除避孕套以外的避孕措施,但没有有效地使用它们。获得避孕措施促进了更好的获得,而距离服务的距离是一个障碍,这表明改善供应方干预措施的重要性,例如增加提供性和生殖健康(SRH)服务的场所的数量和可及性。我们建议对年轻人,尤其是青少年进行长期行为咨询,以及进行风险降低和信息定制的干预措施。
妊娠预防级联是监测普及避孕服务进展和确定需要解决的障碍以实现避孕有效使用的有前途的工具。