Herbert Wertheim School of Public Health and Human Longevity Science, University of California San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, San Diego, CA, 92093, USA.
San Diego State University School of Public Health, San Diego, CA, USA.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2024 May 13;24(1):353. doi: 10.1186/s12884-024-06549-1.
Non-consented care, a form of obstetric violence involving the lack of informed consent for procedures, is a common but little-understood phenomenon in the global public health arena. The aim of this secondary analysis was to measure the prevalence and assess change over time of non-consented care during childbirth in Mexico in 2016 and 2021, as well as to examine the association of sociodemographic, pregnancy-, and childbirth-factors with this type of violence.
We measured the prevalence of non-consented care and three of its variations, forced sterilization or contraception, forced cesarean section, and forced consent on paperwork, during childbirth in Mexico for 2016 (N = 24,036) and 2021 (N = 19,322) using data from Mexico's cross-sectional National Survey on the Dynamics of Household Relationships (ENDIREH). Weighted data were stratified by geographical regions. We performed adjusted logistic regression analyses to explore associations.
The national prevalence of non-consented care and one of its variations, pressure to get a contraceptive method, increased from 2016 to 2021. A decrease in the prevalence was observed for forced contraception or sterilization without knowledge, forcing women to sign paperwork, and non-consented cesarean sections nationally and in most regions. Women between the ages of 26 and 35 years, married, cohabiting with partner, living in urban settings, who do not identify as Indigenous, and who received prenatal services or gave birth at the Mexican Institute of Social Security (IMSS) facilities experienced a higher prevalence of non-consented care. Being 26 years of age and older, living in a rural setting, experiencing stillbirths in the last five years, having a vaginal delivery, receiving prenatal services at IMSS, or delivering at a private facility were significantly associated with higher odds of reporting non-consented care.
While a decrease in most of the variations of non-consented care was found, the overall prevalence of non-consented care and, in one of its variations, pressure to get contraceptives, increased at a national and regional level. Our findings suggest the need to enforce current laws and strengthen health systems, paying special attention to the geographical regions and populations that have experienced higher reported cases of this structural problem.
未经同意的护理是一种产科暴力形式,涉及程序缺乏知情同意,在全球公共卫生领域是一种常见但鲜为人知的现象。本二次分析的目的是衡量 2016 年和 2021 年墨西哥分娩期间未经同意护理的流行率,并评估其随时间的变化,以及检查社会人口、妊娠和分娩因素与这种类型的暴力之间的关联。
我们使用墨西哥横断面家庭关系动态调查(ENDIREH)的数据,测量了 2016 年(N=24036)和 2021 年(N=19322)墨西哥分娩期间未经同意护理及其三种变化(强制绝育或避孕、强制剖腹产和在文书工作上强制同意)的流行率。加权数据按地理区域分层。我们进行了调整后的逻辑回归分析以探索关联。
未经同意护理及其一种变化(被迫使用避孕方法)的全国流行率从 2016 年到 2021 年有所增加。全国和大多数地区观察到未经同意的绝育或避孕、强制妇女签署文书工作以及未经同意的剖腹产的流行率下降。26 至 35 岁、已婚、与伴侣同居、居住在城市环境中、不认为自己是土著人、接受产前服务或在墨西哥社会保障研究所(IMSS)设施分娩的妇女经历未经同意护理的流行率更高。26 岁及以上、居住在农村地区、过去五年内有死产、阴道分娩、在 IMSS 接受产前服务或在私人机构分娩与报告未经同意护理的可能性更高显著相关。
虽然大多数未经同意护理的变化有所减少,但未经同意护理的总体流行率及其一种变化(使用避孕药具的压力)在国家和地区层面上有所增加。我们的研究结果表明,需要执行现行法律并加强卫生系统,特别关注经历过这种结构性问题报告案例较高的地理区域和人群。