Stirling-Cameron Emma, Carson Andrea, Abdulai Abdul-Fatawu, Martin-Misener Ruth, Renner Regina, Ennis Madeleine, Norman Wendy V
School of Population and Public Health, The University of British Columbia, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
School of Nursing, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.
BMJ Sex Reprod Health. 2025 Apr 9;51(2):102-110. doi: 10.1136/bmjsrh-2024-202379.
In 2017, nurse practitioners (NPs) became the first non-physician healthcare providers authorised to independently provide medication abortion (MA) in Canada. We aimed to report on demographic and clinical characteristics of NPs providing mifepristone/misoprostol MA in Canada and to identify context-specific barriers and enablers to NP provision of mifepristone/misoprostol MA in Canada among MA providers and non-providers.
From August 2020 to February 2021, we invited Canadian NPs to complete a national, web-based, bilingual (English/French) survey. The survey was distributed through national and provincial nursing associations and national abortion health professional organisations. We collected demographic and clinical care characteristics and present descriptive statistics and bivariate analyses to compare the experiences of NP providers and non-providers of MA.
The 181 respondents represented all Canadian provinces and territories. Sixty-five NPs (36%) had provided MA at the time of the survey and 116 (64%) had not. Nearly half (47%) of respondents worked in rural or remote communities and 81% in primary care clinics. Significant barriers impacting non-providers' abilities to provide MA included limited proximity to a pharmacy that dispensed mifepristone/misoprostol, few experienced abortion providers in their community of practice, poor access to procedural abortion services, policy restrictions in NPs' places of employment, and no access to clinical mentorship. Some 98% of NPs providing MA services had never encountered anti-choice protest activity.
NPs appear prepared and able to provide MA, yet barriers remain, particularly for NPs in smaller, lower-resourced communities. Our findings inform the development of supports for NPs in this new practice to improve abortion access in Canada.
2017年,执业护士成为加拿大首批被授权独立提供药物流产的非医生医疗服务提供者。我们旨在报告在加拿大提供米非司酮/米索前列醇药物流产的执业护士的人口统计学和临床特征,并确定在加拿大提供米非司酮/米索前列醇药物流产的执业护士在提供者和非提供者中特定背景下的障碍和促进因素。
2020年8月至2021年2月,我们邀请加拿大执业护士完成一项全国性的基于网络的双语(英语/法语)调查。该调查通过全国和省级护理协会以及全国堕胎健康专业组织进行分发。我们收集了人口统计学和临床护理特征,并进行描述性统计和双变量分析,以比较药物流产执业护士提供者和非提供者的经历。
181名受访者代表了加拿大所有省份和地区。65名执业护士(36%)在调查时提供过药物流产服务,116名(64%)没有。近一半(47%)的受访者在农村或偏远社区工作,81%在初级保健诊所工作。影响非提供者提供药物流产能力的重大障碍包括:距离可配米非司酮/米索前列醇的药房较远、其执业社区经验丰富的堕胎提供者较少、获得程序性堕胎服务的机会少、执业护士工作场所的政策限制以及无法获得临床指导。约98%提供药物流产服务的执业护士从未遇到过反堕胎抗议活动。
执业护士似乎已做好准备并能够提供药物流产服务,但障碍仍然存在,特别是对于资源较少的较小社区的执业护士。我们的研究结果为支持执业护士开展这项新业务提供了依据,以改善加拿大的堕胎服务可及性。