| Literature DB >> 26327217 |
Mandira Paul1, Kirti Iyengar2, Birgitta Essén3, Kristina Gemzell-Danielsson3, Sharad D Iyengar4, Johan Bring5, Sunita Soni4, Marie Klingberg-Allvin6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Studies evaluating acceptability of simplified follow-up after medical abortion have focused on high-resource or urban settings where telephones, road connections, and modes of transport are available and where women have formal education.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26327217 PMCID: PMC4556554 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0133354
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flow diagram of the RCT.
Flow diagram of the study showing enrolment, randomized allocation to home-assessment (n = 378) or clinic follow-up (n = 323) group, two-week follow-up and analysis (n = 623).
Characteristics of successfully followed-up women, included for acceptability analysis, stratified by treatment group (n = 623).
| Clinic Follow-up n = 274 | Home-assessment n = 349 | All Women included n = 623 | All Women not included n = 108 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 26 (18–48) | 26 (18–46) | 26 (18–48) | 26 (18–40) |
|
| ||||
| - Urban | 92 (33.6) | 92 (26.4) | 184 (29.5) | 15 (13.9) |
| - Rural | 182 (66.4) | 257 (73.6) | 439 (70.5) | 93 (86.1) |
|
| 141 (51.5) | 199 (57.0) | 340 (54.6) | 70 (64.8) |
|
| ||||
| - No formal | 124 (45.3) | 199 (57.0) | 323 (51.8) | 82 (75.9) |
| - Primary (1–3 years) | 51 (18.6) | 49 (14.0) | 100 (16.1) | 13 (12.0) |
| - Secondary (4–10 years) | 61 (22.3) | 57 (16.3) | 118 (18.9) | 9 (8.3) |
| - Higher (> 10 years) | 38 (13.9) | 44 (12.6) | 82 (13.2) | 4 (3.7) |
|
| ||||
| - Woman herself | 130 (47.4) | 152 (43.6) | 282 (45.3) | 42 (38.9) |
| - Husband | 100 (36.5) | 133 (38.1) | 233 (37.4) | 36 (33.3) |
| - No/others | 44 (16.1) | 64 (18.3) | 108 (17.3) | 30 (27.8) |
|
| ||||
| -Nobody | 94 (34.3) | 107 (30.7) | 201 (32.3) | 42 (38.9) |
| -Husband | 98 (35.8) | 117 (33.5) | 215 (34.5) | 24 (22.2) |
| -Health Worker | 28 (10.2) | 51 (14.6) | 79 (12.7) | 11 (10.2) |
| -Maternal family member | 18 (6.6) | 30 (8.6) | 48 (7.70) | 17 (15.7) |
| -In-law family member | 31 (11.3) | 33 (9.5) | 64 (10.3) | 9 (8.3) |
| -Neighbour/friend/other | 5 (1.8) | 12 (3.4) | 17 (2.7) | 3 (2.8) |
|
| 10 (3.6) | 18 (5.2) | 28 (4.5) | 8 (7.4) |
|
| 6 (5–9) | 6 (5–9) | 6 (5–9) | 7 (5–9) |
| - Gestational age in weeks, n (%) | ||||
| < 6 weeks | 51 (18.6) | 58 (16.6) | 109 (17.5) | 19 (17.6) |
| 6–7 | 150 (54.7) | 196 (56.2) | 346 (55.5) | 61 (56.5) |
| > 7 weeks | 73 (26.6) | 95 (27.2) | 168 (27.0) | 28 (25.9) |
|
| 106 (38.7) | 104 (29.8) | 210 (33.7) | 27 (25.0) |
| - Medical | 79 (28.8) | 84 (24.1) | 163 (77.6) | 19 (70.4) |
| - Surgical | 30 (10.9) | 25 (7.2) | 55 (26.2) | 9 (33.3) |
|
| 134 (48.9) | 156 (44.7) | 290 (46.5) | 37 (34.3) |
|
| 111 (40.5) | 106 (30.4) | 217 (34.8) | 25 (23.1) |
There were no socio-demographic background differences between the women included in analysis and the women that were lost to follow-up (data of women lost to follow-up is not shown).
a Majority were ASHAs (incentive based community health workers), however NGO workers or auxiliary nurse-midwives occasionally accompanied women as well.
bPercentages are calculated for women with prior elective abortions (n = 210)
Satisfaction and expectation of the abortion procedure, stratified by treatment group (n = 623).
| Clinic FU n = 274 | Home-assessment n = 349 | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| - Satisfactory | 262 (96.0) | 335 (96.0) | 597 (96.0) |
| - Not Satisfactory | 11 (4.0) | 14 (4.0) | 25 (4.0) |
| Total | 273 (100) | 349 (100) | 622 (100) |
|
| |||
| - Same/ Better | 260 (95.2) | 332 (95.4) | 592 (95.3) |
| - Worse | 13 (4.8) | 16 (4.6) | 29 (4.7) |
| Total | 273 (100) | 348 (100) | 621 (100) |
Chi-square tests were performed on all categorical variables. There are no significant differences. ‘missing values’ were excluded from analysis
Women’s experiences of abortion in relation to previous elective abortions, and stratified by treatment group.
| Clinic FU n = 106 | Home-assessment n = 104 | Total n = 210 | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| - Better | 57 (54.8) | 50 (52.6) | 107 (53.8) |
| - Same | 32 (30.8) | 34 (35.8) | 66 (33.2) |
| - Worse | 15 (14.4) | 11 (11.6) | 26 (13.1) |
| Total | 104 (100) | 95 (100) | 199 (100) |
|
| |||
| - Better | 36 (46.2) | 34 (44.2) | 70 (45.2) |
| - Same | 30 (38.5) | 33 (42.9) | 63 (40.6) |
| - Worse | 12 (15.4) | 10 (13.0) | 22 (14.2) |
| Total | 78 (100) | 77 (100) | 155 (100) |
|
| |||
| - Better | 23 (79.3) | 19 (82.6) | 43 (81.1) |
| - Same | 2 (6.9) | 2 (8.7) | 4 (7.7) |
|
| 4 (13.8) | 2 (8.7) | 6 (11.5) |
| Total | 29 (100) | 23 (100) | 53 (100) |
Chi-square tests were performed on all categorical variables with n>5. Fisher’s test was applied when the expected cell count was <5. There are no significant differences. ‘missing values’ were excluded from analysis. 8 women have had both surgical and medical abortions and are included in both comparisons.
a Only women that reported previous abortion have been included in analysis.
Women’s assessment of the LSPT result compared with the final LSPT result as recorded by the research assistant at follow-up (n = 349).
| Women’s and research assistants results assessment of the LSPT result at follow-up | |||
|---|---|---|---|
|
| Positive n (%) | Negative n (%) | Not sure n (%) |
| Positive | 9 (69.2) | 4 (30.8) | 0 (0) |
| Negative | 1 (0.4) | 245 (99.6) | 0 (0) |
| Not sure | 0 (0) | 11 (78.6) | 3 (21.4) |
| Did the test at follow-up | 5 (6.6) | 70 (92.1) | 1 (1.3) |
| Total | 15 (4.3) | 330 (94.6) | 4 (1.1) |
a 21 women carried out a new test at home follow-up due to insecurity of test result or because the test had been done too early (including the false positive). Remaining women did the test by themselves after a reminder of the research assistant.
b As reported by the woman at the time of follow-up. Not all positive test results were repeated, only those that were done too early. Remaining women that reported a positive test result or were unsure of their result were referred to return to the clinic.
Abortion outcome of successfully followed-up women (n = 623) compared with level of satisfaction and expectation of abortion.
| Complete | On-going | Incomplete | Total | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||||
| - Satisfactory | 576 (96.5) | 2 (0.3) | 19 (3.2) | 597 (100) | p < 0.001 |
| - Not satisfactory | 12 (48.0) | 4 (16.0) | 9 (36.0) | 25 (100) | |
| Total | 588 (94.7) | 6 (1.0) | 28 (4.5) | 622 (100) | |
|
| |||||
| - Better | 332 (96.2) | 2 (0.6) | 11 (3.2) | 345 (100) | p < 0.001 |
| - Same | 241 (97.6) | 0 (0.0) | 6 (2.4) | 247 (100) | |
| - Worse | 14 (48.3) | 4 (13.8) | 11 (37.9) | 29 (100) | |
| Total | 587 (94.7) | 5 (0.8) | 28 (4.5) | 621 (100) |
Chi-square tests were performed on all categorical variables. Fisher’s exact test was performed where expected count was <5. ‘missing values’ were excluded from analysis. All women that had an on-going or incomplete abortion received additional surgical or medical intervention for completion of their abortion.