| Literature DB >> 27688719 |
Stembile Mugore1, Ntapi Tchiguiri K Kassouta2, Boniface Sebikali3, Laurel Lundstrom4, Abdulmumin Saad5.
Abstract
High-quality postabortion care (PAC) services that include family planning counseling and a full range of contraceptives at point of treatment for abortion complications have great potential to break the cycle of repeat unintended pregnancies and demand for abortions. We describe the first application of a systematic approach to quality improvement of PAC services in a West African country. This approach-IntraHealth International's Optimizing Performance and Quality (OPQ) approach-was applied at 5 health care facilities in Togo starting in November 2014. A baseline assessment identified the following needs: reorganizing services to ensure that contraceptives are provided at point of treatment for abortion complications, before PAC clients are discharged; improving provider competencies in family planning services, including in providing long-acting reversible contraceptive implants and intrauterine devices; ensuring that contraceptive methods are available to all PAC clients free of charge; standardizing PAC registers and enhancing data collection and reporting systems; enhancing internal supervision systems at facilities and teamwork among PAC providers; and engaging PAC providers in community talks. Solutions devised and applied at the facilities during OPQ resulted in significant increases in contraceptive counseling and uptake among PAC clients: During the 5-month baseline period, 31% of PAC clients were counseled, while during the 13-month intervention period, 91% were counseled. Of all PAC clients counseled during the baseline period, 37% accepted a contraceptive, compared with 60% of those counseled during the intervention period. Oral contraceptive pills remained the most popular method during both periods, yet uptake of implants increased significantly during the intervention period-from 4% to 27% of those accepting contraceptives. This result demonstrates that the solutions applied maintained method choice while expanding access to underused long-acting reversible contraceptives. OPQ shows great potential for sustainability and scale in Togo and for application in similar contexts where the health system struggles to offer safe, high-quality, accessible PAC services. © Mugore et al.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27688719 PMCID: PMC5042703 DOI: 10.9745/GHSP-D-16-00212
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Sci Pract ISSN: 2169-575X
Access to and Quality of PAC Services in Togo: Baseline Assessment Findings, Quality Improvement Solutions, and Results of Applying the Solutions
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Abbreviations: FP, family planning; IUD, intrauterine device; MVA, manual vacuum aspiration; OPC, Optimizing Performance and Quality; PAC, postabortion care.
FIGURE 1.Percentage of PAC Clients Who Received Counseling and Percentage of Those Counseled Who Accepted a Contraceptive Method, Pre‐Intervention (5 Months’ Duration) and Post‐Intervention (13 Months’ Duration), 2014–2015
Abbreviation: PAC, postabortion care.
Note: The pre‐intervention data include data from only 2 facilities that were offering contraceptive methods at the time, whereas the post‐intervention data include data from all 5 facilities that began offering postabortion family planning services after the Optimizing Performance and Quality training.
FIGURE 2.Percentage of Counseled PAC Clients Who Accepted a Contraceptive Method by Type of Method, Pre‐Intervention (5 Months’ Duration) and Post‐Intervention (13 Months’ Duration), 2014–2015
Abbreviations: IUD, intrauterine device; OCPs, oral contraceptive pills; PAC, postabortion care.