Literature DB >> 30538585

Abortion-related care and the role of the midwife: a global perspective.

Judith Fullerton1, Michelle M Butler2, Cheryl Aman3, Tobi Reid3, Melanie Dowler3.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The International Confederation of Midwives (ICM) represents 132 midwifery associations in 113 countries. The ICM disseminates the Essential Competencies for Basic Midwifery Practice (EC) that describes the global scope of midwifery practice. The basic (core) and expanded (additional or optional) role of midwives in providing abortion-related care services was first described in 2010. A literature review about three items that are particularly critical to access to abortion services was conducted. Findings that emerged in the recent 2016-2017 update study about these three items are presented.
METHODS: A modified Delphi study was administered via the Internet in a series of three rounds. Thirty-seven statements of abortion-related knowledge and skill were presented.
RESULTS: A total of 895 individuals participated. The total of respondents across all three rounds represented 90 of the 105 member countries at the time of the study. The role of midwives in providing comprehensive abortion care, including referral for abortion and provision of postabortion family planning, achieved the necessary 85% agreement to be designated as essential (basic) knowledge or skill for the global scope of midwifery practice. The provision of medication abortion and performance of manual vacuum aspiration abortion were designated as optional for midwives who wished to provide these services. Endorsement of these latter practices was highest in both Francophone and Anglophone regions of Africa, Asian Pacific countries, and countries at a lower state of economic development.
CONCLUSION: The role of midwives in provision of abortion-related care services was reaffirmed in the recent Delphi study to inform the update to the EC. The role of midwives as direct providers of medical and vacuum aspiration abortions was reaffirmed for those individual midwives who wish to obtain the requisite competency to provide those services, in jurisdictions where these services are legally authorized.

Entities:  

Keywords:  abortion providers; aspiration abortion; comprehensive abortion care; medical abortion; midwives; postabortion care

Year:  2018        PMID: 30538585      PMCID: PMC6260173          DOI: 10.2147/IJWH.S178601

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Womens Health        ISSN: 1179-1411


Introduction and background

The ICM represents 132 midwifery associations in 113 countries. Member associations, in their turn, represent those who meet all requirements for use of the title, as delineated in the ICM global definition of the midwife.1 The ICM’s scope of service includes the preparation of policy and position statements that assist its member associations to represent the global profession of midwifery within the various country-specific policy and regulatory frameworks. The scope of global midwifery practice is reflected in the ICM EC. This guidance document was first developed in 20022 and has been regularly updated and amended over time.3,4 The profession of midwifery has a globally understood common (core or basic) scope of practice, but this scope of practice continues to evolve. The ICM also encourages midwives to acquire the necessary knowledge and skills to perform additional (optional) clinical procedures across the continuum of perinatal and reproductive health care to meet the particular needs of the women and families and communities in which they practice (country-specific competencies). Deliberation and debate that took place during the 28th International Congress of Midwives in Glasgow, Scotland (2008), led to the directive that midwives’ role in provision of abortion-related care be assessed in the next-scheduled update of the EC. This position was reaffirmed by delegates to the 30th Triennial Congress in Prague (2014). The EC update published in 2010 presented the first set of knowledge and skills statements that described both the basic (core) and expanded (additional/optional) role of midwives in providing these services. Results from the most recent study to inform the update of the essential competencies, conducted in 2016–2017, generated a contemporary vision of the role, which differed in several ways from the 2010 version.3,4 The purpose of this article is to discuss selected findings from the recent update study that describe the role of ICM-titled midwives in performance of three specific abortion-related procedures (tasks). Increasing the number of providers who have the skill to perform these tasks increases access to the procedures. Access to safe, comprehensive abortion care, including PAC, can save lives. Findings are presented by global and regional geography and by the World Bank designation of country wealth status (high-, medium-, and low-income countries).5

Literature review

We conducted an in-depth review of the literature about the relationship between access to safe abortion and maternal morbidity and mortality. We then focused on three particular abortion-related tasks that represent critical access points to the receipt of abortion-related care services. We examined the evidence about the appropriate role of the midwife in providing each of these three clinical services in terms of safety and quality of care.

Maternal mortality and abortion

The annual number of maternal deaths decreased from 532,000 to 303,000 across the 15-year period of 1990–2015.6 A total of 193,000 (7.9%) of these deaths were attributed to unsafe abortion,7 although the number might be much higher, were all abortions factually reported. An estimated 56 million induced abortions occurred each year worldwide across the 5-year period of 2010–2014. Global variations in the likelihood of having an abortion were higher for women in developing regions, and highest in Latin America and the Caribbean, African, and Asian regions. An estimated 25 million (45%) of the 56 million induced abortions were considered unsafe.8 Highly restrictive abortion laws do not seem to be associated with lower rates of induced abortions.9 Abortion is generally safe in jurisdictions where abortion is permitted on broad legal grounds, when provided in accord with evidence-based guidelines.10 In developing countries, relatively liberal abortion laws are associated with fewer negative health consequences from unsafe abortion than highly restrictive laws.9 Providing safe and legal abortions is more cost-efficient for health systems, compared to the costs of PAC following unsafe abortion.11

Midwives as providers of comprehensive abortion-related care services

The ICM position statement on midwives’ provision of abortion-related services12 states that “a woman who seeks or requires abortion-related services is entitled to be provided with such services by midwives.” The literature contains a wide range of investigative and implementation science research examining the safety, efficacy, and acceptability of midwives’ involvement in abortion-related care, including medical and surgical TOP and the provision of PAC. Berer13 offers a summary of comparative studies of the provision of abortion by mid-level providers, including midwives, using either medical or surgical approaches, demonstrating that countries across the globe have seen the feasibility and utility of this provider policy for several decades. The literature offers two systematic reviews and one Cochrane Review indicating that trained nonphysician providers (and specifically midwives in some of the included studies) can safely and effectively provide first-trimester medical and/or surgical TOP.14–16 The studies included in these reviews took place in both well-resourced settings (eg, Sweden, US) and developing nations (eg, India, Nepal, South Africa, Vietnam).

Medical abortion

A series of studies conducted in Nepal demonstrated the safety and efficacy of early medical abortion (<9 weeks gestation) prescribed and overseen by government-trained, certified nurses and auxiliary nurse-midwives compared to those provided by physicians.17 The services were provided in under-resourced areas where access to skilled surgical experience and health care resources was challenging. These results were supported by two program evaluations of the expansion of Nepalese auxiliary nurse-midwives’ training and scope to include medical abortion service.18,19 A very recent study demonstrated both safety and effectiveness when auxiliary nurse-midwives provided medication abortion in community pharmacies, which are more accessible to women in the rural and mountainous areas of Nepal.20 Additional studies addressing medical abortion provided by mid-level providers include a study conducted among Swedish midwives21 that demonstrated equivalent or superior outcomes in provision of medical abortion, including lower complication rates for women (4.1% for midwives compared to 6.1% for the physician group). Midwives provided drugs for medical abortion to 554 women in Kyrgyzstan, achieving a complete abortion rate of 97.8%, without reported complications.22

Vacuum aspiration abortion

MVA for abortion is particularly suited for low-resource settings because it does not require electricity or an operating theater.23 A randomized controlled study conducted in South Africa and Vietnam by Warriner et al24 demonstrated that MVA abortions performed by trained midwives are as safe and effective as those performed by physicians. Similar outcomes were demonstrated in Nepal, where 96 nurses were trained to provide first-trimester comprehensive abortion care services using the MVA procedure to over 5,600 women over a 1-year period. Complications were experienced in only 12 (1.2%) of the cases.25 Weitz et al26 compared the outcomes of physicians and advanced practice clinicians (NPs, CNMs, and PAs) providing vacuum aspiration abortions in California (USA). The primary outcome measured in this prospective, observational study was the incidence of immediate or delayed complications within 4 weeks of the TOP. Of the 11,487 aspiration abortions assessed, complications were clinically equivalent between the two provider groups, even though NPs, CNMs, and PAs were newly trained in aspiration abortion for the purposes of the study and had less clinical experience than the physicians.

Referral for abortion services and PAC

The 2010/2013 ICM EC document endorses the role of the midwife in direct provision of or the referral to other providers for receipt of abortion services. A number of studies demonstrate that the availability of pregnancy options counseling and referrals is widely disparate, and that geographic locale influences availability of resources for both referral and service.27–33 A recent systematic review of barriers and facilitators to abortion in developed countries indicated that clear guidelines about service referral promote access to abortion services, apart from and independent of an individual provider’s personal perspective.34 A conceptual model for abortion referral-making, which acknowledges individual perspectives, but still offers a pathway to services for women, serves as a provider resource.35 PAC may include one or more of the following services: medical or surgical completion of incomplete abortion, including MVA; stabilization of women experiencing complications from incomplete/unsafe abortion (eg, administration of antibiotics for infection, uterotonics to control bleeding); family planning and contraceptive counseling; emotional support; treatment and/or referral for sexually transmitted infections; and community empowerment through awareness and mobilization.36,37 A comprehensive summary of 550 studies of PAC services conducted over a 20-year period (1994–2013)38 concluded that PAC services positively affect health outcomes on virtually every variable included in the various reviews. Nevertheless, a recent systematic review of the status of PAC in Eastern and Southern Africa concluded that social stigma constitutes a major barrier to the advances of these services throughout the regions.39 PAC provided by midwives is recognized as an efficient and cost-effective way to reduce maternal morbidity and mortality, particularly in developing countries.40 The safety and effectiveness of midwives’ provision of PAC with misoprostol to evacuate products of conception following incomplete abortion was assessed in two randomized controlled equivalence trials: one in Uganda41 and one in Kenya.42 Midwifery outcomes were essentially equal to physician outcomes on the proportion of complete abortion (94.8% vs 95.4% and 95.4% vs 94.3%, respectively). Health workers, including auxiliary nurse-midwives, were trained as PAC providers in Nepal and Nigeria.43 Findings from follow-up visits over the course of 1 year following training documented that 56% (Nepal) and 64% (Nigeria) of providers continued to provide high-quality abortion services, and that most of these providers were consistently using the WHO-recommended abortion technologies (90% and 86%, respectively) and pain management strategies (80% and 84%), although only 36% (Nepal) and 59% (Nigeria) were providing clients with an adequate contraceptive method mix at the time of service.

The 2010 ICM EC update study

Methods

The methodology and outcomes of the 2010 EC update study were published in 2011.3 An amendment was published in 2013.4 The 2010 update study was conducted via a single e-mail survey. Knowledge and skills statements related to provision of the continuum of abortion-related care (TOP through PAC) were newly crafted in response to the directive of the 28th Council of Midwives (2008). The items were presented as a new competency domain in the document’s organizational framework (“Competency 7: Midwives provide a range of individualized, culturally sensitive abortion-related care services for women requiring or experiencing pregnancy termination or loss that are congruent with applicable laws and regulations and in accord with national protocols”). The knowledge and skills (the “task statements”) were derived from an exhaustive review of clinical guidance documents, such as those developed by international agencies44 and nongovernmental organizations that provided leadership in abortion-related care45 and in collaboration with subject content experts. Twenty items (10 knowledge and 10 skills) were incorporated into the broader task list that was presented to participants in the global update survey.

Results

Responses to the 2010 update study were received from 178 participants in 42 countries. Respondents affirmed that each of the 10 items of pre and post-abortion care knowledge in competency domain 7 should be considered basic content in the pre-service curriculum of midwifery studies. Eight skills statements were also designated as basic. The remaining two items were designated as additional skills that could be acquired by midwives in clinical practice. These two skills statements address the role of the midwife in performing medical or vacuum-assisted abortion procedures, as well as the evacuation of incomplete products of conception.

The 2016–2017 ICM EC update study

Methods

A Delphi study was conducted in a series of three survey rounds administered via the Internet, using FluidSurveys software. A full account of the study methods is described elsewhere.46 The study received ethical approval from the Behavioral Research Ethics Committee, University of British Columbia, Office of Research Ethics (approval number: H16-00558; April 4, 2016). Detailed information about the study was widely distributed prior to and at the time of the survey. The request for participation in the survey noted that return of the survey would be considered consent to participate. The same twenty items from the 2010 task list were incorporated into the initial list of items considered for inclusion in the 2017 EC update study. The process of document review and content expert review was repeated, and in 2017, there was also a review of midwifery regulatory documents from midwifery associations in 24 countries. All items from all sources were aggregated using NVivo software. Expert reviewers identified and removed all duplicate items and crafted common wording for essentially similar statements of knowledge, skill, and professional behavior. This exercise led to the development of 37 abortion-related care items for review by participants in the 2017 survey research study. These items were inserted into the document where appropriate to the antenatal, labor and birth, postnatal care, or sexual and reproductive health time period when they would be enacted. They did not comprise their own domain of practice as they did in the 2010/2013 document. Individuals could participate in one or more of the three rounds of the 2017 survey. The survey was structured to encourage wide representation among educators and clinicians. Participants could answer individually or as a team of up to five respondents. Participants in Round 1 were asked to identify which of the survey items (all content areas) were essential for basic midwifery practice (≥85% considered indicative of consensus among respondents). Participants were also encouraged to comment on any item and were invited to make suggestions for new items. These comments were reviewed, when received, and new (unduplicated) content was merged into the working version of the document, for presentation in Round 2. No new items of abortion-related knowledge, skill, or professional behavior were proposed through this comment process. Items that had achieved ratings between 50% and 85% in Round 1, that is, those that had not achieved a clear consensus, were presented for reconsideration in Round 2. A final third survey round asked participants to consider the items that had received support, but not full endorsement after the second review. In this final round, respondents were asked to consider whether the remaining items should be considered: 1) an advanced or optional (not basic) competency; 2) a country-specific competency; or 3) not relevant to or appropriate for the midwifery scope of practice. Respondents were asked to think about the global practice of midwifery when providing their responses. In other words, it was the intention that respondents would think beyond their individual ethical or moral perspective and beyond the legal circumstances in their own country of residence that might constrain their personal willingness or authority to provide any specific procedure or task, including abortion-related care services.

Results

A total of 895 individuals participated in at least one survey round. The total of respondents across all three rounds represented 90 of the 105 countries that had at least one ICM member association at the time of the study. Twelve of the items in the list of 37 components of abortion-related knowledge or skill presented in the update study achieved the necessary 85% agreement as essential (basic) knowledge and skills for the global scope of midwifery practice in the first survey round. Ten of the 18 items designated as basic competencies in the 2010 study were validated as basic in this study. Eight of these 18 basic items from 2010 were categorized as additional/country-specific in 2017. Both the additional skills (2010) did not change their status and were similarly categorized as additional skills in the update study. The following tables present the quantitative responses from the first survey round for three of these abortion-related care items that represent knowledge and skills that, if competently performed by midwives, could have substantial impact on access to abortion services for women globally. Given that these specific items reached the predetermined consensus level in the first round; they were not further considered, and therefore there are no data for Round 2 and Round 3 of the Delphi survey on these same three items. The data are presented by geography and by wealth indicators. In the respective tables, individual countries, regardless of the number of respondents within individual countries, are the units of analysis. Tables 1 and 2 present the degree of support expressed for the item addressing the midwives’ role in the provision of medications for the purpose of inducing an abortion, that is, “prescribe, dispense, furnish, or administer drugs in appropriate dosages to induce medical abortion.” Table 1 depicts endorsements by country. Respondents from the African regions were most supportive (55.6% at ≥85% endorsement), and midwives from Francophone Africa were most supportive among the respondent countries from the two African regions (66.7% at ≥85% endorsement). Countries representing the Northern European region were most supportive (75% at ≥85%) of the three European regional divisions. The more unfavorable opinions overall were expressed by countries from the Central European (72.7% at <50% endorsement) and North American and Caribbean regions (66.7% at <50%).
Table 1

“Prescribe, dispense, furnish, or administer drugs in appropriate dosages to induce medical abortion”, by country endorsement

Region and subregionN of respondent countries within region or subregionLevels of endorsement by respondent countries: Round I N (% within region or subregion)
RegionSubregion≥85% Consensus endorsement50%–85% Ambivalent<50% Not endorsed
Africa (n=35)1810 (55.6)6 (33.3)2 (11.1)
• Africa Anglophone (n=17)94 (44.4)5 (55.6)0 (0)
• Africa Francophone (n=18)96 (66.7)1 (11.1)2 (22.2)
Americas (n=14)115 (45.5)1 (9.1)5 (45.5)
• North America and Caribbean (n=7)62 (33.3)0 (0)4 (66.7)
• Latin America (n=7)53 (60)1 (20)1 (20)
Europe (n=33)255 (20)7 (28)13 (52)
• Northern (n=7)43 (75)0 (0)1 (25)
• Central (n=14)111 (9.1)2 (18.9)8 (72.7)
• Southern (n=12)101 (10)5 (50)4 (40)
Asia Pacific (n=21)103 (30)3 (30)4 (40)
Total (n=103)646423 (35.9)17 (26.6)24 (37.5)
Table 2

“Prescribe, dispense, furnish, or administer drugs in appropriate dosages to induce medical abortion”, by country wealth indicator

Region and subregionN of respondent countries within region or subregionN of respondent countries by wealth indicator and % of respondent countries within each wealth category that expressed ≥85% endorsement: Round 1
RegionSubregionLowMiddleHigh
Africa (n=35)187 of 13 (53.8)2 of 4 (50)1 of 1 (100)
• Africa Anglophone (n=17)92 of 6 (33.3)2 of 3 (66.7)
• Africa Francophone (n=18)95 of 7 (71.4)0 of 1 (0)1 of 1 (100)
Americas (n=14)111 of 2 (50)4 of 9 (44.4)
• North America and Caribbean (n=7)61 of 2 (50)1 of 4 (25)
• Latin America (n=7)53 of 5 (60)
Europe (n=33)250 of 3 (0)5 of 22 (22.7)
• Northern (n=7)43 of 4 (75)
• Central (n=14)110 of 1 (0)1 of 10 (10)
• Southern (n=12)100 of 2 (0)1 of 8 (12.5)
Asia Pacific (n=21)102 of 3 (66.7)1 of 4 (25)0 of 3 (0)
Total (n=103)64649 of 16 (56.3)4 of 13 (30.8)10 of 35 (28.6)
Table 2 presents endorsement at ≥85% by respondent countries categorized according to the World Bank wealth indicators. Francophone Africa is again the most supportive among countries categorized as at a low level of economic development (71.4% endorsement), followed by two countries representing the Asian Pacific region (66.7%). Tables 3 and 4 present the results of endorsements for inclusion of an item that proposed a midwife’s participation in performance of uterine evacuation by aspiration (electronic or manual), that is, “perform vacuum aspiration abortion according to standards and provide appropriate pain management.” Table 3 depicts the opinion of country respondents from Anglophone Africa, who were the most highly supportive (55.6% expressed endorsement at a level ≥85%). Conversely, countries in the North American and Caribbean regions (83.3% expressed <85% endorsement) and countries in all three European regions were not supportive (range of 70%–100% endorsement at <50%).
Table 3

“Perform vacuum aspiration abortion according to standards and provide appropriate pain management”, by country endorsement

Region and sub-regionN of respondent countries within region or sub-regionLevels of endorsement by respondent countries: Round I N (% within region or sub-region)
RegionSub-region≥85% Consensus endorsement50%–85% Ambivalent<50% Not endorsed
Africa (n=35)188 (44.4)6 (33.3)4 (22.2)
• Africa Anglophone (n=17)95 (55.6)3 (33.3)1 (11.1)
• Africa Francophone (n=18)93 (33.3)3 (33.3)3 (33.3)
Americas (n=14)113 (27.3)1 (9.1)7 (63.6)
• North America & Caribbean (n=7)61 (16.7)0 (0)5 (83.3)
• Latin America (n=7)52 (40)1 (20)2 (40)
Europe (n=33)262 (8)3 (11.5)21 (80.8)
• Northern (n=7)40 (0)0 (0)4 (100)
• Central (n=14)121 (8.3)1 (8.3)10 (83.3)
• Southern (n=12)101 (10)2 (20)7 (70)
Asia Pacific (n=21)102 (20)2 (20)6 (60)
Total (n=103)656515 (23.1)12 (18.5)38 (58.5)
Table 4

“Perform vacuum aspiration abortion according to standards and provide appropriate pain management”, by country wealth indicator

Region and sub-regionN of respondent countries within region or sub-regionN of respondent countries by wealth indicator and % of respondent countries within each wealth category that expressed ≥85% endorsement: Round 1
RegionSub-regionLowMiddleHigh
Africa (n=35)187 of 13 (53.8)1 of 4 (25)0 of 1 (0)
• Africa Anglophone (n=17)94 of 6 (66.7)1 of 3 (33.3)
• Africa Francophone (n=18)93 of 7 (42.9)0 of 1 (0)0 of 1 (0)
Americas (n=14)111 of 2 (50)2 of 9 (22.2)
• North America & Caribbean (n=7)61 of 2 (50)0 of 4 (0)
• Latin America (n=7)52 of 5 (40)
Europe (n=33)261 of 4 (25)1 of 22 (4.6)
• Northern (n=7)40 of 4 (0)
• Central (n=14)120 of 1 (0)1 of 11 (9.1)
• Southern (n=12)101 of 3 (33.3)0 of 7 (0)
Asia Pacific (n=21)102 of 3 (66.7)0 of 4 (0)0 of 3 (0)
Total (n=103)65659 of 16 (56.3)3 of 14 (21.4)3 of 35 (8.6)
Table 4 reflects endorsement at ≥85% by country wealth indicator. Anglophone African and Asian Pacific countries expressed strongest support (66.7%) for countries at the lowest wealth level. Tables 5 and 6 present findings about an item of comprehensive abortion care, which includes postabortion family planning, that is, “[knowledge of] risk factors for repeat spontaneous miscarriage, risk of unsafe abortion, legal options for induced abortion and eligibility, emergency contraception, referral resources, and family planning methods appropriate for use during the postabortion period.” The item received at least a majority supportive endorsement (≥50%) from every country represented in the survey (Table 5) and by respondents from the majority of countries at all levels of economic development (Table 6).
Table 5

“[Knowledge of] risk factors for repeat spontaneous miscarriage, risk of unsafe abortion, legal options for induced abortion and eligibility, emergency contraception, referral resources, and family planning methods appropriate for use during the postabortion period”, by country endorsement

Region and subregionN of respondent countries within region or subregionLevels of endorsement by respondent countries: Round I N (% within region or subregion)
RegionSubregion≥85% Consensus endorsement50%–85% Ambivalent<50% Not endorsed
Africa (n=35)1817 (94.4)1 (5.6)0 (0)
• Africa Anglophone (n=17)99 (100)0 (0)0 (0)
• Africa Francophone (n=18)98 (88.9)1 (11.1)0 (0)
Americas (n=14)118 (72.7)3 (27.3)0 (0)
• North America and Caribbean (n=7)64 (66.7)2 (33.3)0 (0)
• Latin America (n=7)54 (80)1 (20)0 (0)
Europe (n=33)2622 (84.6)3 (11.5)1 (3.9)
• Northern (n=7)43 (75)1 (25)0 (0)
• Central (n=14)119 (81.8)1 (8.3)1 (8.3)
• Southern (n=12)1110 (90.9)1 (9.1)0 (0)
Asia Pacific (n=21)106 (60)3 (30)1 (10)
Total (n=103)656553 (81.5)10 (15.4)2 (3.1)
Table 6

“[Knowledge of] risk factors for repeat spontaneous miscarriage, risk of unsafe abortion, legal options for induced abortion and eligibility, emergency contraception, referral resources, and family planning methods appropriate for use during the postabortion period”, by country wealth indicator

Region and subregionN of respondent countries within region or subregionN of respondent countries by wealth indicator and % of respondent countries within each wealth category that expressed ≥85% endorsement: Round 1
RegionSubregionLowMiddleHigh
Africa (n=35)1812 of 13 (92.3)4 of 4 (100)1 of 1 (100)
• Africa Anglophone (n=17)96 of 6 (100)3 of 3 (100)
• Africa Francophone (n=18)96 of 7 (85.7)1 of 1 (100)1 of 1 (100)
Americas (n=14)112 of 2 (100)6 of 9 (66.7)
• North America and Caribbean (n=7)62 of 2 (100)2 of 4 (50)
• Latin America (n=7)54 of 5 (80)
Europe (n=33)263 of 4 (75)19 of 22 (86.4)
• Northern (n=7)43 of 4 (75)
• Central (n=14)111 of 1 (100)8 of 10 (80)
• Southern (n=12)112 of 3 (66.7)8 of 8 (100)
Asia Pacific (n=21)102 of 3 (66.7)3 of 4 (75)1 of 3 (33)
Total (n=103)656514 of 16 (88)12 of 14 (86)27 of 35 (77)
A total of 83 comments were received from respondents in Round 1 (68 English, 12 French, 3 Spanish), and an additional 251 in Round 2 (192 English, 52 French, 7 Spanish). These items were thematically aggregated in Excel and categorized into six key concepts offered by the respondents for the researchers’ consideration: 1) several ICM survey participants identified the need for comprehensive abortion care services and supported the provision of care by midwives; 2) many endorsed abortion care service provision, but felt that context, such as legality and access, should be taken into consideration; 3) many participants supported comprehensive knowledge of abortion procedures and complications, no matter the local context, as critical to quality care and decreasing maternal morbidity and mortality; 4) others supported abortion care services being carried out by midwives and were willing to refer women for these services, but they felt provision of abortion should be a choice for midwives with moral, ethical, or religious objections; and 5) some respondents endorsed the view that these services should be reflected in the global scope of midwifery practice but noted that they were constrained by laws or regulations in their own jurisdiction from providing those services. The contrary view (theme 6) expressed by a few respondents was an objection to including tasks related to either provision of or referral for abortion-related care services into the global scope of midwifery practice.

Discussion

Given the strong relationship between global maternal morbidity and mortality and the issues of global access to abortion services, a coalition of the United Nations and WHO agencies recently released a global database detailing law, policy, health standards, and guidelines for abortion.47 The objective of the database is to make this information and these global comparisons readily transparent to every country that may be considering their own positions on abortion-related care services. The recent Countdown to 2030 report48 contains information on 81 countries, and reports on the progress being made by these countries toward attainment of the Sustainable Development Goals.49 These 81 countries account for 95% of maternal deaths worldwide. Thirty-one of these 81 countries only allow abortion if the woman’s life is at risk, and one country fully restricts abortion. More than half of these 31 countries are African nations. Access to safe abortion and PAC has been cited as a main intervention for promotion of the health of all Africans by 2030.40,50 The original resolution to include abortion-related care services into the global scope of midwifery practice was put forth by ICM delegates from Africa, noting the emerging body of evidence that midwives and other nonphysician providers could provide these services safely and with high quality. That evidence has continued to emerge, as cited in our own literature review about three specific abortion-provision procedures (tasks or skills). The inclusion of both medication and vacuum aspiration abortion services within the midwifery scope of practice was most highly expressed by respondents to this update study residing in countries in the two African regions. The qualitative responses received from respondents in both Anglophone and Francophone African countries reflect, in large part, the opinion that the provision of abortion services is essential to the effort to decrease maternal morbidity and mortality. Many noted that legal restrictions had to be taken into consideration, but that knowledge of PAC and related complications remained important due to high rates of illegal abortion. Two studies conducted in Africa are somewhat inconsistent with the findings of our recent EC update study. Fetters et al51 studied the availability of medical abortion services in Zambia, where the service has been legal for many years, but provision of services remains severely limited. The authors conclude that there is a continuing need to affect provider attitudes toward abortion and to expand community engagement activities that would encourage women to ask their providers for abortion-related care services. Voetagbe et al52 surveyed all 74 tutors from all 14 midwifery schools in Ghana and reported that <20% of them were fully aware of the legal context for services in the country and were also not prepared to teach the curriculum content of comprehensive abortion care. Midwives are likely to have their own, very personal, opinions and values about their own direct participation in these activities. The many comments made by global respondents across the two survey rounds during which comments were solicited (our qualitative findings) clearly indicated the difficulty that respondents had trying to separate the issues of the global scope of midwifery practice from their personal perspectives and circumstances. Clarifying personal abortion values and attitudes, particularly within the context of knowledge of the WHO guidance,44 is fundamental to expansion of these services by providers.53 For example, Rominski et al54 studied 853 students from 15 public midwifery schools in Ghana, where abortion has been legal for many years, to identify predictors that the graduate midwife would become an abortion provider. A positive opinion about the availability of abortion as a legal choice was a prominent facilitating factor for these students. A complex dynamic underlies midwives’ willingness to offer the range of comprehensive abortion care services. Conflicts may exist between professional norms and religious beliefs.55,56 Conscientious objection,55–59 grounded in individual religious and moral belief systems,55,60 will constrain some individuals, despite scientific evidence of the health-related value of these services to women. Abortion evokes religious, moral, ethical, sociocultural, and medical concerns which means it is highly stigmatized,61,62 thus posing a threat to providers and serving as an overarching impediment for abortion service provision. The comments received from survey respondents clearly represent the complexity of the interface between professional, religious, and legal influences on decision-making about an individual’s participation in provision of abortion-related services. At the same time, quantitative data that emerged from the EC survey indicated high endorsement of the role of midwives in the provision of PAC, including postabortion family planning services. Our qualitative findings also indicated that many respondents were personally willing to accept the responsibility to provide these services. The critical importance of PAC services was recently addressed in the Philippines, where a new PAC policy clarifies the legal and ethical duties of health service providers to provide PAC services, and offers women formal avenues for redress against abuse. The PAC policy offers useful guidance for countries that are contemplating new ways to strengthen the quality of PAC services, centering the policy within internationally recognized standards of medical ethics and human rights.63

Summary and conclusion

The ongoing series of studies addressing the global scope of midwifery practice allow ICM to monitor the pulse of midwives’ opinion over time on contemporary issues of critical importance to women’s health care. The pattern of responses received in 2017 from countries in the African and Asian Pacific regions, in particular, does offer some basis for recommending continued effort toward expansion of the role of midwives as direct providers of abortion services, as an advanced skill for those midwives who wish to offer these services to women, consistent with recommendations set forth in the 2010–2013 version of the EC. The almost universal support for midwives’ engagement in provision of comprehensive counseling and referral for abortion in both the 2010 and 2017 studies, and the provision of PAC services, including postabortion family planning, highlights the importance of this care as a basic element in the global scope of midwifery practice.
  51 in total

1.  The role of auxiliary nurse-midwives and community health volunteers in expanding access to medical abortion in rural Nepal.

Authors:  Mahesh Puri; Anand Tamang; Prabhakar Shrestha; Deepak Joshi
Journal:  Reprod Health Matters       Date:  2015-02

2.  Evaluation of nurse providers of comprehensive abortion care using MVA in Nepal.

Authors:  I Basnett; M K Shrestha; M Shah; E Pearson; K Thapa; K L Andersen
Journal:  J Nepal Health Res Counc       Date:  2012-01

3.  Competence for basic midwifery practice: Updating the ICM essential competencies.

Authors:  Michelle M Butler; Judith T Fullerton; Cheryl Aman
Journal:  Midwifery       Date:  2018-08-17       Impact factor: 2.372

4.  Prevalence of conscientious objection to legal abortion among clinicians in northern Ghana.

Authors:  John K Awoonor-Williams; Peter Baffoe; Philip K Ayivor; Chris Fofie; Sheila Desai; Wendy Chavkin
Journal:  Int J Gynaecol Obstet       Date:  2017-10-13       Impact factor: 3.561

5.  Rates of complication in first-trimester manual vacuum aspiration abortion done by doctors and mid-level providers in South Africa and Vietnam: a randomised controlled equivalence trial.

Authors:  I K Warriner; O Meirik; M Hoffman; C Morroni; J Harries; N T My Huong; N D Vy; A H Seuc
Journal:  Lancet       Date:  2006-12-02       Impact factor: 79.321

6.  "She's on her own": a thematic analysis of clinicians' comments on abortion referral.

Authors:  Nazeneen Homaifar; Lori Freedman; Valerie French
Journal:  Contraception       Date:  2017-01-25       Impact factor: 3.375

7.  Midwifery tutors' capacity and willingness to teach contraception, post-abortion care, and legal pregnancy termination in Ghana.

Authors:  Gertrude Voetagbe; Nathaniel Yellu; Joseph Mills; Ellen Mitchell; Amanda Adu-Amankwah; Koma Jehu-Appiah; Felix Nyante
Journal:  Hum Resour Health       Date:  2010-02-23

8.  Midwives and postabortion care: experiences, opinions, and attitudes among participants at the 25th Triennial Congress of the International Confederation of Midwives.

Authors:  Suellen Miller; Deborah L Billings; Barbara Clifford
Journal:  J Midwifery Womens Health       Date:  2002 Jul-Aug       Impact factor: 2.388

9.  To be, or not to be, referred: A qualitative study of women from Burma's access to legal abortion care in Thailand.

Authors:  Grady Arnott; Eh Tho; Niru Guroong; Angel M Foster
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-06-12       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Moving from legality to reality: how medical abortion methods were introduced with implementation science in Zambia.

Authors:  Tamara Fetters; Ghazaleh Samandari; Patrick Djemo; Bellington Vwallika; Stephen Mupeta
Journal:  Reprod Health       Date:  2017-02-16       Impact factor: 3.223

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  3 in total

1.  A critical interpretive synthesis of the roles of midwives in health systems.

Authors:  Cristina A Mattison; John N Lavis; Michael G Wilson; Eileen K Hutton; Michelle L Dion
Journal:  Health Res Policy Syst       Date:  2020-07-08

2.  Midwives' integration of post abortion manual vacuum aspiration in the Democratic Republic of Congo: a mixed methods case study & positive deviance assessment.

Authors:  Kirsty M Bourret; Sylvie Larocque; Amélie Hien; Carol Hogue; Kalum Muray; Aurélie Thethe Lukusa; Abel Minani Ngabo
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2020-12-10       Impact factor: 2.655

3.  Views and practice of abortion among Queensland midwives and sexual health nurses.

Authors:  Aakanksha Desai; Belinda Maier; Janelle James-McAlpine; Daniel Prentice; Caroline de Costa
Journal:  Aust N Z J Obstet Gynaecol       Date:  2022-03-07       Impact factor: 1.884

  3 in total

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