Literature DB >> 32950052

Development and validation of a person-centered abortion scale: the experiences of care in private facilities in Kenya.

May Sudhinaraset1, Amanda Landrian2, Patience A Afulani3, Beth Phillips3, Nadia Diamond-Smith3, Sun Cotter3.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There is a need for a standardized way to measure person-centered care for abortion. This study developed and validated a measure of person-centered abortion care.
METHODS: Items for person-centered abortion care were developed from literature reviews, expert review, and cognitive interviews, and administered with 371 women who received a safe abortion service from private health clinics in Nairobi, Kenya. Exploratory factor analyses were performed and stratified by surgical abortion procedures and medication abortion. Bivariate linear regressions assessed for criterion validity.
RESULTS: We developed a 24-item unifying scale for person-centered abortion care including two sub-scales. The two sub-scales identified were: 1) Respectful and Supportive Care (14 items for medication abortion, 15 items for surgical abortion); and 2) Communication and Autonomy (9 items for both medication and surgical abortion). The person-centered abortion care scale had high content, construct, criterion validity, and reliability.
CONCLUSIONS: This validated scale will facilitate measurement and further research to better understand women's experiences during abortion care and to improve the quality of women's overall reproductive health experiences to improve health outcomes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Abortion; Kenya; Patient experience; Patient-provider communication; Person-centered care; Quality of care

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32950052      PMCID: PMC7501655          DOI: 10.1186/s12905-020-01071-w

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Womens Health        ISSN: 1472-6874            Impact factor:   2.809


Background

Positive patient experience is a critical component in ensuring quality abortion care for women, linked to health outcomes such as decreases in severe abortion complications and seeking timely care [1]. Globally, there are approximately 56 million abortions yearly [2]. In Kenya, changes to the Constitution were passed in 2010, allowing abortions in instances where the health or the life of the mother is at risk [3]. However, the Kenya law is still restrictive and requires a qualified health professional to determine if the mother’s health or life is jeopardized. These restrictions continue to limit women’s access to quality care – resulting in abortion providers working in contexts where women experience high levels of fear and uncertainty, mistreatment and discrimination, and consequently women delaying timely care. Given these circumstances, there is evidence of high maternal mortality as a result of unsafe abortions in Kenya [4]. Safe abortion services can help prevent these avoidable deaths, and such services are available even in places like Kenya where laws are restrictive [5]. Women’s experiences during these services could help inform women’s decisions to seek safe abortions or delay abortion care, particularly for post-abortion complications [6]. Improving women’s experiences within broader efforts to improve quality of abortion services is critical in protecting women’s reproductive rights and needs. One overlooked aspect of quality of abortion care is person-centered care, or care that is respectful of and responsive to women’s preferences, needs and values [1]. A recent review of person-centered care for abortion services found many instances where women are treated poorly [7], particularly in contexts with restrictive laws. In Brazil, for example, women report discrimination from providers, threats from health facility staff to involve law enforcement, lack of pain management provision, and long waiting lines at the facility [8]. Treating women with respect and dignity during abortion care is important from a human rights perspective, but also because women’s experiences can impact outcomes, adherence to post-abortion guidance, and future health-seeking decisions by the patient and women who hear of her experiences [7, 9]. While there is evidence that women experience poor person-centered abortion care around the globe, a significant limitation in the literature is the lack of a standardized scale to assess person-centered abortion care (PCAC). In Kenya, there are few studies that focus on patient experiences of care, with most studies qualitative in nature [4, 10–12]. Standardized measures are important for quality improvement efforts, designing and evaluating health system and policy improvements, identifying the unmet need of the most vulnerable populations, and for advocacy. A recent systematic review maps out measures of quality of abortion services [13], grouping these under structure, process, output, and outcomes. The broad range of indicators evidenced in this review demonstrates that abortion care quality is multidimensional and emphasizes the need for progress in the field to move beyond a clinical-only perspective [13]. As the authors also highlight, a streamlined list of standard indicators to measure abortion quality must be produced to advance program, advocacy, and policy efforts. This study aims to develop and validate a PCAC scale to assess women’s person-centered experiences during abortion care in Kenya. This is the first study to validate a person-centered abortion care scale. We describe the scale development process and procedures to assess content, construct, and criterion validity. Given the unique dimension of abortion care, we examine person-centered care items separately for medication abortions and surgical abortions, acknowledging the important differences in these methods and women’s subsequent abortion experiences.

Methods

Scale development

Study activities included a literature review to identify potential items of the scale, expert reviews and cognitive interviews, survey administration with Kenyan women, and psychometric analyses to assess construct and criterion validity (Fig. 1). This study followed a standard sequential procedure to scale development to explore women’s experiences of abortion care [14] including: 1) identifying dimensions of PCAC and item generation; 2) conducting expert reviews and cognitive interviews; 3) survey administration; and 4) psychometric analyses.
Fig. 1

Flowchart of research methodology for the development and validation of a person-centered abortion care scale

Flowchart of research methodology for the development and validation of a person-centered abortion care scale This study occurred concurrently with the validation of person-centered maternity care (PCMC) scale [15] and person-centered family planning care (PCFP) scale [16], as part of a study on person-centered reproductive health care. Specifically, steps 1–3 occurred simultaneously, and step one informed a framework for equity in person-centered reproductive health care [9].

Step 1: dimension of abortion person-centered care and item generation

This study first identified dimensions, or domains, of abortion person-centered care focused on quality of care for abortion described in detail in another manuscript [9]. Using this literature review, we identified eight domains discussed in full elsewhere [9] and which are shown in Table 1. Using the domains as a guide and based on existing measures drawn from the literature review, we then created a database of potential person-centered care measures for abortion services. In total, we began with 62 items that spanned all domains identified.
Table 1

Items for person-centered abortion care scale in Kenya

Original DomainQuestionReferred to in text as:Comment
Dignity/RespectHow did you feel about the amount of time you waited?Time to careRetained for both
Dignity/RespectDuring your time in this clinic did the doctors, nurses, or other health care providers introduce themselves to you when they first came to see you?Introduce selfRetained for both
Dignity/RespectDid the doctors, nurses, or other health care providers call you by your name?Called by nameRetained for both
Dignity/RespectDid the doctors, nurses, or other staff at the facility treat you with respect?Treated with respectRetained for both
Dignity/RespectDid the doctors, nurses, and other staff at the facility treat you in a friendly manner?FriendlyRetained for both
Dignity/RespectDuring your time in the health facility, would you say you were treated differently because of any personal attribute … like your age, marital status, number of children, your education, wealth, your connections with the facility, or something like that?Treated differentlyRetained for both
Dignity/RespectDid the doctors, nurses, and other staff at the facility show that they cared about you?CaredRetained for both
Dignity/RespectDid you feel the doctors, nurses, or other health providers shouted at you, scolded, insulted, threatened, or talked to you rudely?Verbal abuseRetained for both
Dignity/RespectDid you feel like you were treated roughly like pushed, beaten, slapped, pinched, physically restrained, or gagged?Physical abuseRetained for both
Privacy/ConfidentialityWhen you were speaking to the doctors, nurses or other staff at the facility, did you feel other people not involved in your care could hear what you were discussing?PrivacyRetained for both
Privacy/ConfidentialityDo you feel like your health information was or will be kept confidential at this facility?Record confidentialityRetained for both
AutonomyDid you feel like the doctors, nurses or other staff at the facility involved you in decisions about your abortion care?Involvement in careRetained for both
AutonomyDid the doctors, nurses or other staff at the facility ask your permission/consent before doing procedures on you?Consent before proceduresRetained for both
CommunicationDid the doctors, nurses or other staff at the facility speak to you in a language you could understand?Language understandDeleted for both
CommunicationDid the doctors and nurses explain to you why they were doing examinations or procedures on you?Explain examsRetained for both
CommunicationDid the doctors and nurses explain to you why they were giving you any medicine, including pain medicine or medicine to start an abortion?Explain medicinesRetained for both
CommunicationDid you feel you could ask the doctors, nurses or other staff at the facility any questions you had?Ask questionsRetained for both
Supportive CareDid the doctors and nurses at the facility talk to you about how you were feeling?Ask about feelingRetained for both
Supportive CareDid the doctors and nurses ask how much pain you were in?Ask about painRetained for both
Supportive CareDo you feel the doctors or nurses did everything they could to help control your pain?Pain medication givenRetained among SA sub-group; Deleted among MA sub-group
Supportive CareDid you feel the doctors and nurses paid attention to you during your stay in the facility?Paid attentionRetained for both
Supportive CareDuring your time at the facility, did any staff at the facility ask you or your family for kitu kidogo [unofficial cost]?BribeDeleted for both
Supportive CareDo you think there was enough health staff in the facility to care for you?Enough staffRetained for both
Supportive CareDid you feel the doctors, nurses or other staff at the facility took the best care of you?Took best careRetained for both
Supportive CareDid you feel you could completely trust the doctors, nurses or other staff at the facility with regards to your care?TrustRetained for both
Supportive CareIn general, did you feel safe in the health facility?SafeRetained for both

Adapted from Afulani et al.,[15]

Items for person-centered abortion care scale in Kenya Adapted from Afulani et al.,[15]

Step 2: expert review and cognitive interviews

We conducted expert reviews, in both the United States and Kenya, with reproductive health experts. The purpose of the expert reviews was to assess content validity – the extent to which measures fully describe and represent a construct (i.e. person-centered care) [14]. Additionally, we sent the surveys to individual experts focused on person-centered care for specific feedback, including differences in experiences of women for medication vs. surgical abortion. Expert reviewers gave feedback on the list of measures, suggested measures to include, and commented on item wording and response options. Expert reviewers also suggested including the same questions for both surgical and medication abortions to be able to compare across the two procedures, and because the preparation for medication abortion clients (i.e. ultrasounds, tests, etc.) would warrant the same type of questions as surgical procedures. Based on these revisions, we conducted cognitive interviews, using an interview guide provided in Additional file 1, with 15 participants in Nairobi, Kenya in 2017. We recruited women aged 15–24 in the clinic after they had received any type of safe abortion service from one of four clinics. The purpose of cognitive interviews was to assess how important questions are to women, potential problems with survey questions, whether questions are interpreted as intended, whether the questions are contextually appropriate or needed editing, and whether the survey length was appropriate [14]. Interviews were individually conducted, coded, and analyzed by a team of three researchers (specifically, authors MS, NDS, and PA).

Step 3: survey administration

We piloted the full survey with 30 items among a convenience sample of clients (n = 31) in three private clinics in Nairobi (Table 1). Based on pilot results, several survey questions were removed to accommodate time constraints and avoid interviewee fatigue. Four items were removed from the initial set of items (facility/bathrooms are clean, the facility is not crowded, electricity, and water are available in facility). The final set of 26 items was administered in the full survey as provided in Additional file 2. Inclusion criteria for the survey were women who: 1) received a safe abortion-related service at the clinic the day of recruitment (surgical abortion or medication abortion), 2) were at least 18 years old, 3) spoke English or Swahili, and 4) owned a mobile phone where she felt comfortable being contacted by the study team. The study enumerator obtained written consent prior to any study procedures from interested and eligible women. Consented women were then administered a 40-min baseline questionnaire at the clinic in a private space. In total, 371 women were interviewed at six clinics in Nairobi. Participants received airtime equivalent to approximately $1.50 as a token of appreciation for their participation.

Step 4: psychometric analyses

Psychometric analyses were conducted to assess construct and criterion validity and reliability. While expert reviewers believed all items would pertain to both medication abortion and surgical abortion procedures, we hypothesized that the extent to which certain behaviors would pertain more for medication abortion vs. surgical abortion procedures might differ. Therefore, all analyses were stratified by abortion type (medication vs. surgical). The following psychometric analyses were performed for both groups. First, we examined the distribution of each item for heterogeneity. Negative items were reverse coded so that all items could be scored from worst (score of 0 on the item) to best (score of 3 on the item). Responses of “not applicable” were recoded to the highest response category (corresponding to highest PCAC) to obtain a uniform scale for conducting psychometric analyses. After recoding items, a correlation matrix was constructed and the correlations among the items were examined. Next, we conducted exploratory factor analysis (EFA) using principal factoring. The degree of common variance among items was assessed with the Kaiser-Meyer-Olkin (KMO) test using a standard cutoff of 0.50 indicating that items are sufficiently correlated to warrant principal components analysis [17]. We then began the initial EFA by examining a scree plot of eigenvalues using all 26 scale items to determine the number of factors to retain. We used both Kaiser’s rule of retaining only factors with eigenvalues greater than one and the shape of the plot [18], along with theoretical considerations, to decide on a final number of factors. Multiple rounds of factor analyses were subsequently performed, whereby a factor loading cutoff of 0.10 was used for determining which items to delete or retain. Each factor was assessed individually before evaluating the final scale on a single factor. We used oblique rotation because it allows for naturally occurring correlation between the rotated factors [19]. Internal consistency of the full scale and each sub-scale was then assessed using Cronbach’s alpha. Cronbach’s alpha may range from 0 to 1, with a higher value implying greater reliability. An alpha of at least 0.70 is generally considered to suggest acceptable reliability [19]. Finally, criterion validity was assessed by examining whether the PCAC scale was related to other measures of perceived quality of care. This was done by first summing the responses across all items to obtain a total PCAC score, as well as total scores for each sub-scale, where higher scores indicate better PCAC. We then ran bivariate linear regression analyses to assess the association between PCAC score (for the full scale and each sub-scale) and receipt of adequate information regarding the abortion procedure as a measure of quality of care. Women were considered to have received adequate information regarding their abortion procedure if they reported to have been told the following: about the care to be received so they knew what to expect; what side effects to expect; the warning signs to look out for that would warrant returning to the clinic or nearest hospital; and that they would be able to get pregnant again quickly, even before their next menstruation. There was a measure of satisfaction of care; however, there was little heterogeneity in distribution of the responses, with more than 95% of women indicating that they were satisfied with their abortion care. We therefore used another measure of women’s quality of care. All analyses were performed using StataSE version 15.

Results

Demographic characteristics

A total of 353 women completed all PCAC scale items; their demographic characteristics are presented in Table 2, stratified by abortion procedure type. Among both surgical abortion and medication abortion participants, most women were aged 20–29 years (63 and 68%, respectively) and not married, partnered, or cohabitating (73 and 81%, respectively). About half of women in both samples had a college or university degree (52% in the surgical abortion sample and 49% in the medication abortion sample). Slightly more women were employed for pay among the surgical abortion sample (62%) compared to the medication abortion sample (55%). A higher proportion of women among the medication abortion sample (54%) reported this to be their first pregnancy than in the surgical abortion sample (40%).
Table 2

Demographic characteristics stratified by abortion type

CharacteristicN (%)
Surgical Abortion (N = 157)Medication Abortion(N = 196)
Age, years
 Less than 206 (3.8)25 (13.8)
 20–2461 (38.9)76 (38.8)
 25–2937 (23.6)57 (29.1)
 30–3425 (15.9)25 (12.8)
 35 or older28 (17.8)13 (6.6)
Married, partnered, or cohabitating
 Yes42 (26.8)37 (18.9)
 No114 (72.6)158 (80.6)
 Missing1 (0.6)1 (0.5)
Education
 Primary or less20 (12.7)14 (7.1)
 Secondary or vocational56 (35.7)87 (44.4)
 College or University81 (51.6)95 (48.5)
Employed for pay
 Yes97 (61.8)108 (55.1)
 No60 (38.2)88 (44.9)
Religion
 Catholic, Protestant, or other Christian148 (94.3)189 (96.4)
 Muslim5 (3.2)5 (2.6)
 None3 (1.9)2 (1.0)
 Missing1 (0.6)0 (0.0)
Number of pregnancies
 163 (40.1)105 (53.6)
 241 (26.1)46 (23.5)
 325 (15.9)22 (11.1)
 411 (7.0)17 (8.7)
 5 or more17 (10.8)6 (3.1)
Number of births
 076 (48.4)120 (61.2)
 137 (23.6)40 (20.4)
 223 (14.7)25 (12.8)
 3 or more21 (13.4)11 (5.6)
Number of children
 078 (49.7)121 (61.7)
 135 (22.3)43 (21.9)
 224 (15.3)20 (10.2)
 3 or more20 (12.7)12 (6.1)
Received adequate information regarding abortion procedure
 No88 (56.1)75 (38.3)
 Yes69 (43.9)121 (61.7)
Demographic characteristics stratified by abortion type

Exploratory factor analysis

Among the medication abortion sample, nearly 50% of women responded “not applicable” to the “pain medication given” item. Further, only one woman responded “yes” to the “bribe” item among the surgical abortion sample and all the women in the medication abortion sample responded “no, never.” As a result, the “bribe” item was removed from both samples and the “pain medication given” item was removed among the medication abortion sample. This left 25 scale items among the surgical abortion sample and 24 items among the medication abortion sample at the start of conducting factor analyses. All scale items among both samples had a KMO measure of sampling adequacy greater than 0.50, with an overall KMO value of 0.74 among the surgical abortion sample and 0.80 among the medication abortion sample, providing evidence that the items were sufficiently correlated for conducting principal components analysis.

Surgical abortion sample

Among the surgical abortion sample, the initial EFA yielded a 3-factor solution with eigenvalues of greater than 1, accounting for about 50% of the variance. All 25 items loaded onto at least one of the three factors at the 0.10 factor loading cutoff, with cross loading on 11 items. We therefore categorized the items that cross loaded to factors based on the factor they loaded higher on and theoretical reasoning. Of the 11 items that loaded positively onto more than one factor, eight were retained in the factor they loaded highest on. Two items, “explain exams” and “ask questions,” which had slightly higher factor loadings on Factor 1 than Factor 2, were categorized into Factor 2 for conceptual reasons. Similarly, the item “pain medication given” had a higher loading on Factor 2 but was ultimately categorized with Factor 1. Also, despite the item “language understand” having a positive loading of greater than 0.10, upon further review it was felt that the wording of the item was too ambiguous, and as a result, the item was removed. Thus, this process resulted in 12 items being categorized to Factor 1, 9 items being categorized to Factor 2, and only three items (“treated differently,” “verbal abuse,” and “physical abuse”) remaining in Factor 3. Upon further discussion, we decided three items were insufficient for a sub-scale, and given that these items were conceptually related to those included in Factor 1, they were categorized with the items in Factor 1. We then performed EFA with oblique rotation again on the two factors, or sub-scales, separately (Table 3). For the first factor, a standardized alpha of 0.78 was obtained suggesting acceptable reliability. Eleven of the 15 items had factor loadings of at least 0.30 and two items had factor loadings of at least 0.10. The remaining two items, “privacy” and “physical abuse,” had factor loadings less than 0.10 but were retained due to their theoretical importance. For the second factor, a standardized alpha of 0.69 was obtained. With the exception of “called by name” and “involvement in care,” the remaining seven items had factor loadings greater than 0.30. The standardized alpha for the nine items was 0.72 suggesting acceptable reliability.
Table 3

Rotated factor loadings of sub-scales stratified by abortion type

ItemRotated Factor Loadings
Surgical Abortion(24 items total)Medication Abortion(23 items total)
Respectful and Supportive Care(15 items)Communication and Autonomy(9 items)Respectful and Supportive Care(14 items)Communication and Autonomy(9 items)
Time to care0.32080.2312
Treated with respect0.55650.6147
Friendly0.48650.6244
Treated differently0.19740.4978
Cared0.53790.5557
Privacy0.0613a0.2580
Record confidentiality0.15480.3769
Pain medication given0.5453NA
Paid attention0.81190.6811
Verbal abuse0.41890.6824
Physical abuse0.0539a0.4982
Enough staff0.60070.2242
Took best care0.83040.7268
Trust0.49350.6571
Safe0.53980.4339
Introduce self0.44680.4611
Called by name0.24960.2876
Involvement in care0.20690.4135
Consent before procedures0.64460.3996
Explain exams0.45080.3301
Explain medicines0.59500.1952
Ask about feeling0.64320.7358
Ask questions0.44730.2669
Ask about pain0.61970.6138

Notes: NA Not applicable as this item was deleted among medication abortion patients

aFactor loading is less than 0.10 but item is being retained due to theoretical importance

Rotated factor loadings of sub-scales stratified by abortion type Notes: NA Not applicable as this item was deleted among medication abortion patients aFactor loading is less than 0.10 but item is being retained due to theoretical importance A final factor analysis was conducted on the remaining 24 items restricted to a single factor (Table 4). Twenty-one of the 24 items loaded onto the single dominant factor at the 0.10 cutoff, and in fact, 17 of these had factor loadings greater than 0.30. The item “called by name” had a factor loading less than 0.10; however, it was ultimately retained because of its acceptable factor loading on the sub-scale (Factor 2). “Privacy” and “physical abuse” items also had factor loadings less than 0.10, as in the two-factor solution, but again, were retained due to their theoretical importance – lack of patient privacy and physical abuse are considered central components of poor person-centered care, and thus, would be important to measure. The standardized alpha of the 24-item scale was 0.82 (mean score = 61.84; SD = 7.69; Range = 25–71). A summary of standardized alphas and associated means, standard deviations (SD), and the range of scores for the full scale and each sub-scale are provided in Table 5.
Table 4

Full PCAC scale rotated factor loadings stratified by abortion type

ItemRotated Factor Loading
Surgical AbortionMedication Abortion
Time to care0.29770.2349
Treated with respect0.54080.6111
Friendly0.45080.6248
Treated differently0.24190.4521
Cared0.50510.5736
Privacy0.0447a0.2038
Record confidentiality0.17100.4074
Pain medication given0.6478NA
Paid attention0.79170.7092
Verbal abuse0.39450.6321
Physical abuse0.0035a0.4484
Enough staff0.56600.2288
Took best care0.76860.7301
Trust0.45920.6596
Safe0.47080.4115
Introduce self0.31280.2845
Called by name0.0299a0.2789
Involvement in care0.11470.2810
Consent before procedures0.50830.3673
Explain exams0.50210.1683
Explain medicines0.48770.2647
Ask about feeling0.57830.2860
Ask questions0.51600.4295
Ask about pain0.53340.1539

Notes: NA Not applicable as this item was deleted among medication abortion patients

aFactor loading is less than 0.10 but item is being retained due to theoretical importance

Table 5

Standardized alphas and means for the PCAC scale and sub-domains stratified by abortion type

Alpha (standardized)Mean ScoreSDMinMax
Surgical Abortion
Full PCAC Scale (24 items)0.8261.847.692571
Respectful and Supportive Care (15 items)0.7841.134.172045
Communication and Autonomy (9 items)0.7220.714.79427
Medication Abortion
Full PCAC Scale (23 items)0.8256.987.441369
Respectful and Supportive Care (14 items)0.8238.164.10642
Communication and Autonomy (9 items)0.6518.824.98727

Note: SD Standard deviation

Full PCAC scale rotated factor loadings stratified by abortion type Notes: NA Not applicable as this item was deleted among medication abortion patients aFactor loading is less than 0.10 but item is being retained due to theoretical importance Standardized alphas and means for the PCAC scale and sub-domains stratified by abortion type Note: SD Standard deviation

Medication abortion sample

Among the medication abortion sample, the initial EFA using principal factors with oblique rotation also yielded a 3-factor solution with eigenvalues of greater than 1, accounting for about 53% of the variance. All 24 items loaded onto at least one of the three factors at the 0.10 factor loading cutoff, with cross loading on 12 items. We categorized the items that cross loaded to factors based on the factor they loaded higher on and theoretical reasoning. Ten of the 12 items that loaded positively onto more than one factor were categorized according to the higher factor loading. Two items, “friendly” and “privacy”, had similar loadings on two factors but were categorized with Factor 1 because these items were deemed to be more conceptually related to the items in that factor. Despite “explain medicines” loading to Factor 1, it was ultimately recategorized to Factor 3 for conceptual reasons. As was done in the surgical abortion sample, the “language understand” item was removed after it was concluded that the item was too ambiguous. This process resulted in 12 items being categorized to Factor 1, three items (“treated differently,” “verbal abuse,” and “physical abuse”) being categorized to Factor 2, and 9 items being categorized to Factor 3. For consistency, the three items in Factor 2 were ultimately categorized with Factor 1 to yield a final 2-factor solution, like that proposed among the surgical abortion sample, with 23 items retained at this time. Performing EFA with oblique rotation on the two factors, or sub-scales, separately, we found that the first factor had a standardized alpha of 0.82 suggesting acceptable reliability. All 14 items had factor loadings greater than 0.10, and 11 of the 14 items had factor loadings greater than 0.30 (Table 3). For the second factor, a standardized alpha of 0.65 was obtained. All items in Factor 2 had factor loadings greater than the 0.10 cutoff; six of the nine items had factor loadings greater than 0.30. A final factor analysis was conducted on the remaining 23 items restricted to a single factor (Table 4), with all items loading onto the single factor at the 0.10 cutoff. The standardized alpha of the final 23 item scale was 0.82 (mean score = 56.98; SD = 7.44; Range = 13–69; Table 5). To name the factors, we assessed the specific items and mapped the items out on the original domains that the authors conceptualized for person-centered care. For the first factor, items came from the domains of respectful and supportive care (RSC sub-scale). Items included in the second factor all related to communication and women’s ability to be involved in care (CA sub-scale). Therefore, again, guided by the original conceptualized domains of person-centered care, we named the second factor “Communication and Autonomy.”

Criterion validity

The results of the bivariate linear regressions assessing the association between the two PCAC sub-scales (RSC sub-scale and CA sub-scale) and the full PCAC scale and the receipt of adequate information regarding the abortion procedure, respectively, are provided in Table 6. Among both samples, we found that women who reported receiving adequate information regarding their abortion procedure had significantly higher PCAC scores (for each sub-scale, as well as the full scale) than women who did not receive adequate information. These results confirm our hypothesis and suggest that higher PCAC scores are associated with receiving adequate information.
Table 6

Bivariate linear regression of person-centered abortion care sub-scales and full-scale and receipt of adequate abortion procedure information stratified by abortion type

RSC Sub-scaleCA Sub-scalePCAC Full Scale
Surgical Abortion
Received adequate information regarding abortion procedure
NoRefRefRef
Yes2.01 (0.72, 3.30)**4.07 (2.68, 5.45)***6.06 (3.82, 8.33)***
Constant40.25 (39.39, 41.11)***18.92 (18.00, 19.84)***59.17 (57.68, 60.66)***
R-squared0.05150.17300.1494
Medication Abortion
Received adequate information regarding abortion procedure
NoRefRefRef
Yes1.44 (0.27, 2.62)*1.68 (0.25, 3.10)*3.12 (1.00, 5.23)**
Constant37.27 (36.35, 38.19)***17.79 (16.66, 18.91)***55.05 (53.39, 56.72)***
R-squared0.02450.02190.0368

Notes: Coefficient (95% confidence interval) provided. RSC Respectful and Supportive Care. CA Communication and Autonomy. PCAC=Person Centered Abortion Care

*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001

Bivariate linear regression of person-centered abortion care sub-scales and full-scale and receipt of adequate abortion procedure information stratified by abortion type Notes: Coefficient (95% confidence interval) provided. RSC Respectful and Supportive Care. CA Communication and Autonomy. PCAC=Person Centered Abortion Care *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001

Discussion

This study utilized established scale development procedures to validate a new scale for PCAC. The resulting 24- and 23-item scale for surgical abortion and medication abortions, respectively, includes two sub-scales that measure: 1) Respectful and Supportive Care (i.e. whether women received care in a respectful manner, trusted providers, and felt safe in the facility); and 2) Communication and Autonomy (i.e. whether women were actively involved in making healthcare decisions and providers fully explained procedures, exams, treatment regimens, etc. in a way a woman could understand beforehand). The scale has high content, construct, and criterion validity, as well as strong reliability, based on the expert reviews, cognitive interviews, and psychometric analyses. The few existing related scales are either much more narrowly focused, for example measuring only one component of person-centered care related to stigma [20], or are much broader, including the quality of technical aspects of the abortion itself [13]. Our scale measures a diverse set of domains of person-centered care, while still being focused on the quality of women’s experiences themselves. This study examines the potential for customized scale items for medication abortion versus surgical abortion procedures, and we found significant overlap in items across the two methods. While surgical procedures can be completed in less than 15 min, the preparation and wait times at the health facility and, potentially, at home is typically longer for those receiving a medication abortion. Consequently, the interactions with the provider are likely to be different. However, the one minor difference included a question regarding pain, which was not included in the person-centered scale for medication abortions. This minor difference suggests that a unified scale can be applicable for both medication abortion and surgical abortion clients, with an additional pain question asked for surgical clients only. Given that this same scale could potentially be used for all abortion clients regardless of abortion type, this scale is more generalizable and user-friendly for clinics and potentially scalable if integrated into other larger, on-going surveys. Additionally, many researchers and others consider the two types of abortion services to be vastly different; these findings suggest a convergence in this field that the same set of factors are equally important to women’s person-centered abortion experiences, regardless of method. The two identified sub-scales (RSC sub-scale and CA sub-scale) are in line with other measures of person-centered care for reproductive health, specifically PCMC [15] and PCFP [16], but also diverged in a couple areas. For example, similar to PCMC, autonomy and communication domains produced one sub-scale for PCAC. On the other hand, for PCFP, autonomy was more closely associated with items for respectful care. Additionally, in the respectful care domain, similar to PCMC, physical and verbal abuse were included in the abortion care scale, but not PCPF scale, although in both cases the item on physical abuse was retained based on theoretical rationale. Potential reasons for these similarities in maternity and abortion scales include that, similar to maternity care, provision of abortion procedures, particularly surgical abortions, requires greater attention and time from providers than providing contraceptive services. Therefore, the longer and more in-depth the provider-patient interaction is may naturally lead to more opportunities for certain behaviors to occur during care. Nonetheless, the similarity of items across PCMC, PCFP, and PCAC scales suggest that the construction and manifestation of person-centered care may be similar across maternity care, family planning, and abortion care. Future studies may be able to use items found across the three scales to examine whether there are differences in experiences across reproductive health care services. There were a few limitations to the PCAC scale validation for abortion. One limitation is that we recruited women who received an abortion-related service from a private clinic/hospital. The extent to which these measures hold up to other settings, including public hospitals where women may experience substandard care, is unknown. Recruiting in private clinics may have biased our sample. For example, the prevalence of women with a college or university degree is high and may be due to recruitment in private facilities, where the quality of care may be higher, and thus attract higher socioeconomic status women. Future studies may be conducted among women accessing abortion services from the public sector. Our study also includes women seeking abortions in legal settings and it is difficult to ascertain its applicability in settings where laws are even more restrictive than Kenya. Likely, these women would potentially face higher levels of poor person-centered care and experience additional issues captured by items that were dropped from our validation process, such as bribes. Another limitation is that due to constraints in the duration of the surveys, we were unable to include items related to the health facility environment. We anticipated that because private non-governmental organization clinics tend to have better health facility environments than public facilities, that this might play less of a role in our study sample, but is likely to be more important in public facilities. In addition, given that the surveys were conducted within the health facility, social desirability bias in responses is a limitation despite emphasis on confidentiality and privacy during the consent process.

Conclusion

We developed and validated a new scale for PCAC. This scale makes an important contribution to the literature given growing evidence of the importance of prioritizing person-centered care across reproductive health services and the lack of validated measurement tools. There are a number of potential uses of this scale. First, a validated scale for PCAC will facilitate measurement and research to better understand women’s experiences when seeking care for abortion. Second, it will facilitate future research to identify the gaps in PCAC during women’s abortion care experiences. This scale will also aid research into sources of disparities in women’s abortion care experiences and help refine interventions aiming to improve abortion care, particularly for vulnerable groups. In addition, it provides a valuable tool for evaluating these types of interventions in other contexts. The scale will also facilitate standardized measurement across key places where person-centered care is most lacking during abortion care and simultaneously assess trends in the provision of abortion care. Future studies may assess how person-centered abortion care may influence or correlate with different outcomes, including abortion complications or post-abortion family planning counseling. Finally, given the similarities in items across the PCMC, PCFP, and PCAC scales, together these reproductive health scales could facilitate future research on person-centered care across the reproductive health continuum and improve women’s reproductive health experiences and outcomes worldwide. This scale is potentially applicable in other settings beyond Kenya. Validation in other settings is however needed to assess its validity across settings. Additional file 1. Additional file 2.
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1.  Why are women still aborting outside designated facilities in metropolitan South Africa?

Authors:  Rachel K Jewkes; Tebogo Gumede; Margaret S Westaway; Kim Dickson; Heather Brown; Helen Rees
Journal:  BJOG       Date:  2005-09       Impact factor: 6.531

2.  The stigma of having an abortion: development of a scale and characteristics of women experiencing abortion stigma.

Authors:  Kate Cockrill; Ushma D Upadhyay; Janet Turan; Diana Greene Foster
Journal:  Perspect Sex Reprod Health       Date:  2013-05-02

Review 3.  Identifying indicators for quality abortion care: a systematic literature review.

Authors:  Amanda Dennis; Kelly Blanchard; Tshego Bessenaar
Journal:  J Fam Plann Reprod Health Care       Date:  2016-05-12

4.  Men, women, and abortion in central Kenya: a study of lay narratives.

Authors:  Chimaraoke O Izugbara; Kennedy J Otsola; Alex Chika Ezeh
Journal:  Med Anthropol       Date:  2009-10

5.  [Maltreatment and discrimination in induced abortion care: perception of women in Teresina, State of Piauí, Brazil].

Authors:  Alberto Pereira Madeiro; Andréa Cronemberger Rufino
Journal:  Cien Saude Colet       Date:  2017-08

6.  'High profile health facilities can add to your trouble': Women, stigma and un/safe abortion in Kenya.

Authors:  Chimaraoke O Izugbara; Carolyne Egesa; Rispah Okelo
Journal:  Soc Sci Med       Date:  2015-07-21       Impact factor: 4.634

Review 7.  The patient perspective: perceptions of the quality of the abortion experience.

Authors:  Anna L Altshuler; Natalie S Whaley
Journal:  Curr Opin Obstet Gynecol       Date:  2018-12       Impact factor: 1.927

8.  Advancing a conceptual model to improve maternal health quality: The Person-Centered Care Framework for Reproductive Health Equity.

Authors:  May Sudhinaraset; Patience Afulani; Nadia Diamond-Smith; Sanghita Bhattacharyya; France Donnay; Dominic Montagu
Journal:  Gates Open Res       Date:  2017-11-06

9.  Development of a tool to measure person-centered maternity care in developing settings: validation in a rural and urban Kenyan population.

Authors:  Patience A Afulani; Nadia Diamond-Smith; Ginger Golub; May Sudhinaraset
Journal:  Reprod Health       Date:  2017-09-22       Impact factor: 3.223

10.  Providers, Unmarried Young Women, and Post-Abortion Care in Kenya.

Authors:  Chimaraoke O Izugbara; Carolyne P Egesa; Caroline W Kabiru; Estelle M Sidze
Journal:  Stud Fam Plann       Date:  2017-09-22
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  4 in total

1.  Perspectives on high-quality interpersonal care among people obtaining abortions in Argentina.

Authors:  Chiara Bercu; Sofía Filippa; Ana Maria Ramirez; Anna Katz; Belén Grosso; Ruth Zurbriggen; Sandra Vázquez; Sarah E Baum
Journal:  Reprod Health       Date:  2022-05-02       Impact factor: 3.355

2.  Validation of a Spanish-language scale for evaluating perceived quality of care of medical abortions before 9 weeks gestation.

Authors:  Rosa Cabedo-Ferreiro; Maria-Mercedes Vicente-Hernández; Josep-Maria Manresa-Domínguez; Miriam Gómez-Masvidal; Laura Montero-Pons; Azahara Reyes-Lacalle; Gemma Falguera-Puig
Journal:  BMC Womens Health       Date:  2022-05-28       Impact factor: 2.742

3.  Evaluating the development, woman-centricity and psychometric properties of maternity patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs) and patient-reported experience measures (PREMs): A systematic review protocol.

Authors:  Claudia Bull; Helena Teede; Lane Carrandi; Azure Rigney; Sally Cusack; Emily Callander
Journal:  BMJ Open       Date:  2022-02-10       Impact factor: 2.692

4.  Toward a Standard Measure of Abortion Service Quality-A Stakeholder First Approach.

Authors:  Nirali M Chakraborty; Erin Pearson; Caitlin Gerdts; Sarah E Baum; Bill Powell; Dominic Montagu
Journal:  Front Glob Womens Health       Date:  2022-07-04
  4 in total

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