| Literature DB >> 35698144 |
Addisu Fekadu1, Aster Berhe2, Belete Belgu1, Ibrahim Yimer1, Yeshitila Tesfaye1, Sarah Jane Holcombe3, Sahai Burrowes4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Midwives are a large proportion of Ethiopia's health care workforce, and their attitudes and practices shape the quality of reproductive health care, including safe abortion care (SAC) services. This study examines how midwives' conceptions of their professional roles and views on women who have abortions relate to their willingness to provide respectful SAC.Entities:
Keywords: Abortion; Counseling; Ethiopia; Midwives; Patient-centered care; Quality
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35698144 PMCID: PMC9195199 DOI: 10.1186/s12978-021-01238-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Reprod Health ISSN: 1742-4755 Impact factor: 3.355
Characteristics of regional focus group discussions
| Location | Number of participants | Type of midwife participant | Female | Male |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Addis Ababa | 6 | Bachelor’s degree | 4 | 2 |
| Asela | 6 | Diploma | 6 | 0 |
| Hawassa | 5 | Diploma | 5 | 0 |
| Hosanna | 8 | Bachelor’s degree | 1 | 7 |
| Mekelle | 6 | Diploma | 4 | 2 |
| Nekemte | 5 | Bachelor’s degree | 1 | 4 |
| Shashemane | 6 | Diploma | 5 | 1 |
Fig. 1Ethiopia’s health system
Client care scenarios
| Scenario 1: Woyzerit Miriam, an unmarried 14-year-old client, comes into your facility. She works as a housemaid in the town where this health facility is located. She asks for a contraceptive method. She also asks that you not tell her parents or other relatives or employers | |
| Scenario 2: Woyzero Tsehai, a 24-year-old married woman with three children, comes into your health center and requests that you help her by providing safe abortion care. The health center is far from any other health facility | |
| Scenario 3: Woyzero Selamawit, a 30-year-old unmarried woman is suffering from severe mental illness. She comes into your health center and requests that you help her by providing safe abortion care services |
Population-weighted sociodemographic characteristics of midwives in Oromia, Amhara, SNNP, and Tigray regions and in Addis Ababa
| Number of observationsa | Estimated percentageb | 95% confidence intervalc | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age categories | |||
| Younger than 25 years | 411 | 45 | 41, 49 |
| 26–40 years old | 483 | 53 | 48, 57 |
| Older than 41 years | 21 | 3 | 1, 5 |
| Sex | |||
| Female | 574 | 62 | 58, 66 |
| Male | 359 | 38 | 34, 42 |
| Marital status | |||
| Married | 516 | 54 | 48, 60 |
| Never married | 397 | 44 | 37, 51 |
| Widowed/divorced/separated | 20 | 2 | 1, 5 |
| Father’s education | |||
| None | 290 | 30 | 25, 36 |
| Primary | 273 | 29 | 25, 34 |
| Secondary | 138 | 16 | 13, 19 |
| Higher | 209 | 22 | 19, 26 |
| Don’t know | 14 | 2 | 1, 3 |
| Have had children | 392 | 43 | 37, 49 |
| Have had unplanned pregnancy | 295 | 27 | 23, 31 |
| Currently using contraception | 394 | 44 | 39, 48 |
| Ethnic group | |||
| Amhara | 299 | 34 | 29, 39 |
| Oromo | 314 | 30 | 24, 36 |
| Tigray | 88 | 12 | 8, 18 |
| Gurage | 19 | 3 | 2, 4 |
| Welayta | 45 | 5 | 2, 12 |
| Gamo | 74 | 9 | 3, 20 |
| Other | 90 | 8 | 3, 20 |
| Religious affiliation | |||
| Ethiopian orthodox | 536 | 62 | 55, 68 |
| Muslim | 130 | 13 | 8, 19 |
| Evangelical or protestant | 237 | 23 | 18, 29 |
| Other | 30 | 3 | 2, 4 |
| Attendance at religious services | |||
| Very regular (daily or > weekly) | 383 | 42 | 39, 46 |
| Regular (weekly) | 237 | 23 | 20, 27 |
| Less frequent (monthly, holy days, annually, never) | 309 | 33 | 29, 38 |
aUnweighted observations. Because of weighting, the number of observations may not match percentages and may not add to the total sample size. Because of missing observations, proportions may not add to 100%
bThese estimates are population weighted
c5% CIs reflect the range of possible values for the survey-weighted estimated percentages
Population-weighted professional characteristics of midwives in Oromia, Amhara, SNNP, and Tigray regions and in Addis Ababa
| Number of observationsa | Estimated percentageb | 95% confidence intervalc | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Midwifery training program | |||
| Diploma | 509 | 54 | 49, 59 |
| Bachelor’s degree | 406 | 44 | 39, 50 |
| Other | 21 | 2 | 1, 3 |
| Currently works in private facility | 287 | 26 | 22, 31 |
| Type of health care facility | |||
| Rural health center | 347 | 27 | 22, 33 |
| Urban health center | 311 | 41 | 36, 45 |
| Primary hospital | 126 | 15 | 12, 20 |
| General hospital | 117 | 14 | 11, 16 |
| Specialized/tertiary/teaching | 34 | 3 | 2, 6 |
| Years in practice | |||
| Fewer than 3 years | 266 | 28 | 25, 32 |
| 3–4 years | 244 | 29 | 26, 32 |
| 5–9 years | 347 | 37 | 33, 41 |
| 10 years or more | 53 | 6 | 4, 9 |
| Has received SAC training | 313 | 32 | 26, 39 |
| Has had patient with incomplete abortion | 748 | 85 | 81, 87 |
| Has provided post-abortion care | 620 | 72 | 66, 76 |
| Has had patient die from unsafe abortion | 143 | 17 | 15, 19 |
| Has provided SAC | 334 | 34 | 28, 42 |
aUnweighted observations. Because of missing observations and weighting, the number of observations may not match percentages and may not add to the total sample size
bThese estimates are population weighted
c95% CIs reflect the range of possible values for the survey-weighted estimated percentages
Population-weighted estimates of the proportion of affirmative responses to questions related to patient-centered SAC by region (n = 944)
| Addis Ababa | Amhara | Oromia | SNNP | Tigray | Total | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Professionalism | ||||||
| It is the professional duty of midwives to provide SAC | 36% [35, 36] | 51% [37, 64] | 50% [40, 59] | 48% [40, 56] | 80% [67, 88] | 50% [45, 55] |
| SAC access is good thing | 66% [59, 72] | 84% [79, 88] | 72% [60, 81] | 78% [70, 85] | 89% [86, 91] | 77% [72, 80] |
| SAC refusal risks mother’s life ( | 46% [44, 47] | 57% [45, 68] | 54% [42, 65] | 58% [50, 67] | 81% [78, 83] | 57% [52, 61] |
| Women will die without SAC ( | 83% [74, 90] | 77% [71, 82] | 76% [63, 86] | 82% [76, 87] | 71% [59, 81] | 79% [74, 83] |
| Midwives providing SAC make a positive contribution ( | 66% [64, 68] | 78% [71, 84] | 71% [57, 82] | 76% [69, 81] | 93% [91, 95] | 75% [71, 79] |
| Measures of respectful care | ||||||
| Willing to provide SAC | 38% [8, 82] | 52% [41, 62] | 60% [50, 70] | 51% [40, 62] | 79% [71, 85] | 54% [45, 63] |
| Midwives should refuse adolescent asking for SAC ( | 52% [42, 62] | 66% [57, 74] | 24% [16, 34] | 61% [48, 72] | 53% [36, 70] | 50% [44, 55] |
| Midwives should be allowed SAC refusal ( | 71% [69, 73] | 58% [51, 64] | 53% [41, 64] | 65% [61, 69] | 55% [46, 63] | 60% [56, 64] |
| Attitudes towards women having abortion | ||||||
| A woman who has had an intentional abortion cannot be trusted | 40% [21, 61] | 31% [23, 40] | 29% [22, 37] | 49% [39, 59] | 34% [32, 36] | 36% [31, 42] |
| A woman who has an abortion is committing a sin | 59% [42, 75] | 73% [69, 77] | 41% [33, 50] | 65% [33, 50] | 42% [34, 51] | 57% [52, 62] |
| Once a woman starts an intentional abortion, she will make it a habit | 45% [45] | 35% [29, 42] | 31% [25, 37] | 51% [46, 57] | 35% [18, 58] | 39% [37, 42] |
| A woman who has had an intentional abortion might encourage other women to do so | 49% [40, 58] | 48% [40, 55] | 39% [30, 49] | 61% [51, 70] | 47% [40, 53] | 49% [45, 53] |
| Not willing to provide because believe women make unjustified requests for SACb | 7% [2, 22] | 14% [7, 24] | 6% [3, 11] | 12% [5, 27] | 24% [9, 50] | 11% [7, 17] |
| Not willing to provide because feel inadequately trainedb | 33% [14, 61] | 25% [16, 37] | 44% [34, 54] | 40% [30, 51] | 53% [52, 55] | 38% [32, 46] |
| Not willing to provide because believe abortion is a sinb | 54% [28, 78] | 56% [40, 71] | 32% [23, 43] | 37% [31, 44] | 13% [7, 22] | 40% [32, 49] |
95% CIs for survey-weighted estimated percentages reported in brackets
aThese items are from the SABAS[49], an instrument with Likert scale response categories ranging from 1 (strongly disagree) to 5 (strongly agree). Because disagreement is considered as less stigmatizing for these SABAS questions, researchers are usually conservative in assigning ambiguous responses to the disagree category in order to avoid overstating the lack of stigma in respondents. Therefore, when this scale has been dichotomized in past studies, unsure responses have been categorized as affirmative as they do not indicate disagreement with stigmatizing statements [38, 58]. We have followed this convention
bn = 617
Factors associated with willingness to provide SAC, logistic regression (n = 816)
| AOR | 95% CI | |
|---|---|---|
| Age group (base = less than 25 years old) | ||
| 26–40 years old | 1.03 | 0.63, 1.67 |
| Older than 41 years | 1.05 | 0.67, 1.66 |
| Gender (base = female) | ||
| Male gender | ||
| Marital status (base = married) | ||
| Never married | 0.88 | 0.54, 1.44 |
| Widowed/divorced/separated | ||
| Have had children (base = no children) | ||
| Have had children | 1.10 | 0.66, 1.82 |
| Religion (base = Ethiopian Orthodox) | ||
| Muslim | 1.21 | 0.77, 1.90 |
| Evangelical Christian or Protestant | ||
| Other religious group | ||
| Religious attendance (base = very frequent religious attendance) | ||
| Regular religious attendance | 1.42 | 0.93, 2.16 |
| Less frequent religious attendance | 0.98 | 0.64, 1.49 |
| Midwifery training program (base = diploma) | ||
| Bachelor’s degree | 0.79 | 0.53, 1.17 |
| Training (base = no) | ||
| Received SAC training | 2.60, 6.20 | |
| Attitudes towards women having abortion | ||
| Belief that a woman who has an abortion is committing a sin | ||
| Belief that it is a professional duty to provide SAC | ||
| Belief that SAC refusal risks mother’s life | ||
| Region (base = Addis Ababa) | ||
| Amhara | 1.43 | 0.20, 10.41 |
| Oromia | 1.49 | 0.17, 13.38 |
| SNNP | 1.69 | 0.18, 15.71 |
| Tigray | 1.95 | 0.21, 17.79 |
| Observations |
*p < 0.05
**p < 0.01
***p < 0.001