Validation and Predictive Utility of a Person-Centered Quality of Contraceptive Counseling (QCC-10) Scale in Sub-Saharan Africa: A Multicountry Study of Family Planning Clients and a New Indicator for Measuring High-Quality, Rights-Based Care.
Celia KarpFunmilola M OlaOlorunGeorges GuiellaPeter Bundi GichangiYoonjoung ChoiPhilip AnglewiczKelsey HoltPublished in: Studies in family planning (2023)
The lack of validated, cross-cultural measures for examining quality of contraceptive counseling compromises progress toward improved services. We tested the validity and reliability of the 10-item Quality of Contraceptive Counseling scale (QCC-10) and its association with continued protection from unintended pregnancy and person-centered outcomes using longitudinal data from women aged 15-49 in Burkina Faso, Kenya, and Nigeria. Psychometric analysis showed moderate-to-strong reliability (alphas: 0.73-0.91) and high convergent validity with greatest service satisfaction. At follow-up, QCC-10 scores were not associated with continued pregnancy protection but were linked to contraceptive informational needs being met among Burkinabe and Kenyan women; the reverse was true in Kano. Higher QCC-10 scores were also associated with care-seeking among Kenyan women experiencing side effects. The QCC-10 is a validated scale for assessing quality of contraceptive counseling across diverse contexts. Future work is needed to improve understanding of how the QCC-10 relates to person-centered measures of reproductive health.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- pregnancy outcomes
- quality improvement
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- hiv testing
- mental health
- smoking cessation
- palliative care
- primary care
- preterm birth
- men who have sex with men
- type diabetes
- machine learning
- pregnant women
- affordable care act
- adipose tissue
- pain management
- insulin resistance
- current status
- breast cancer risk
- hiv infected
- antiretroviral therapy