Login / Signup

Availability, accessibility and utilization of post-abortion care in Sub-Saharan Africa: A systematic review.

Chimaraoke IzugbaraFrederick Murunga WekesahMeroji SebanyElizabeth EchokaJoshua Amo-AdjeiWinstoun Muga
Published in: Health care for women international (2019)
At the 1994 ICPD, sub-Saharan African (SSA) states pledged, inter alia, to guarantee quality post-abortion care (PAC) services. We synthesized existing research on PAC services provision, utilization and access in SSA since the 1994 ICPD. Generally, evidence on PAC is only available in a few countries in the sub-region. The available evidence however suggests that PAC constitutes a significant financial burden on public health systems in SSA; that accessibility, utilization and availability of PAC services have expanded during the period; and that worrying inequities characterize PAC services. Manual and electrical vacuum aspiration and medication abortion drugs are increasingly common PAC methods in SSA, but poor-quality treatment methods persist in many contexts. Complex socio-economic, infrastructural, cultural and political factors mediate the availability, accessibility and utilization of PAC services in SSA. Interventions that have been implemented to improve different aspects of PAC in the sub-region have had variable levels of success. Underexplored themes in the existing literature include the individual and household level costs of PAC; the quality of PAC services; the provision of non-abortion reproductive health services in the context of PAC; and health care provider-community partnerships.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • primary care
  • mental health
  • affordable care act
  • palliative care
  • quality improvement
  • emergency department
  • pain management
  • young adults
  • risk factors
  • chronic pain
  • smoking cessation