학술논문

Barriers to Family Planning Service Utilization in Ethiopia: A Qualitative Study.
Document Type
Article
Source
Ethiopian Journal of Health Sciences. 2023 Special Issue, Vol. 33, p143-154. 12p.
Subject
*COVID-19 pandemic
*FAMILY planning services
*MEDICAL personnel
*HEALTH education
*QUALITATIVE research
*MEDICAL care
Language
ISSN
1029-1857
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The unmet need for family planning (FP) is a major impediment to achieving the sustainable development goal. The COVID-19 pandemic and other contextual, individual, and hospital-related problems are major barriers that reduce FP service uptake. However, most of the studies are quantitative and give due focus to individual and community-level barriers. Therefore, this study tends to explore barriers to the utilization of FP in Ethiopia including health care and contextual barriers. METHODS: A multiple explorative case study design was employed from October to December 2021 and a total of 41 Keyinformant interviews, 32 in-depth interviews, and 13 focus group discussions were performed by using the purposive sampling technique. The data were analyzed with a thematic content analysis approach using NVivo software. RESULT: This study explored barriers to FP in four major teams; individual, community-related, health system, and contextual barriers. It reviled that the community’s misconception, fear of side effects, lack of women’s decision-making autonomy, existing sociocultural norms, religious conditions, topography, covid 19 pandemic, and conflict were the major barriers to FP service utilization. CONCLUSION: Using the four teams mentioned above, this study identified different poor health professional skills, misconceptions, pandemics, functional, and structurally related barriers. As a result, it is recommended that health education for the community and training for health professionals are important. Collaboration between government and non-government organizations is also mandatory for strengthening mentorship and supervision systems and establishing resilient health care that can avoid future pandemics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]