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Recent work in family planning has shifted from an instrumentalist perspective on quality in contraceptive counselling, which views quality as a means to encourage contraceptive uptake, to privilege quality of care as a valued end in itself. In this context of shifting narratives about quality, it is important to understand how health systems and providers navigate potential conflicts between instrumentalist definitions of quality versus a person-centred definition that considers meeting clients' contraceptive needs and preferences as an important end goal in and of itself. However, we know little about how providers and other health system stakeholders interpret the concept of quality in counselling, and how their experiences with different quality monitoring systems influence their ability to provide person-centred care. This qualitative study draws from 51 in-depth interviews with public healthcare providers and health facility administrators in Ethiopia, Mexico and India. Across all three countries, except for some cases in India, administrators were concerned with encouraging uptake of contraceptives in order to meet local and national level goals on contraceptive uptake and maternal health. In contrast, providers were more concerned with responding to client desires and needs. However, participants across all levels shared the opinion that successful counselling should end with contraceptive uptake. We conclude that the instrumentalist view of quality counselling continues to prevail across all three countries. Our findings suggest that encouraging healthcare providers and administrators to meet even relatively broad targets set by government reinforces an instrumentalist approach, as opposed to an approach that privileges person-centred care.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10364555 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/26410397.2023.2229220 | DOI Listing |
Open Access J Contracept
September 2025
Coordinator for Centre for SET-SRHR Lira University, Lira, Uganda.
Background: Conventional top-down health interventions often exclude adolescents and community stakeholders from service design and implementation, resulting in low uptake and a mismatch with young people's needs. The CAFFP-PAC initiative in Northern Uganda sought to explore how a community-led, adolescent-centered inception process could support integration of adolescent-friendly family planning and post-abortion care into primary healthcare services.
Methods: A participatory qualitative design was employed during an inception meeting in Lira City on April 1, 2025, guided by principles of community-based participatory research and citizen science.
BMC Womens Health
September 2025
Department of Community Medicine, University of Jos, P. M. B. 2084, Jos, Plateau State, Nigeria.
Background: Nigeria is the seventh-most populous country in the world. Its high fertility rate and unmet need for family planning contribute to the increasing population size. To reduce this gap, the Federal Government of Nigeria, in collaboration with Injectables Access Collaborative and other public and private sector players, introduced the subcutaneous depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA-SC) to the contraceptive method mix in 2017.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAccess to desired contraceptive care is a critical component of reproductive autonomy. Telemedicine (TM), or the remote provision of clinical services via technology, in community-based health centers has the potential to expand access to family planning services, potentially enhancing both reproductive autonomy and equity. However, little is known about which patient populations use TM for contraceptive services in the US " safety net" (community-based health centers), if there are inequities in access to TM care, or patient preferences for TM contraceptive care.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReprod Health
September 2025
Department of Health, Behavior, and Society, Faculty of Public Health, Institute of Health, Jimma University, Jimma, Ethiopia.
Background: Once women decide to use modern contraception, choosing among available methods becomes a decision that is fundamentally their right. While the World Health Organization (WHO) and Ethiopia's Ministry of Health promote long-acting reversible contraceptive (LARC) methods due to their significant health and economic benefits, short-acting injectables remain the most widely used method, accounting for use by over 50% of contraceptive users in Ethiopia. This persistent divergence highlights a crucial gap in understanding the factors that truly influence women's individual method selection.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Health Serv Res
September 2025
School of Public Health, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong , Hong Kong SAR, China.
Background: The widespread availability of private-sector family planning services in low- and middle-income countries can be complementary to public-sector efforts to increase population coverage of modern contraceptive methods. The comparative advantages of a private-sector family planning program are more locations with shorter wait time. The disadvantages are higher prices and more variation in service quality.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF