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Post-Abortion Family Planning: A cost-effective best practice for reducing maternal morbidity and mortality Carolyn Curtis, CNM, MSN, FACNM USAID Postabortion.

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Presentation on theme: "Post-Abortion Family Planning: A cost-effective best practice for reducing maternal morbidity and mortality Carolyn Curtis, CNM, MSN, FACNM USAID Postabortion."— Presentation transcript:

1 Post-Abortion Family Planning: A cost-effective best practice for reducing maternal morbidity and mortality Carolyn Curtis, CNM, MSN, FACNM USAID Postabortion Care Team Leader Reconvening Bangkok Bangkok, Thailand March 2010

2 The Magnitude of the Problem Each year (worldwide): 205 million pregnancies 40% of them unplanned 137 million women have unmet need for FP 20 million unsafe abortions 67,000 women die from unsafe abortion: 13% of all pregnancy-related deaths Half of all deaths from unsafe abortion are in Asia

3 Women who seek abortion are: Married, cohabitating or living in union (65%) Interested in using a contraceptive (50%) Repeat aborters (20%) —Kidder, Sonneveldt, Hardee, 2004 Women who seek abortion are: Married, cohabitating or living in union (65%) Interested in using a contraceptive (50%) Repeat aborters (20%) —Kidder, Sonneveldt, Hardee, 2004 Women seek abortion to: postpone pregnancy or stop childbearing altogether — Alan Guttmacher, 2007 Women seek abortion to: postpone pregnancy or stop childbearing altogether — Alan Guttmacher, 2007 Who Seeks Abortion and Why?

4 Who Gets Unsafe Abortions and Who Dies from Them? ( WHO,2007)

5 USAID’s Postabortion Care Model Three Core Components of Postabortion Care Immediately do... Community Empowerment through Community Awareness and Mobilization Emergency Treatment FP Counseling, Provision; Selected RH (STI,HIV)

6 What occurs with Postabortion Care ? Treatment for hemorrhage, sepsis or other complications experienced AFTER miscarriage or induced abortion Treatment of unmet need for family planning by providing FP counseling and services to PREVENT the next unplanned pregnancy that may result in a repeat abortion Service delivery model that requires reorganizing services to be effective

7 (Population Council, 2008) How We Fail Women Who Want PAC FP (Situation Analyses in Dominican Republic, Haiti, Nicaragua, Population Council, 2008)

8 Lack of policies/guidelines Lack of organized services to provide FP Limited method mix Lack of IEC materials Stockouts of contraceptives Lack of counseling on FP methods and availability Additional charges for FP Barriers to FP Provision in PAC Services National Norms/Policies Some cadres not allowed to provide PAC services Limitations on who can receive FP (age, # of pregnancies) “Poor” location of PAC services No FP commodities in budget Health System Barriers Provider Negative provider attitude Lack of knowledge about rapid return to fertility Little to no FP counseling Lack of referral for FP methods (if cannot be provided on-site) Client

9 Joint Statement on Post abortion FP endorsed by: - FIGO - ICM - ICN Purpose: To highlight the importance of Family Planning in Post abortion Care Programs

10 Key consensus points Unmet need for FP is the primary cause of induced abortion All postabortion women should receive voluntary postabortion family planning counseling A wide range of contraceptive methods, including long acting should be offered Postabortion family planning uptake is high when quality services are offered before discharge Provision of universal access to postabortion family planning should be a standard of practice for doctors, nurses, and midwives. FIGO, ICM and ICN health professionals have a special advocacy role with policymakers and governments

11 Sites increased from 81 to 433 33% increase in number of PAC clients in Nepal and Senegal FP acceptance among PAC and other clients almost doubled Average cost per facility to decentralize PAC = $2432 USD Decentralization and Community Mobilization Works!

12 Cost of FP Services Compared to PAC and Abortion Services FP can be less costly than PAC or abortion services! Nigeria PAC consumes 3.4% of total health expenditures Annually, PAC services cost 4 times the cost of contraceptives Kazakhstan Abortion services accounted for almost 1% of total public health spending in 2004 Contraceptives are 3.2 times more cost- effective than abortion services in terms of births averted

13 Recognize that PAC is a golden opportunity to address unmet FP and maternal mortality Ensure that national guidelines/policies include: –Nurses and midwives as providers of PAC and FP services –Support for decentralization of services to health centers / dispensaries that have maternities –FP supplies and commodities are in national budgets Reorganize services: –to allow PAC services and FP counseling and service delivery 24 hours/day –To encourage referral for long acting and/or permanent methods Increase access to postabortion FP - move services closer to the community Evidence Based Recommendations

14 What’s at Stake? If contraception were provided to the 137 million women who lack access: maternal mortality would decline by 25% to 35%. (Lule, Singh and Chowdhury, 2007) If contraception were provided to the 137 million women who lack access: maternal mortality would decline by 25% to 35%. (Lule, Singh and Chowdhury, 2007) Postabortion care services ARE NOT COMPLETE until you have done family planning counseling and service delivery!


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