Striving toward safe abortion services in Nepal: A review of barriers and facilitators

Background and Aims Despite the decriminalization of abortion in Nepal in 2002, unsafe abortion is still a significant contributor to maternal morbidity and mortality. Nepal has witnessed a significant drop in abortion‐related severe complications and maternal deaths owing to the legalization of abo...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health Science Reports 2024-02, Vol.7 (2), p.e1877-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Atreya, Alok, Adhikari, Kishor, Nepal, Samata, Bhusal, Milan, Menezes, Ritesh G., Shrestha, Dhan B., Shrestha, Deepak
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background and Aims Despite the decriminalization of abortion in Nepal in 2002, unsafe abortion is still a significant contributor to maternal morbidity and mortality. Nepal has witnessed a significant drop in abortion‐related severe complications and maternal deaths owing to the legalization of abortion laws, lowered financial costs, and wider accessibility of safe abortion services (SAS). However, various factors such as sociocultural beliefs, financial constraints, geographical difficulties, and stigma act as barriers to the liberal accessibility of SAS. This review aimed to determine key barriers obstructing women's access to lawful, safe abortion care and identify facilitators that have improved access to and quality of abortion services. Methods A systematic search strategy utilizing the databases PubMed, CINAHL, Scopus, and Embase was used to include studies on the accessibility and safety of abortion services in Nepal. Data were extracted from included studies through close reading. Barriers and facilitators were then categorized into various themes and analyzed. Results Of 223 studies, 112 were duplicates, 73 did not meet the inclusion criteria, and 18 did not align with the research question; thus, 20 studies were included in the review. Various barriers to SAS in Nepal were categorized as economic, geographic, societal, legal/policy, socio‐cultural, health systems, and other factors. Facilitators improving access were categorized as economic/geographic/societal, legal/policy, socio‐cultural, and health systems factors. The patterns and trends of barriers and facilitators were analyzed, grouping them under legal/policy, socio‐cultural, geographic/accessibility, and health systems factors. Conclusion The review identifies financial constraints, unfavorable geography, lack of infrastructure, and social stigmatization as major barriers to SAS. Economics and geography, legalization, improved access, reduced cost and active involvement of auxiliary nurse‐midwives and community health volunteers are key facilitators. Key points The legalization of abortion in Nepal has not ensured universal access to safe services. Stigma, lack of awareness, and negative attitude of providers hamper access. Rural, low‐income women face additional obstacles such as distance, cost and lack of confidentiality.
ISSN:2398-8835
2398-8835
DOI:10.1002/hsr2.1877