ABORTION-SEEKING BEHAVIOUR AMONG NIGERIAN WOMEN

2008 ◽  
Vol 40 (2) ◽  
pp. 247-268 ◽  
Author(s):  
AKINRINOLA BANKOLE ◽  
GILDA SEDGH ◽  
BONIFACE A. OYE-ADENIRAN ◽  
ISAAC F. ADEWOLE ◽  
RUBINA HUSSAIN ◽  
...  

SummaryThis study used data from a community-based survey to examine women’s experiences of abortion in Nigeria. Fourteen per cent of respondents reported that they had ever tried to terminate a pregnancy, and 10% had obtained an abortion. The majority of women who sought an abortion did so early in the pregnancy. Forty-two per cent of women who obtained an abortion used the services of a non-professional provider, a quarter experienced complications and 9% sought treatment for complications from their abortions. Roughly half of the women who obtained an abortion used a method other than D&C or MVA. The abortion prevalence and conditions under which women sought abortions varied by women’s socio-demographic characteristics. Because abortion is illegal in Nigeria except to save the woman’s life, many women take significant risks to terminate unwanted pregnancies. Reducing the incidence of unwanted pregnancy and unsafe abortion can significantly impact the reproductive health of women in Nigeria.

Author(s):  
Teng Esther Mbong ◽  
Dickson S. Nsagha ◽  
Niba Clinton Ambe ◽  
Micheal Okunlola ◽  
A. Oladokun Sina

Background: Unsafe abortion is one of the commonest causes of maternal mortality and post-abortion care services have been acclaimed as the best remedy for this situation. Yet, high maternal mortality still prevails pointing to issues with the quality of services. The paper was designed to investigate women's motives for engaging in unsafe abortion; assess women's experiences on the quality of PAC services and identify the challenges women faced in accessing PAC services in Buea. Methods: This study recruited 10 participants in Buea. Using a structured interview, data was collected on women's motives for engaging in unsafe abortion; assess women's experiences on the quality of PAC services, and identify the challenges women faced in accessing PAC services in Buea. Thematic and grounded theory analytical techniques were used to organize and interpret the data. Results: Majority of women in Buea did not use contraceptives for different reasons ranging from personal, spousal consent, ignorance, and the fear of side effects of contraceptive use. The low contraceptive use accounts highly for unwanted pregnancy cases which results in the decisions to induce. Most of these women involuntarily engage in induced abortion, highly driven by second party influence like the request from spouse/partner, disappointment from the spouse, and fear of parents’ reactions; while some occur as a result of missed abortion. The quality of PAC services received by most of these women were merely emergency treatments without proper PAC activities like family planning counseling, provision of modern contraceptive methods, linkages to other reproductive health care services. Women in Buea encounter some challenges in the use of PAC services, pains associated with the procedure, the cost, the absence of some family planning methods, the absence of counselling before PAC and above all, non constant availability of blood in the bood bank for transfusion. Conclusion: This study concluded that most women in Buea engage in induced abortion on account of the pressure to terminate an unwanted pregnancy; resulting from low contraceptives use; desire to avoid problems from their spouses/partners as well as to pursue career ambition. Moreover, the quality of PAC services offered to women in Buea was emergency treatment; void of important aspects like family planning services, linkage to other reproductive health care services, and facilitating their social reinsertion and preventing future induce abortion.


2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (7) ◽  
pp. 1149-1158
Author(s):  
Rifka Fatchurrahmi ◽  
Mutingatu Sholichah

Adolescence is a transitional period between children and adults, where there is rapid growth, secondary sex characteristics arise, fertilization is achieved and psychological and cognitive changes occur. However, the level of adolescent knowledge about reproductive health is still low. As a result of the lack of knowledge of adolescents about reproductive health, among others, the increase in the number of unwanted pregnancy. Unwanted pregnancy in adolescents also occurs in one area in Yogyakarta city, so that community-based preventive interventions are needed. The intervention provided was in the form of psychoeducational activities for adolescents and parents. Parents are given intervention because they have a role in preventing unwanted pregnancies in adolescents, for example by maintaining effective communication with adolescents and getting used to being open mind. The results of this activity have proven to be effective because they can increase knowledge significantly.


1996 ◽  
Author(s):  
Friday Okonofua ◽  
Clifford Odimegwu ◽  
Bisi Aina ◽  
Patrick Daru ◽  
Agnes Johnson

2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (12-13) ◽  
pp. 1555-1573
Author(s):  
Elke Mitchell ◽  
Linda Rae Bennett

Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a violation of women’s human rights and dramatically increases women’s vulnerability to sexual and reproductive health morbidities. This article examines young iTaukei (Indigenous Fijian) women’s experiences of, and responses to, nonphysical forms of coercion in romantic relationships. It draws on ethnographic research with young unmarried women attending university in Suva, Fiji. Young women disclosed experiencing a continuum of coercive behaviors, including verbal pressure, deception, and manipulation by male partners to initiate sexual intercourse, unprotected sex, and unsafe abortions. Findings indicate an urgent need to address IPV within premarital relationships in Fiji to promote young women’s sexual and reproductive health and autonomy.


2013 ◽  
Vol 23 (6) ◽  
pp. 847-860 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shawn M. Kneipp ◽  
Barbara J. Lutz ◽  
Catherine Levonian ◽  
Christa Cook ◽  
Jill B. Hamilton ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 42 (4) ◽  
pp. 21-41
Author(s):  
Mounia El Kotni

In an effort to improve health outcomes, the proportion of hospital-attended births has been on the rise in Mexico since the 1990s, resulting in an increased medicalization of reproductive health. Ethnographic research in southern Mexico highlights women and Indigenous midwives' ambivalence about “being cut.” While “being cut” can refer to procedures such as episiotomies or cesarean sections, it also stands for Indigenous and poor women's multiple experiences of frustration, mistreatment, and violence during childbirth. I argue that such violence can only be fully understood when examining the conditions shaping women's consent through an intersectional lens, to include a failure to value poor women's desires, whose silenced voices exist at the intersection of multiple oppressions.


2008 ◽  
Vol 4 (1) ◽  
pp. 54-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diane Thompson ◽  
Hilary Thomas ◽  
Juliet Solomon ◽  
Lina Nashef ◽  
Sally Kendall

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