TY - JOUR
T1 - Contraceptive Care Visit Objectives and Outcomes
T2 - Evidence From Burkina Faso, Pakistan, and Tanzania
AU - Moucheraud, Corrina
AU - Wollum, Alexandra
AU - Brooks, Mohamad
AU - Shah, Manisha
AU - Gipson, Jessica
AU - Wagner, Zachary
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Studies in Family Planning published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Population Council.
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - Globally, care experiences of the growing population of contraceptive users are not well-understood. We leverage a large client dataset (n = 71,602) from three countries (Burkina Faso, Pakistan, and Tanzania) to characterize contraceptive services sought (visit objective and method preference), assess whether these visit objectives were met and for whom, and explore if visit objective fulfillment was associated with care quality. Most people in all three countries said they were seeking to continue their current method or adopt a method for the first time. Clients seeking to change their method were least likely to have their objective met: 63.7 percent of clients in Burkina Faso, 73.3 percent in Pakistan, and 61.1 percent in Tanzania who wanted to switch actually achieved this during the visit. In Burkina Faso, people with lower socioeconomic standing, lower educational attainment, and lower parity less commonly had their switching objective, fulfilled. Method preference fulfillment was generally high, although approximately 15 percent of Tanzanian clients were given implants despite wanting another method. Among those seeking to adopt or restart a method in Pakistan and Tanzania, having this visit objective fulfilled, was correlated with better perceived treatment and higher person-centeredness of care.
AB - Globally, care experiences of the growing population of contraceptive users are not well-understood. We leverage a large client dataset (n = 71,602) from three countries (Burkina Faso, Pakistan, and Tanzania) to characterize contraceptive services sought (visit objective and method preference), assess whether these visit objectives were met and for whom, and explore if visit objective fulfillment was associated with care quality. Most people in all three countries said they were seeking to continue their current method or adopt a method for the first time. Clients seeking to change their method were least likely to have their objective met: 63.7 percent of clients in Burkina Faso, 73.3 percent in Pakistan, and 61.1 percent in Tanzania who wanted to switch actually achieved this during the visit. In Burkina Faso, people with lower socioeconomic standing, lower educational attainment, and lower parity less commonly had their switching objective, fulfilled. Method preference fulfillment was generally high, although approximately 15 percent of Tanzanian clients were given implants despite wanting another method. Among those seeking to adopt or restart a method in Pakistan and Tanzania, having this visit objective fulfilled, was correlated with better perceived treatment and higher person-centeredness of care.
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U2 - 10.1111/sifp.12279
DO - 10.1111/sifp.12279
M3 - Article
C2 - 39627833
AN - SCOPUS:85211185995
SN - 0039-3665
VL - 55
SP - 315
EP - 332
JO - Studies in family planning
JF - Studies in family planning
IS - 4
ER -