Background: There is a complex interplay between women’s preferences, abortion services availability and the context in which these are provided. Even in countries where it is legal, denial of abortion is common, especially in low and middle income countries, forcing women to look for the service elsewhere and bringing serious consequences to the health and wellbeing of many women and their families. This non-systematic review pretends to answer the question: Which are the barriers to and facilitators for the access to legal abortion services in low and middle income countries? Methods: A non-systematic bibliographical review. Inclusion criteria: all quantitative, qualitative and evidence synthesis studies performed in low and middle income countries according to the World Bank classification for 2015 and published in English, Spanish and Portuguese language, between 2005 and 2017. Exclusion criteria: articles evaluating the efficacy of interventions, addressing the knowledge about abortion procedures among health care students and personnel, as well as those that only included sex workers. Results: The database search yield 199 articles in MEDLINE. 24 in Scopus and 38 in Scielo. A total of 22 articles including 15 countries from Africa (n = 6), Asia (n = 5), Central and South America (n = 3) and Europe (n = 1). The legal status of abortion in each of these countries was studied and described. For the analysis of the information, three categories of deepening were established: Laws and policies, Service delivery and Women’s abortion care-seeking behavior. Conclusion: the determinants of access to abortion in low and middle income countries are convoluted as multiple delays and barriers usually overlap. Similarly, stigmatization has a great impact across all the steps of abortion provision. Multiple facilitators were proposed in the three aspects of abortion provision, but they need to be adjusted depending on the context of each country.
Worldwide, it is estimated that 2.4 million maternal deaths occurred between 2003 and 2009, of which 7.9% were caused by abortion complications, almost all of them in low and middle income countries as result of unsafe procedures [
There is a complex interplay among women’s preferences, abortion services availability and the context in which these are provided [
A recent systematic review of the barriers and facilitators to abortion services in high income countries found that opposition to abortion among health professionals, direct and indirect costs of the procedure, unavailability of the service in rural areas, lack of training and of the proper resources were important barriers for the access to the service. Harassment of providers was the only form of stigma found in studies from rural Canada. On the contrary, the existence of specialized clinics, medical abortion via telemedicine and access to medical methods of abortion were identified as facilitators [
This non-systematic review was aimed to collect the existent literature about the barriers to and facilitators for the access to abortion in low and middle income countries, as the conditions in these countries differ significantly from that of high income countries.
A search of peer-reviewed articles was conducted in the following databases: MEDLINE, Scopus (English and Portuguese language) and Scielo (Spanish language). The search strings used were: MeSH: (Abortions, Legal OR Legal Abortion OR Legal Abortions OR Abortion on Demand) AND (Availability of Health Services OR Health Services Availability OR Accessibility, Health Services OR Access to Health Care OR Accessibility of Health Services OR Health Services Geographic accessibility OR Program Accessibility OR Accessibility, Program) and DeCS: Solicitantes de Aborto OR Aborto Legal OR Aborto. The references of the articles found were used to retrieve more articles of interest.
Inclusion criteria: all quantitative, qualitative and evidence synthesis studies performed in low and middle income countries according to the World Bank classification for 2015 and published in English, Spanish and Portuguese language, between 2005 and 2017. An article was included if the country/region in which it was made had the following criteria for legal abortion (2013) [
Exclusion criteria: articles evaluating the efficacy of interventions, addressing the knowledge about abortion procedures among health care students and personnel, as well as those that only included sex workers.
Data from the articles was collected and analyzed using thematic content analysis. The Framework for evaluating safe abortion programs by Benson (2005) was modified to create a Framework for determinants of the access to safe abortion programs.
Data Analysis: the results were grouped into 3 categories for analysis: laws and policies, service delivery and women’s abortion care-seeking behavior (
the conditions seemed to be very different from the other countries included. For each of the articles, the abstract was first reviewed to check that it met the criteria established in the search and to verify that its aim was in accordance with the search strategy. Subsequently, the methodology, the main results and the discussion of each study were analyzed and condensed in a matrix of Excel software which served as a tool to summarize the main contributions of each investigation. The possible biases of each study were considered and it was verified that the mention of some control strategies was written in each article.
A flow diagram reflecting the article screening process can be seen at
Perceptions about the abortion law varied among the general population of Trinidad and Tobago, where 71% of the surveyed were in favor of the decriminalization of the current law in different degrees, while 29% favored a more restrictive law.
Reference. | Country. | Focus of study. | Type of study. | Sample. | Population. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Qualitative. | |||||
Smith SS. The Challenges Procuring of Safe Abortion Care in Botswana. African journal of reproductive health. 2013; 17(4). | Botswana. | Factors that make terminating an unwanted pregnancy difficult. | Semi structured interviews. | n = 21 | Women and 4 men from the community, 1 human rights lawyer and 1 gynecologist. |
Ouédraogo R, Sundby J. Social determinants and access to induced abortion in Burkina Faso: from two case studies. Obstetrics and gynecology international. 2014; 2014. | Burkina Faso. | Social determinants of the type of clandestine abortion women are likely to access and the time taken to effective abortion. | Review of cases from in-depth interviews. | n = 2 | Women in post-abortion care. |
Hung SL. Access to safe and legal abortion for teenage women from deprived backgrounds in Hong Kong. Reprod Health Matter. 2010; 18(36): 102-10. | Hong Kong, China* | Experience of teenage women from deprived backgrounds who looks for an abortion. | In depth interviews and focus groups. | n = 29 | Young women from deprived backgrounds seeking abortion. |
Schwandt HM, Creanga AA, Adanu RM, Danso KA, Agbenyega T, Hindin MJ. Pathways to unsafe abortion in Ghana: the role of male partners, women and health care providers. Contraception. 2013; 88(4): 509-17. | Ghana. | Pathways to unsafe abortion and the role male partners and health care providers. | In-depth interviews and 3 focus groups. | n = 58 | Female post-abortion patients with complications of unsafe abortion, male partners, family planning nurses and obstetricians/gynecologists. |
Aniteye P, Mayhew SH. Shaping legal abortion provision in Ghana: using policy theory to understand provider-related obstacles to policy implementation. Health Research Policy and Systems. 2013; 11(1):23. | Ghana. | Reasons for poor implementation of the abortion policy. | In depth Interviews. | n = 76 | Health professionals (Ob/gyn, midwives, pharmacists and other) |
Potdar P, Barua A, Dalvie S, Pawar A. “If a woman has even one daughter, I refuse to perform the abortion”: Sex determination and safe abortion in India. Reprod Health Matter. 2015; 23(45): 114-25. | India. | Interactions of private medical practitioners with the regulatory machinery and reasons for refusal to provide abortion services. | In depth interviews. | n = 19 | Gynecologists. |
Tong WT, Low WY, Wong YL, Choong SP, Jegasothy R. Exploring pregnancy termination experiences and needs among Malaysian women: A qualitative study. BMC public health. 2012; 12(1): 743. | Malaysia. | Experiences of women and needs with regard to abortion. | Semi structured interviews. | n = 31 | Women who had previous abortions. |
Puri M, Lamichhane P, Harken T, Blum M, Harper CC, Darney PD, et al. “Sometimes they used to whisper in our ears”: health care workers’ perceptions of the effects of abortion legalization in Nepal. BMC public health. 2012; 12(1): 297. | Nepal. | Health care workers’ views of abortion legalization. | In depth interviews. | n = 35 | Health care workers. |
Harries J, Stinson K, Orner P. Health care providers' attitudes towards termination of pregnancy: A qualitative study in South Africa. BMC public health. 2009; 9(1): 296. | South Africa | Knowledge, attitudes and opinions of health service providers. | In depth interviews and focus groups. | n = 34 | Health care workers related to abortion provision. |
Gallo MF, Nghia NC. Real life is different: a qualitative study of why women delay abortion until the second trimester in Vietnam. Soc Sci Med. 2007; 64(9): 1812-22. | Vietnam. | Determinants of delaying obtaining abortion until the second trimester. | Semi structured interviews. | n = 66 | Women looking for second-trimester abortion and abortion providers. |
Quantitative. | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Amado ED, García MCC, Cristancho KR, Salas EP, Hauzeur EB. Obstacles and challenges following the partial decriminalisation of abortion in Colombia. Reprod Health Matter. 2010; 18(36): 118-26. | Colombia. | Barriers in looking for a legal termination of pregnancy. | Case series. | n = 46 | Woman looking for abortion. | |
Banerjee SK, Andersen KL, Buchanan RM, Warvadekar J. Woman-centered research on access to safe abortion services and implications for behavioral change communication interventions: a cross-sectional study of women in Bihar and Jharkhand, India. BMC public health. 2012; 12(1): 175. | India. | Accessibility of safe abortion services from the perspective of rural Indian women. | Survey. | n = 1411 | Married women in reproductive age. | |
Gerdts C, DePiñeres T, Hajri S, Harries J, Hossain A, Puri M, et al. Denial of abortion in legal settings. J Fam Plan Reprod H. 2014: jfprhc-2014-100999. | Katmandu, Nepal; Cape Town, South Africa; Tunis, Tunisia; and Bogota, Colombia. | Socio-demographic characteristics of legal abortion seekers and reasons for denied abortion care. | Surveys and data from medical records. | n = 681 | Women looking for legal abortion services. | |
Clyde J, Bain J, Castagnaro K, Rueda M, Tatum C, Watson K. Evolving capacity and decision- making in practice: adolescents’ access to legal abortion services in Mexico City. Reprod Health Matter. 2013; 21(41): 167-75. | Mexico city, Mexico* | Obstacles to abortion care reported by women. | Survey. | n = 398 | Adult women who obtained first-trimester abortion services at public facilities. | |
Adinma E, Adinma J, Ugboaja J, Iwuoha C, Akiode A, Oji E, et al. Knowledge and perception of the Nigerian Abortion Law by abortion seekers in south-eastern Nigeria. J Obstet Gynaecol. 2011; 31(8): 763-6. | Nigeria. | To determine their knowledge and perceptions on the Nigerian Abortion Law. Information derived from the study may constitute major considerations in the future development of policies related to abortion management. | Survey. | n = 100 | Abortion seekers. | |
Okonta PI, Ebeigbe PN, Sunday-Adeoye I. Liberalization of abortion and reduction of abortion related morbidity and mortality in Nigeria. Acta Obstet Gyn Scan. 2010; 89(8): 1087-90. | Nigeria. | Knowledge and perception of physicians on abortion-related deaths, liberalization of abortion and its impact on the reduction of maternal deaths. | Survey. | n = 131 | Physicians. | |
Thapa S, Sharma SK, Khatiwada N. Women’s knowledge of abortion law and availability of services in Nepal. J Biosoc Sci. 2014; 46(02): 266-77. | Nepal. | Women’s awareness of the legal status of abortion and availability of abortion services. | Survey. | n = 11727 | Women aged 15 - 45 years. | |
Martin CJ, Hyacenth G, Suite LS. Knowledge and Perception of Abortion and the Abortion Law in Trinidad and Tobago. Reprod Health Matter. 2007; 15(29): 97-107. | Trinidad and Tobago. | People’s knowledge and views on the abortion law. | Survey. | n = 918 | Men and women over 15 years of age from the community. | |
Mixed. | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Holcombe SJ, Berhe A, Cherie A. Personal Beliefs and Professional Responsibilities: Ethiopian Midwives’ Attitudes Toward Providing Abortion Services after Legal Reform. Stud Family Plann. 2015; 46(1): 73-95. | Ethiopia. | Factors associated with the willingness of mid-level providers to provide abortion services. | Survey and interviews. | n = 188 (surveys) and n = 12 (interviews) | Survey: Midwives attending to a national meeting, Interviews: Midwifery students. |
Clyde J, Bain J, Castagnaro K, Rueda M, Tatum C, Watson K. Evolving capacity and decision- making in practice: adolescents’ access to legal abortion services in Mexico City. Reprod Health Matter. 2013; 21(41): 167-75. | Mexico city, Mexico* | The effect of regulations and clinical attitudes and practice in the access of adolescent girls to information regarding termination of pregnancy and to abortion. | In-depth interviews, focus groups and surveys. | n = 61 adolescents, n = 4 mystery clients, n = 47 surveys. | 1-Mystery client visits to access information about legal abortion services, 2-Surveys of abortion clinic directors and staff, 3-Survey of adolescents looking for a legal abortion. |
Review. | |||||
Raševic M, Sedlecky K. The abortion issue in Serbia. Eur J Contracept Reprod Health Care. 2009;14(6):385-90. | Serbia. | To identify the causal factors involved in the high prevalence of induced abortion in Serbia. | Review. | - | - |
*City is specified because legal status of abortion is different across the country.
Country. | To save a woman’s life. | To preserve a woman’s physical health. | To preserve a woman’s mental health. | In cases of rape or incest. | Because of fetal impairment. | For economic or social reasons. | On request. |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Africa. | |||||||
Botswana | X | X | X | X | X | ||
Burkina Faso | X | X | X | X | X | ||
Ethiopia | X | X | X | X | X | ||
Ghana | X | X | X | X | X | ||
Nigeria | X | X | X | ||||
Tunisia | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
Asia. | |||||||
China | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
India | X | X | X | X | X | X | |
Malaysia | X | X | X | ||||
Nepal | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
Vietnam | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
Central and South America. | |||||||
Trinidad and Tobago | X | X | X | ||||
Colombia | X | X | X | X | X | ||
Mexico | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
Europe. | |||||||
Serbia | X | X | X | X | X | X | X |
Obtained from: World Abortion Policies 2013, United Nations - Department of Economic and Social Affairs - Population Division [
Women were more leaned to be pro-choice than men (62% vs 38%), in contrast to Botswana, where women seemed to be more punitive than men, while in both cases negative attitudes towards abortion laws increased with age [
On the other perspective, 17% of Nigerian women thought that the law was too restrictive and only 2% thought it was “alright” [
“You can’t make it legal for people to abort, because one, you compromise a lot of, you know, a lot of education that goes into trying to stop teenage pregnancies and trying to stop a lot of uh, extra-marital affairs. In the country we are trying to fight HIV and AIDS [...] you know people have to change their ways […] sexual patterns and so on” [
In India, medical doctors raised their concern about the infringement of the Medical Termination of Pregnancy Act (MTP Act), which states to keep confidentiality of all the medical records of abortion. This was expressed because government authorities demand the access to abortion records during their monitoring visits to control sex selection under the Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques (PCPNDT) Act (2003). Moreover, doctors stated that sex selection was still occurring, but the fear to persecution and extortion for themselves and patients, especially after second-trimester abortions, was creating an environment of fear in which they preferred to deny abortions to women [
In Hong Kong, sexual intercourse with minors under 16 years is illegal and consequently, adolescent pregnant women looking for legal abortion fear the prosecution of their partners [
In different instances, abortion providers demand requirements outside the law that result in delays [
Quality of legal abortion services was an issue raised by interviewees in three studies. Teenage women from Hong Kong and abortion providers from South Africa said that women preferred to go to private clinics and pay higher fees to receive a personalized service with more privacy, less stigmatization, shorter waiting times and better pre and post-abortion counselling [
Four women from Vietnam sought for second-trimester termination of pregnancy (TOPs) because they went to health services in the first trimester, but their pregnancy was not detected, while other two women received manual vacuum aspiration (MVA) during early pregnancy at a hospital, but the procedure was not effective and they had to appeal for a second-trimester TOP. In addition, second-trimester abortions have been traditionally performed using the Kovac’s method1 in this country, which is not recommended by the World Health Organization due to the increase of serious complications and is restricted by the law to a gestational age between 16 and 22 weeks, meaning that women between 12 and 16 weeks of gestation have to wait until they reach the proper time of pregnancy [
A different situation was exposed by abortion providers from Nepal, as they were concerned about the increasing number of women presenting from complications of ineffective medical abortion whom had obtained the pills from private pharmacists and other uncertified health personnel. Women used this service because it was more geographically accessible and advantages were similar to that mentioned for private services [
In 10 out of 15 countries, judgmental attitudes from health care workers (including midwives, general practitioners, gynecologist/obstetrician, nurses and other health staff) towards women looking for abortion services were described, frequently based on personal and/or religious beliefs. Health workers questioned the reasons to obtain abortions-even in cases of rape and fetal malformations-, created unjustified delays, put pressure in women to continue the pregnancy, called them killers, and put fetus’ rights over women’s rights [
Adolescents and unmarried women were particularly vulnerable to providers’ negative attitudes, which seemed to be increased by the negative perceptions about premarital sex and use of abortion as an anticonception method [
Counselling practices varied significantly across countries and type of providers. Some midwifes used counselling to dissuade women from obtaining an abortion, which was done through delivering incorrect information, warning women about “the dangers of abortion”, hiding information about providers and advising them to deliver the baby. General practitioners and gynecologist/obstetricians appeared to be more objective than midwives when delivering information to patients [
Some health providers refused to get involved in any step of the provision of abortion based in religious and conscientious objection [
“Personally, I don’t want to do abortion, but if a woman came to me to have an abortion, according to the legal exceptions that make abortion legal, I would do it. Even if it is killing the baby, but she came being pregnant from her father or brother, it is hard to live with that. Even having a baby from a father or brother is not legal. So, this is a sin, and performing an abortion is also a sin. I think that when I weigh it, performing an abortion for her is much better than letting her live with that baby. Even if I say I will not perform an abortion, I know that this will not stop this lady from aborting. She will go to other places that are not safe” [
In the same way, colleagues seemed to have an important impact in the willingness of health care workers to provide the service. For instance, 37% of Ethiopian midwives felt that colleagues would not respect them if they offered abortion services [
“They make it difficult for you. They spread the word in the community...and also isolate you. Where you’re supposed to be peers and working hand in hand and you can become extremely unhappy. You’d often find midwifes not providing abortions because they fear the victimization, being stigmatized, being isolated from their peers, and also within the community itself” [
Unsafe abortion and the resulting high burden of maternal deaths were strong reasons for providing the service or referring the patient to a practitioner that would do it, even when health care workers were against abortion. Consequently, practitioners were aware that denying the provision of the service would not prevent women from having an abortion, but rather it would force them to look for it elsewhere [
Training about abortion varied between countries and health providers. In Mexico 79% of the staff working in abortion facilities received training about it [
Only 37% of Ethiopian midwives knew the instances for legal abortion [
“It’s illegal for unmarried women to my knowledge... because, you know; the culture does not allow it” [
Unavailability of the abortion services occurred in different levels; scarcity of provider facilities, shortage of staff to perform the procedure, overcrowded services, unwillingness of health staff to provide the service and lack of adequate pre- and post-abortion counselling were all described [
Delays in getting appointments were mentioned in Colombia and Mexico. In the first one, average waiting time for the procedure was 16 days (range 2 to 44 days) [
An important aspect for availability in India was the time spent by doctors to fill an extensive form manually and then submit the information online, as there were frequent problems with the internet connection and the platform performance and the whole process was considered time consuming in an already overcrowded service [
Facilities providing abortion were less frequent in rural than in urban areas [
The direct and indirect costs of abortion are an important determinant for the access to it in low and middle income countries, as shown in nine of the articles [
In a study performed in the area of Bihar and Jharkhand, India, the perceived affordability was a general concern and it was higher in women from the general caste (compared to scheduled tribe, p = 0.004), other religions (compared to Hindu, p = 0.04) and null gravid women (p = 0.048) [
“This area is very much developed and many people have money in hand, so they are ready to pay any-thing; they are not bothered about the fees. So the abortion rates are also high in this area. And they openly ask us for sex selection” [
Women described multiple―and overlapping―factors influencing the occurrence of delays for the receipt of abortion services. Delays finding out pregnancy, deciding to have an abortion, obtaining the money to cover the costs, finding a provider and completing requirements―such as reporting rape―were all described in different studies [
A study exploring the reasons for second-trimester abortions in Vietnam found that 80% of these women detected the pregnancy after 12 weeks and 20% of women required more than 1 month to make the decision [
Getting time out of work was the most frequent obstacle to obtaining abortion in México, reported 26% of all participants. Single (OR 2.5, 95%CI 1.4 - 4.3) as well as separated or divorced women (OR 2.9, 95%CI 1.0 - 8.3) were more likely to report this obstacle than married women, while on the contrary, women with a middle school education were less likely to report it (OR 0.4, 95%CI 0.2 - 0.8). Opposition to abortion by the partner or other family member (19%) was the second most frequent obstacle, and was only related to being separated or divorced (compared to married women, OR 3.5, 95%CI 1.3 - 9.6) [
On the whole, women from Mexico with a primary or lower level of education (OR 2.1, 95%CI 1.1 - 4.0) were more likely to report a higher number of obstacles, as well as both single (OR 2.1, 95%CI 1.4 - 3.2) and separated/divorced (OR 3.4, 95%CI 1.4 - 8.6) women, compared to married women [
Partners’ role in the abortion decision-making process was reported in three articles. The final decision to have an abortion by Indian married women was made both by themselves (70%) and their husbands (74%) [
Sources of information and exposure to mass media may influence the degree and quality of knowledge about abortion and therefore have an impact in the decision-making process, as showed by four studies. Firstly, most of women from Malaysia obtained information about the abortion procedure and providers from friends or colleagues, but the information they got was frequently superficial and inadequate. They also said that the information from media was rare and that difficulties finding assertive information caused anxiety to them [
Likewise, the majority of women (87.3%) in Bihar and Jharkhand, India had no information about abortion, which was probably related to the fact that most of them never used to watch television (84.8%), listen to the radio (86.1%) or read newspapers (93.5%). The exposure to other sources of information like at a women’s club or community meetings and the market was also infrequent. Despite this, the most important source for those who had received any information was on the community level (14.2%), followed by family and friends (4.6%), health providers (4.4%) and lastly, mass media (4.3%). The majority of women (83.1%) in this study had a low living standard [
Knowledge about the local abortion law, locations that provide abortion, abortion methods, possible risks of the procedure and post abortion care were all mentioned in eight articles as important aspects of in order to guarantee the access to safe abortion services [
Lack of awareness about the abortion law was reported as a cause for second-trimester abortions by physicians in Nepal [
Only 46.2% of women in India knew about a source of abortion services, while 89% of women who had an abortion within the past 3 years, consulted a doctor on how to obtain it. Most of the latter women were informed about providers by their husbands (61%) or other close relatives (50%) [
Country. | Population. | Knowledge about the law. |
---|---|---|
India [ | Married women in reproductive age. | 35.8% of women knew that abortion was legal, 4.7% thought that if was legal if the woman was married, 47.9% thought that it was illegal and 11.6% did not know. 71.1% of women had incorrect knowledge about the gestational limits for MTP, 1.9% had correct knowledge and 27.0% knew no information about it. |
Trinidad and Tobago [ | General population. | 44% correctly said that abortion was legal under certain circumstances, 38% thought it was completely illegal, 5% did not know about the existence of the law and 13% had no idea. 57.7% of Hindus knew about the law, while 44.3% did and other religions felt in between those two. |
Nigeria [ | Women looking for abortion. | 32% of women knew about the existence of the law. Knowledge about the legality of abortion was not statistically related neither with the number of previous pregnancy terminations nor the education status (p > 0.05). |
Nepal [ | Women in reproductive age. | In total, 38.7% (95% CI: 37.8, 39.6) of women were aware of the legal status of abortion. Awareness was significantly higher in urban than in rural areas (47.9% vs 37.1%, OR 0.8, 95% CI 0.6 - 0.9). Knowledge increased from 22.3% in the first wealth quintile to 54.7% in the fifth wealth quintile (OR 2.5, 95%CI 2.0 - 3.3) Knowledge about the law increased significantly with the level of education compared to women with no education. More than two thirds (69.4%) of women with a high school or higher education knew about the abortion law, compared with 20.4% in women with no education (OR 8.6, 95%CI 6.8 - 10.9) Comparison between the results (2011) and a survey from 2006: Awareness about the existence of an abortion law increased significantly in nine of ten country sub-regions. The increase was similar in rural and urban areas and varied across ages. The increase of awareness was higher in women with higher levels of education and in the higher economic strata, while among women with lower educational levels or lower economic strata there was modest or no increase. |
Abortion-related stigma on social and religious grounds was reported in seven (32%) of the articles (
The study performed in the general population of Trinidad and Tobago showed that 15.4% were in favor of abortion no matter the circumstances, 49.0% opposed completely and 35.6% accepted it depending on the circumstances. Abortion was often accepted for cases of rape, incest, and risk to the woman’s life, even among those that were anti-choice [
The study performed in Botswana found that the role of women and the significance of children in the society were important aspects for the acceptance of abortion. First, children were seen as a reason for pride and respect that confer social standing in African cultures, nourished by the fact that they can be used for labor and financial support later in life. Secondly, the country still preserved an oppressive patriarchal structure, where it was mandatory for women to bear children and having as many children as possible is seen as a way to overcome the inferior position of women in society. Additionally, abortion was considered unnecessary because in the case of an unwanted pregnancy, it is common to transfer the child between family members or from one family to another. However, this tradition appears to have been stablished as a result of an anti-abortion sentiment in the community and it does not take into account than the women’s physical and mental health [
Country. | Perspective. | Social stigma. | Religious stigma. |
---|---|---|---|
Nepal [ | AP. | Stigma and secrecy regarding abortion remain after legalization. Women fear to disclose previous abortions during medical visits, especially if it was an illegal abortion or an abortion outside the gestational age limits. Unmarried women hide the history about previous abortion due to fear to judgment from providers. | |
Malaysia [ | W. | Requesting abortion (information and procedure) to providers is difficult for women due to stigma related to abortion. | Women consider abortion as a “sin” and fear people talking behind their backs. |
Colombia [ | W. | The society does not understand the abortion law and has unrecognized and unresolved ethical, medical and legal issues regarding abortion. | |
Vietnam [ | W. | Women resort to have an abortion due to social consequences of keeping it. In Vietnamese society, premarital intercourse is considered a shame for both the family and the entire clan. | |
Ghana [ | AP. | Social pressure and labelling on doctors who provide abortion leads them to denying or misclassifying it. | Religious beliefs are a barrier both coming from the health personnel and from the community. Churches spread the conception that abortion is bad to the community. |
Botswana [ | W. | The stigma about abortion is related to the association of unwanted pregnancies with irresponsible sexual intercourse and unacceptable promiscuity. | Religiosity influenced the perceptions of women about abortion. The Catholics believe that the soul enters the body after conception, which makes abortion unacceptable at any gestational age. However, women face an ambivalence between their religious and personal beliefs |
India [ | W. | Societal norms and individual attitudes were bot not seen as favorable towards abortion. | Women from other religions were statistically more likely to have a favorable perception towards abortion than Hindu women (p = 0.01). |
AP: Abortion providers, W: Women.
Abortion in Serbia has been legal since 1969 and it is requested directly to gynecologists, who have the legal obligation to perform it. The cost of abortion is higher than the yearly cost of effective contraception and the price is the same in private and public facilities, but the physician is only paid to perform it in private clinics. However, abortion in Serbia is widely used and socially accepted nowadays; 24.3% of adolescents are taught by their parents about induced abortions and nearly half (46.3%) knew that their mothers have used abortion as a birth control method. The reason for this behavior is that women thought that abortion was less harmful to health and less complicated to use than any contraceptive method, as shown in one study that found that 38.7% of health staff had never used contraception, whereas 59.0% of them or their partners had had an induced abortion (1.3 abortions on average) [
The strategies and facilitators proposed to address abortion barriers, either stated in the results or the discussion of the studies are shown in
Category | Subcategory | Strategies and facilitators | Ref. |
---|---|---|---|
Law and health system | Abortion laws and justice system. | Political will regarding abortion. Equality of the access to the laws to all women. Creation of laws to improve social barriers for the access to abortion and gender inequality. Laws to facilitate the access to abortion (transportation of women, reduction of the number of visits required). Legislation for increasing the availability of abortion services and supplies. Approval of abortion medication (misoprostol and mifepristone). Adolescents’ autonomy for decision making. | [ |
Health system norms and standards | Consultation of women and general population about their acceptance of abortion. Supervision of the quality of abortion services. Creation of national abortion provision standards and protocols. Ensure privacy and confidentiality of women during all steps of abortion care. Strengthen pre and post abortion counselling. | [ | |
Access to safe abortion services. | Providers’ attitudes. | Task shifting from specialized to mid-level providers (also increases availability). | [ |
Normalizing abortion as a health service. | [ | ||
Values clarification workshops. | [ | ||
Provider training and support. | Education about the abortion legislation for health managers. | [ | |
Greater advocacy of legal abortion in the health system and to the society. | [ | ||
Education of health personnel including: legislation, requirements to access to abortion, surgical and medical abortion procedures. | [ | ||
Expose providers to the international abortion standards and declarations. | [ | ||
Training about pre and post abortion counselling. | [ | ||
Training of pharmacists on how to deal with women looking for abortion services. | [ | ||
Abortion-specialized centers. | [ | ||
Availability. | Promotion of facilities that provide abortion (e.g. abortion logo for facilities in Vietnam). | [ | |
Increase the involvement of the public sector in provision of the service. | [ | ||
Abortion provision on weekends and after work hours. | [ | ||
Reduce waiting times. | [ | ||
Distribution. | Increasing the number of abortion providers, especially in rural areas. | [ | |
Affordability. | Reduction and standardization of costs. | [ | |
Lower cost for poor women. | [ | ||
Promote the use of medical abortion. | [ | ||
Reimburse for unused medication on follow up. | [ | ||
No charge for follow up visits. | [ | ||
Women’s abortion care seeking behavior. | Attitudes towards looking for services. | Empowerment of women (increase economic and decision independence). | [ |
Increase awareness about unsafe abortion. | [ | ||
Knowledge of services. | Education of general population about: abortion legislation, providers, methods and risks. | [ | |
Clarification of misconceptions about abortion to the general population. | [ | ||
Design of educational material that is understandable for all population (including illiterate women). | [ |
Pro-choice information divulgated trough massive media must be greater than anti-choice propaganda. | [ | ||
---|---|---|---|
Use providers of public health services (such as vaccination and antenatal care) as educational channels. | [ | ||
In-depth education of women looking for abortion. | [ | ||
Social determinants. | Use community channels to deliver information about abortion and increase awareness. | [ |
Main findings and conclusions of the literature: The database search yield 199 articles in MEDLINE. 24 in Scopus and 38 in Scielo. A total of 22 articles including 15 countries from Africa (n = 6), Asia (n = 5), Central and South America (n = 3) and Europe (n = 1). The legal status of abortion in each of these countries was studied and described. For the analysis of the information, three categories of deepening were established: Laws and policies, Service delivery and Women’s abortion care-seeking behavior. Conclusion: the determinants of access to abortion in low and middle income countries are convoluted as multiple delays and barriers usually overlap. Similarly, stigmatization has a great impact across all the steps of abortion provision. Multiple facilitators were proposed in the three aspects of abortion provision, but they need to be adjusted depending on the context of each country.
This review shows that socio-cultural and health-care-related barriers occurred in all countries included, regardless of the degree of decriminalization of abortion. All the religions mentioned in the studies seemed to have the same effect on abortion, considering it a “sin” and making it a punishable act that caused stigmatization of women who used it.
In contrast, the normalization of abortion as a birth control method in Serbia also shows that when abortion is widely accessible but it is not the complement of effective family planning services, it can become overused, although the impact of this issue on maternal health has not been studied in the country [
Stigmatization coming from both colleagues and the society is a reason why abortion providers remain clandestine―even when it is performed under legal instances―similarly to the situation reported in rural Canada [
Women’s expected submission to male partners and to their role in society as child bearers continue to occur in traditionally patriarchal societies [
The results of this review are somewhat similar to the systematic review performed in high income countries when it comes to the barriers related to the health system and the strong influence that the providers’ attitudes have in them. In both reviews, judgmental attitudes of providers had a negative effect in the women’s experience with abortion services and physicians struggled with ambivalent feelings about the provision of abortion [
Conversely, social determinants of access to abortion were markedly different in this review compared with the systematic review including high income countries. First, stigma was found in this review as problem that goes across all the aspects of abortion provision rather being limited to the discrimination of providers. Secondly, in the review by Dorian and Nancarrow, delays to timely access to abortion were mostly related to the availability of appointments and the choice of providers, while in this review, there were multiple delays occurring before the woman reaches the facility, while afterwards, the delays were mostly related to the willingness of the health workers to provide the service [
This finding suggest that liberal abortion laws need to be implemented altogether with political initiatives to guarantee the access to the service, which should include strategies to increase awareness and knowledge about safe abortion, which would help decrease the stigma surrounding the issue [
Education programs must be comprehensive and include the legislation, methods, providers and possible consequences of abortion. However, this program also need to take into consideration that women in the most vulnerable populations may not be exposed to mass media, as shown in India, which makes community channels the best disseminators of information in rural and/or segregated areas.
This review included articles from diverse countries, with a mixture between qualitative and quantitative studies, which gives a broad perspective on the situation of access to abortion in low and middle countries. However, each of the countries included has a very particular situation regarding abortion according to its own socio-cultural background, hence the results are quite heterogeneous. Other limitations are that most of the articles covered a particular area of a country or only the perspective of either women or providers.
In conclusion, the determinants of access to abortion in low and middle income countries are convoluted as multiple delays and barriers usually overlap. Similarly, stigmatization has a great impact across all the steps of abortion provision. Multiple facilitators were proposed in the three aspects of abortion provision, but they need to be adjusted depending on the context of each country.
Arroyave, F.A.B. and Gutiérrez, P.A.M. (2018) A Systematic Bibliographical Review: Barriers and Facilitators for Access to Legal Abortion in Low and Middle Income Countries. Open Journal of Preventive Medicine, 8, 147-168. https://doi.org/10.4236/ojpm.2018.85015