Abstract

BackgroundWomen value receiving quality interpersonal care during abortion services, yet no measure exists to assess this outcome from patients’ perspectives. We sought to adapt the Interpersonal Quality in Family Planning care scale (Dehlendorf et al., American Journal of Obstetrics Gynaecology 10.1016/j.ajog.2016.01.173, 2016) for use in abortion care.MethodsWe adapted items from the original scale for the abortion context, and conducted cognitive interviews to explore the acceptability, understandability, and importance of the adapted items. Adults who spoke English and/or Spanish, had an abortion in the past year, and lived in the US were eligible to participate. Interview memos were analyzed concurrently with data collection to refine the measure in stages.ResultsWe interviewed 26 participants. Items were tested over seven stages and led to four main changes. First, we revised three items to reflect concepts perceived as important to the specific decision-making context of abortion. Second, we removed two items that emerged as potentially inappropriate for this context. Third, we modified language in four items to improve their appropriateness for this context (e.g., ‘telling me’ to ‘explaining’; ‘letting me say’ to ‘listening to’). Fourth, we modified language in three items to improve their clarity. Three items remained unchanged, as there was consistent agreement on their importance, understandability, and relevance.ConclusionsThe resulting 10-item measure, the Interpersonal Quality in Abortion Care scale, was perceived to be highly important, understandable, and feasible to complete. Future psychometric evaluation can prepare it for use in clinical practice to ensure women feel adequately informed and supported during abortion care.

Highlights

  • Women value receiving quality interpersonal care during abortion services, yet no measure exists to assess this outcome from patients’ perspectives

  • Participants lived in nine states that represented those who were ‘extremely hostile’ (i.e., Texas, Kentucky, Tennessee), ‘hostile’ (i.e., Pennsylvania), ‘middle-ground’ (i.e., Massachusetts, New Hampshire) and ‘supportive’ (i.e., Vermont, Connecticut, California) of abortion rights according to the Guttmacher Institute policy review [41]

  • The final scale was reviewed for comprehension with a third native Spanish-speaking researcher (DA). This qualitative study developed a new patient-reported measure, the Interpersonal Quality in Abortion Care (IQAC) scale, which was perceived by participants to be highly important, understandable, and feasible to complete

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Summary

Introduction

Women value receiving quality interpersonal care during abortion services, yet no measure exists to assess this outcome from patients’ perspectives. Women in the United States value receiving quality interpersonal care from abortion care providers [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Research has shown that women prioritize a patient-provider relationship that is non-judgmental [11] and responsive to their needs and Despite the importance of evaluating the quality of interpersonal care for patients seeking abortion, to our knowledge, no such measure is available for this context. Generic measures’ content may not be as sensitive to changes in the aspects of interpersonal care that are most germane and important to abortion patients and providers [24]

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