Abstract

BackgroundMonitoring clients’ experiences with contraceptive care is vital to inform quality improvement efforts and ensure fulfillment of individuals’ human rights. The Quality of Contraceptive Counseling (QCC) Scale is a previously validated scale that comprehensively measures individuals’ experiences receiving counseling in three subscales: Information Exchange, Interpersonal Relationship, and Disrespect and Abuse. We sought to better understand the correlation of client, provider, and visit factors with client-reported quality of contraceptive counseling in the public sector in two Mexican states using the QCC Scale.MethodsThis cross-sectional survey study used the QCC Scale total score and subscale scores as outcome variables. Explanatory variables included clients’ age, LGBTTTIQ status, relationship status, number of children, education, and occupation; providers’ gender and type of provider; and the reason for visit. Linear and logistic regression models assessed bivariate associations. Multivariable, multilevel mixed-effects models with clinic as a random effect were fit. All models used complete cases (n = 470).ResultsIn the multilevel mixed-effects analyses, patients aged 35+ years reported worse Information Exchange (coefficient − 0.29, p = 0.01). Clients receiving care post-partum reported worse Information Exchange (coefficient − 0.25, p = 0.02) and worse total scores (coefficient − 0.15, p = 0.04) compared to clients seeking contraceptive information or methods. Clients who had 1+ children reported better Information Exchange (coefficient 0.21, p = 0.01) than those with no children. Though Disrespect and Abuse subscale scores were overall high (indicating high quality of care), we found a significant association between age and report of such negative experiences: clients in increasing age categories had increasingly higher adjusted odds of reporting no disrespect and abuse (aORs compared to the youngest group were 2.50 for those aged 19–24 years, p = 0.04; 4.53 for those 25–34 years, p = 0.01; and 6.11 for those 35+ years, p = 0.01.)ConclusionsOur findings align with previous results that younger clients have lower adjusted odds of reporting high-quality services in Mexico. There is a need for continued work supporting youth-friendly services in Mexico, and efforts should aim to ensure zero tolerance for disrespectful or coercive provider behaviors, such as pressuring or scolding clients. Improvements are also needed to ensure quality in counseling for post-partum clients, those aged 35+ years, and those without children.

Highlights

  • Monitoring clients’ experiences with contraceptive care is vital to inform quality improvement efforts and ensure fulfillment of individuals’ human rights

  • There is a need for continued work supporting youth-friendly services in Mexico, and efforts should aim to reduce disrespectful or coercive provider behaviors, such as pressuring or scolding clients

  • The multilevel models fit without covariates showed nearly the same intraclass correlation (ICC) values (Table 4). This demonstrates that controlling for covariates did not change our understanding of the amount of variance attributable to differences at clinic level. This analysis of correlates of Quality of Contraceptive Counseling (QCC) Scale and subscale scores identified several dimensions of quality in contraceptive counseling where clients experience differential treatment related to individual factors, including age and parity, as well as what the principal reason was for their visit

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Monitoring clients’ experiences with contraceptive care is vital to inform quality improvement efforts and ensure fulfillment of individuals’ human rights. High quality contraceptive services empower people to control the number of children they will have and the spacing of their pregnancies, thereby securing a basic human right [1]. This critical aspect of health care requires quality monitoring and improvement efforts grounded in human rights principles, given the history of coercion, abuse, and oppressive policies that family planning carries [2,3,4,5,6]. Better measures which focus on client experience and the support given to make fully-informed, voluntary decisions, should be used to evaluate contraceptive counseling [15,16,17]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call