Abstract

BackgroundHealth service providers can restrict access to contraceptives through their own imposed biases about method appropriateness. In this study, provider biases toward contraceptive service provision among urban Nigerian providers was assessed.MethodsHealth providers working in health facilities, as well as pharmacists and patent medical vendors (PMV), in Abuja, Benin City, Ibadan, Ilorin, Kaduna, and Zaria, were surveyed in 2011 concerning their self-reported biases in service provision based on age, parity, and marital status.ResultsMinimum age bias was the most common bias while minimum parity was the least common bias reported by providers. Condoms were consistently provided with the least amount of bias, followed by provision of emergency contraception (EC), pills, injectables, and IUDs. Experience of in-service training for health facility providers was associated with decreased prevalence of marital status bias for the pill, injectable, and IUD; however, training experience did not, or had the opposite effect on, pharmacists and PMV operator’s reports of service provision bias.ConclusionsProvider imposed eligibility barriers in urban study sites in Nigeria were pervasive - the most prevalent restriction across method and provider type was minimum age. Given the large and growing adolescent population - interventions aimed at increasing supportive provision of contraceptives to youth in this context are urgently needed. The results show that the effect of in-service training on provider biases was limited. Future efforts to address provider biases in contraceptive service provision, among all provider types, must find creative ways to address this critical barrier to increased contraceptive use.

Highlights

  • Health service providers can restrict access to contraceptives through their own imposed biases about method appropriateness

  • One way providers contribute to barriers to contraceptive use is through restricting access to methods based on their own personal biases about who should or shouldn’t use certain contraceptive methods [7]

  • The aim of this study was to examine the prevalence of contraceptive provision bias, by method, provider type, and training experience, among family planning providers in six Nigerian cities

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Summary

Introduction

Health service providers can restrict access to contraceptives through their own imposed biases about method appropriateness. Nigeria has exhibited a low (10%) and stagnating modern contraceptive prevalence rate for more than a decade but recent trends in urban areas of the country show promising increases in modern contraceptive use from 17% in 2008 [2] to 27% in 2013 [3]. Barriers to contraceptive method use occur on both the demand side through a lack of awareness or education and fear of side effects - as well as on the supply side -* through contraceptive method stockouts, geographical distance, or through individual health care provider biases of who should or should not obtain family planning services. One way providers contribute to barriers to contraceptive use is through restricting access to methods based on their own personal biases about who should or shouldn’t use certain contraceptive methods [7]. Barriers to contraceptive access imposed by providers on clients with unfounded medical justifications are called “medical barriers” [8, 9]

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