Abstract

Introduction: Several measures to assess family planning service quality (FPQ) exist, yet there is limited evidence on their association with contraceptive discontinuation. Using data from the Measurement, Learning & Evaluation (MLE) Project, this study investigates the association between FPQ and discontinuation-while-in-need in five cities in Kenya. Two measures of FPQ are examined - the Method Information Index (MII) and a comprehensive service delivery point (SDP) assessment rooted in the Bruce Framework for FPQ. Methods: Three models were constructed: two to assess MII reported in household interviews (as an ordinal and binary variable) among 1,033 FP users, and one for facility-level quality domains among 938 FP users who could be linked to a facility type included in the SDP assessment. Cox proportional hazards ratios were estimated where the event of interest was discontinuation-while-in-need. Facility-level FPQ domains were identified using exploratory factor analysis (EFA) using SDP assessment data from 124 facilities. Results: A woman's likelihood of discontinuation-while-in-need was approximately halved whether she was informed of one aspect of MII (HR: 0.45, p < 0.05), or all three (HR: 0.51, p < 0.01) versus receiving no information, when MII was assessed as an ordinal variable. Six facility-level quality domains were identified in EFA. Higher scores in information exchange, privacy, autonomy & dignity and technical competence were associated with a reduced risk of discontinuation-while-in-need (p < 0.05). Facility-level MII was correlated with overall facility quality (R= 0.3197, p < 0.05). Conclusions: The MII has potential as an actionable metric for FPQ monitoring at the health facility level. Furthermore, family planning facilities and programs should emphasize information provision and client-centered approaches to care alongside technical competence in the provision of FP care.

Highlights

  • Several measures to assess family planning service quality (FPQ) exist, yet there is limited evidence on their association with contraceptive discontinuation

  • Contraceptive discontinuation is understood to be a driver of unmet need for family planning; an analysis of Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data collected in 34 countries between 2005 and 2010 demonstrated that modern method discontinuation while in need—which occurs when a woman who wishes to avoid pregnancy stops using her modern method of contraception—accounted for over one third total estimated unmet need[2]

  • Pharmacies are recognized as part of the private health sector in Kenya, women who received their method from a pharmacy or chemist (n = 95) were excluded from models assessing the relationship between facility-level measures of quality and discontinuation but included in models assessing the relationship between woman-reported Method Information Index (MII) and discontinuation

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Summary

Introduction

Several measures to assess family planning service quality (FPQ) exist, yet there is limited evidence on their association with contraceptive discontinuation. The broadly endorsed Bruce framework is applied inconsistently among researchers and programs seeking to understand and improve quality of care at the facility level, and limited guidance exists as to how to analyze resulting data once collected. The QIQ indicators align with 5 out of the 6 domains of FP service quality defined in the Bruce Framework: choice of methods, information provision, technical competence, interpersonal relations, and mechanisms for follow-up[10]. Large scale facility surveys, such as the Service Availability and Readiness Assessment (SARA) used by WHO for health facility assessment in LMICs, typically limit data collection to facility audits which assess infrastructure and readiness for choice only[11] These structural aspects of quality are among the easiest and least expensive to measure

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