SSM: Qualitative Research in Health (Dec 2024)

“I am forced to just give it to her because she is the one who wants it”: A qualitative study of providers’ perspectives on contraceptive counseling in Tanzania

  • Alexandra Wollum,
  • Jessica D. Gipson,
  • Amon Sabasaba,
  • Mohamad I. Brooks,
  • Corrina Moucheraud

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6
p. 100505

Abstract

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Drawing on 29 in-depth interviews with health care providers in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, this paper describes providers’ attitudes and beliefs about contraceptive methods and the extent to which providers consider client choice and autonomy when providing contraceptive care. Interviews were analyzed thematically using the constant comparative approach. Providers described a preference for long-acting reversible methods (i.e., implants and IUDs) primarily due to concerns regarding injectables’ slow return to fertility, exposure to hormones, and concerns about client adherence to pills or injectables. Providers understood the importance of centering a client’s preference to use a specific method and to have a method removed when the client desired. However, providers also described counseling clients toward their own preferences, highlighting a tension between what providers wanted for their clients and client preferences. While most providers described prioritizing client choice even when it contradicted their recommendation, some providers insisted on a certain outcome (e.g., a client taking up an implant), contradicting tenets of informed, full, and autonomous choice. Attention is needed to ensure providers center client autonomy and preferences and guarantee freedom from coercion in contraceptive care.

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