Reproductive Health (Apr 2021)

Health care professionals’ attitudes towards youth-friendly sexual and reproductive health services in Jordan: a cross-sectional study of physicians, midwives and nurses

  • Jewel Gausman,
  • Areej Othman,
  • Raeda Al-Qotob,
  • Abeer Shaheen,
  • Eman Abu Sabbah,
  • Mohannad Aldiqs,
  • Iqbal Hamad,
  • Maysoon Dabobe,
  • Ana Langer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12978-021-01137-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 12

Abstract

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Plain Language Summary Making sexual and reproductive (SRH) services easier for youth to access, organizing service delivery in a way that meets youth’s needs, and supporting health care professionals to interact with youth in a friendly manner can make SRH services more youth-friendly. If SRH services are more youth-friendly, more youth may use them. In Jordan, steps have been taken to make SRH services more youth-friendly, but youth still do not believe that providers are supportive of their needs. This study aims to measure physician’s, nurse’s, and midwives’ attitudes towards youth-friendly SRH services in Jordan. We also look at whether certain individual characteristics, such as age, type of service provider, etc. are related to provider attitudes We used a scale that tested in Jordan to measure provider attitudes. The scale focuses on three domains: (1) Attitudes towards SRH information and services offered to youth, (2) Norms and personal beliefs, and (3) Attitudes towards the policy and clinical environment. Possible scores range between 1 and 4, with higher scores reflecting more youth-friendly attitudes. Our sample includes 510 health care providers from four regions in Jordan. We used descriptive statistics and regression analysis to conduct our analysis. Our results show that physicians had more supportive attitudes than nurses or midwives on Subscales 1 and 3. Providers who reported having been trained in SRH issues in the past had higher scores on Subscale 3. No individual characteristics were related to Subscale 2. We find that in Jordan, provider attitudes may reflect deeply rooted cultural norms.

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