Reproductive Health (Nov 2021)

Determinants of women’s preferred and actual abortion provision locations in Nigeria

  • Meagan E. Byrne,
  • Elizabeth Omoluabi,
  • Funmilola M. OlaOlorun,
  • Caroline Moreau,
  • Suzanne O. Bell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12978-021-01290-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Plain language summary Many factors influence a woman’s pathway to obtaining an abortion, even in a setting with strict laws prohibiting the practice. This study aims to explore where women in Nigeria would prefer to and actually obtain their abortions, reasons why they could or could not use their preferred provider/location, and differences between women who were and were not able to use their preferred provider/location. The findings show that most women would opt to use a clinical source, such as a government or private hospital, especially among women who did not use their preferred source. Privacy/confidentiality, convenience, and recommendation from someone like a friend or partner drove women’s abortion care preferences, although these influences differed by type of provider/location (clinical, pharmacy/chemist, or other non-clinical). Issues like cost, distance, and lack of privacy were barriers that prevented women from using their preferred provider/location, instead obtaining their abortion from a less desired provider. However, the sociodemographic characteristics of women who did and did not use their preferred provider/location did not differ significantly, except by state. These findings provide insights on barriers to safe abortion care in Nigeria, suggesting social safety drives many women to seek care outside of the healthcare system, while cost and distance prevented many from seeking clinical services. Results also highlight the diversity of women’s abortion preferences in a setting where abortion is legally restricted.

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