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Providers’ views on hormonal family planning methods for young women: a qualitative study from Dosso, Niger

Background: Family planning (FP) providers play an important role in ensuring that clients are offered a full range of FP methods. This qualitative study explores providers’ views on three hormonal FP methods and why they think young women may choose these methods in Niger.                          ...

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Autores principales: Maytan-Joneydi, Amelia, MacLachlan, Ellen W., Agali, Balki Ibrahim, Louis-Charles, Kyria, Chaibou, Sanoussi, Amadou Garba, Souleymane, Moumouni, Abdoul Nouhou, Speizer, Ilene S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: F1000 Research Limited 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9550940/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36262978
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.13674.2
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author Maytan-Joneydi, Amelia
MacLachlan, Ellen W.
Agali, Balki Ibrahim
Louis-Charles, Kyria
Chaibou, Sanoussi
Amadou Garba, Souleymane
Moumouni, Abdoul Nouhou
Speizer, Ilene S.
author_facet Maytan-Joneydi, Amelia
MacLachlan, Ellen W.
Agali, Balki Ibrahim
Louis-Charles, Kyria
Chaibou, Sanoussi
Amadou Garba, Souleymane
Moumouni, Abdoul Nouhou
Speizer, Ilene S.
author_sort Maytan-Joneydi, Amelia
collection PubMed
description Background: Family planning (FP) providers play an important role in ensuring that clients are offered a full range of FP methods. This qualitative study explores providers’ views on three hormonal FP methods and why they think young women may choose these methods in Niger.                                                     Methods: In-depth interviews were conducted with 24 FP providers in 24 government health centers in Dosso region, Niger between February-March 2020. Providers were asked about the suitability of different FP methods for women, including unmarried adolescents and young married women with children. The interviews were translated and transcribed from Hausa and Zarma into French, thematically coded, and qualitatively analyzed. Results: Many providers believed discretion to be the most important method attribute for women. Providers report preferring implants for young clients because of the more rapid return to fertility. They disagreed on whether implants or injectables are more discrete for clients. That said, providers felt that clients appreciate the implant’s discretion, effectiveness, long-acting nature, and ease of use.  Providers perceived that the majority of women choose injectables due to familiarity with the method, the fact that it is “invisible” to an outsider, and a lack of awareness of implants. Providers stated that while women may not initially choose the implant, when given more information about it, they were more open to adopting it, or switching from another method, and less likely to believe local myths. Providers believed that women find pills to be indiscreet. Conclusions: The findings highlight that while providers have perspectives on suitable methods for certain women, they also recognize that clients have their own preferences, such as how discreet the method is. As programs continue to expand method choice and new contraceptive technologies undergo research and development, highly desirable features such as discretion need to be considered.
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spelling pubmed-95509402022-10-18 Providers’ views on hormonal family planning methods for young women: a qualitative study from Dosso, Niger Maytan-Joneydi, Amelia MacLachlan, Ellen W. Agali, Balki Ibrahim Louis-Charles, Kyria Chaibou, Sanoussi Amadou Garba, Souleymane Moumouni, Abdoul Nouhou Speizer, Ilene S. Gates Open Res Research Article Background: Family planning (FP) providers play an important role in ensuring that clients are offered a full range of FP methods. This qualitative study explores providers’ views on three hormonal FP methods and why they think young women may choose these methods in Niger.                                                     Methods: In-depth interviews were conducted with 24 FP providers in 24 government health centers in Dosso region, Niger between February-March 2020. Providers were asked about the suitability of different FP methods for women, including unmarried adolescents and young married women with children. The interviews were translated and transcribed from Hausa and Zarma into French, thematically coded, and qualitatively analyzed. Results: Many providers believed discretion to be the most important method attribute for women. Providers report preferring implants for young clients because of the more rapid return to fertility. They disagreed on whether implants or injectables are more discrete for clients. That said, providers felt that clients appreciate the implant’s discretion, effectiveness, long-acting nature, and ease of use.  Providers perceived that the majority of women choose injectables due to familiarity with the method, the fact that it is “invisible” to an outsider, and a lack of awareness of implants. Providers stated that while women may not initially choose the implant, when given more information about it, they were more open to adopting it, or switching from another method, and less likely to believe local myths. Providers believed that women find pills to be indiscreet. Conclusions: The findings highlight that while providers have perspectives on suitable methods for certain women, they also recognize that clients have their own preferences, such as how discreet the method is. As programs continue to expand method choice and new contraceptive technologies undergo research and development, highly desirable features such as discretion need to be considered. F1000 Research Limited 2022-10-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9550940/ /pubmed/36262978 http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.13674.2 Text en Copyright: © 2022 Maytan-Joneydi A et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Licence, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Maytan-Joneydi, Amelia
MacLachlan, Ellen W.
Agali, Balki Ibrahim
Louis-Charles, Kyria
Chaibou, Sanoussi
Amadou Garba, Souleymane
Moumouni, Abdoul Nouhou
Speizer, Ilene S.
Providers’ views on hormonal family planning methods for young women: a qualitative study from Dosso, Niger
title Providers’ views on hormonal family planning methods for young women: a qualitative study from Dosso, Niger
title_full Providers’ views on hormonal family planning methods for young women: a qualitative study from Dosso, Niger
title_fullStr Providers’ views on hormonal family planning methods for young women: a qualitative study from Dosso, Niger
title_full_unstemmed Providers’ views on hormonal family planning methods for young women: a qualitative study from Dosso, Niger
title_short Providers’ views on hormonal family planning methods for young women: a qualitative study from Dosso, Niger
title_sort providers’ views on hormonal family planning methods for young women: a qualitative study from dosso, niger
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9550940/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36262978
http://dx.doi.org/10.12688/gatesopenres.13674.2
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