Magnitude and severity of abortion-related complications and factors associated with severe and near miss events in African humanitarian settings

Project overview

The study sought to describe and estimate the burden of all post-abortion complications and factors associated with severe morbidity among women admitted for post-abortion care in Médecins Sans Frontières facilities in Africa.

Countries
Central african Republic
Democratic Republic of Congo
Nigeria
Organisations
Ipas
Partners
Guttmacher Institute, MSF/Epicentre
Area of funding
Humanitarian Research
Grant amount
£552,776
Start date
01
May
2018
End date
01
December
2023
Project length (in months)
67
Funding calls
R2HC Annual Funding Call
Focus areas
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Topics
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Status
Closed

Project solution

This project offers [specific solution or intervention] to tackle [challenge]. By implementing [strategies, tools, or innovations], the project aims to achieve [desired outcomes]. The approach is designed to [specific actions or methods] to bring about meaningful change in [community, region, or issue area].

Expected outcomes

This project aims to achieve [specific outcomes], such as [measurable results, improvements, or changes]. The expected impact includes [benefits to the target community, advancements in research or innovation, or long-term effects]. By the end of the project, we anticipate [specific changes or milestones] that will contribute to [broader goals or objectives].

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Principal Investigator: Tamara Fetters, Ipas

Research Snapshot: Post-abortion care needs in fragile or conflict-affected settings

A mixed method, cross-sectional study in Nigeria and Central African Republic (CAR) highlights the critical importance of quality post-abortion care to address high abortion-related morbidity and mortality in fragile and conflict affected settings.

[.cta_link]View Snapshot[.cta_link]

What did the study set out to achieve?


The study aimed to describe and estimate the burden of all post-abortion complications, particularly severe complications, near-miss complications and deaths, and factors associated with severe morbidity among women admitted for post-abortion care (PAC) in Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) facilities in Africa.

The locations of Bangui in the Central African Republic (CAR), Jahun in Nigeria and Masisi in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) were chosen as having one large MSF-supported maternity center located and being a humanitarian (fragile or conflict-affected) setting. Given challenges related to Ebola, COVID-19 and insecurity the study team revised this from a 3-country prospective record review and mixed method observational study design, to a full study in Nigeria and CAR, and a limited off-site study, in DRC, using learning from the first two sites, to conduct retrospective record reviews.

What were the findings?


The research generated evidence highlighting the magnitude and severity of abortion-related complications and provided details on the trajectories that led women to experience severe and near-miss abortion-related complications in the humanitarian settings of CAR and Nigeria. The research also highlighted the challenges and barriers to health care experienced by women seeking PAC in these settings.

  • Over 500 women were included in the study from each hospital setting. In the CAR hospital, abortion complications constituted nearly 19.9% of all pregnancy-related admissions; it was lower in the Nigerian hospital (4.2%).
  • Severity of abortion-related complications was high: over 50% of complications in the CAR hospital and over 65% in the Nigerian hospital were severe.
  • In the Nigerian hospital, 1 in 4 women interviewed reported having tried to induce their abortion. In the CAR hospital, the figure was nearly 1 in 2, many
    resulting in very severe or life-threatening complications. In both settings, most women had used unsafe methods to induce their abortions.
  • There was diversity in abortion attitudes and gaps in knowledge and practice related to abortion care. A low level of knowledge about WHO-recommended medication abortion regimens was observed.
  • There were a range of delays in care-seeking with many women taking days to reach care after the onset of symptoms. Pathways to care were complex. Barriers to accessing care included difficulties in navigating the health care system and a lack of referral pathways.


What does this mean for practitioners and policymakers?


The need is high for greater access to high quality contraception, safe abortion care, and post-abortion care to prevent and manage complications of abortion in fragile and conflict-affected settings. Addressing this challenge should be a high priority for donors and public health actors to reduce maternal morbidity and mortality in fragile and conflict-affected settings.

Preventing and managing underlying chronic health conditions like malnutrition and chronic anemia may reduce the lethality of abortion complications.

Attention may be needed to strengthen health services and capacities of health professionals to provide quality post-abortion, contraceptive and safe abortion care, and to improve pathways to care; recognising the complex social, cultural and legal issues that can constrain policymaking and investments for this care, in particular safe abortion and contraceptive services.

Next Steps


In June 2023 the team received follow on funding from the R2HC to conduct further uptake and impact activities, building on the study finding that a lack of public awareness of pathways to healthcare for abortion is a key barrier to improved health outcomes. A focused intervention targeting local and national mass media with the results of this study from CAR will be conducted. At this 3-day workshop journalists will be mentored, and study concepts related to maternal mortality and morbidity, unsafe abortion, abortion legality and terminology from a global and national perspective will be presented. The aim is to engage journalists to translate some of the complex study findings into understandable and actionable messages for women, girls and community healthcare actors.

Banner photo credit: Samuel Sieber/MSF.

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Ipas
Central african Republic
Democratic Republic of Congo
Nigeria