Turned away and sleeping apart: A qualitative study on women's perspectives and experiences with family planning denial in Malawi

Barriers to family planning for potential clients have been explored in the literature, but rarely from the perspective of the women themselves in a low-income setting. This research aimed to understand clients' perspectives on being turned away from receiving a method of family planning at a f...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Midwifery Vol. 129; p. 103825
Main Authors: Peterson, Jill M, Bendabenda, Jaden, Mboma, Alexander, Chen, Mario, Stanback, John, Gunnlaugsson, Geir
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Scotland 01-02-2024
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Summary:Barriers to family planning for potential clients have been explored in the literature, but rarely from the perspective of the women themselves in a low-income setting. This research aimed to understand clients' perspectives on being turned away from receiving a method of family planning at a facility on the day it was sought. Three focus group discussions were held in two districts of Malawi in 2019 with clients who had been turned away approximately three to six months prior. The reasons for turnaway participants mentioned fell into eight categories: no proof of not being pregnant, method and/or supply stock-outs, arriving late, provider unavailable, provider refusal, needing to wait longer after delivery of a child, financial constraints, and medical reasons. Participants were often turned away more than once before finally being able to initiate a method, in some cases returning to the same facility and in others finding it through community health workers, traditional healers, or private facilities. Clients often resorted to sleeping apart from their husbands until they could initiate a method and reported stress and worry resulting from being turned away. Clients are turned away without a method of FP on the day they seek one for multiple reasons, nearly all of which are preventable. Many examples given by the participants showed a lack of knowledge and respect for clients on the part of the providers. Changing attitudes and behaviour, however, may be difficult and will require additional steps. Increasing the availability and use of pregnancy tests, having a more reliable supply of methods and materials, increasing the number of providers-including those trained well in all methods-and providing daily FP services would all help reduce turnaway. Improved access to family planning will help counties achieve their Sustainable Development Goals.
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ISSN:0266-6138
1532-3099
DOI:10.1016/j.midw.2023.103825