Global Epidemiology of Induced Abortion

S. Bell, M. Shankar, C. Moreau
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Induced abortion is a common reproductive experience, with more than 73 million abortions occurring each year globally. Worldwide, the annual abortion incidence decreased in the 1990s and the early decades of the 21st century, but this decline has been driven by high-resource settings, whereas abortion rates in low- and middle-resource countries have remained stable. Induced abortion is a very safe procedure when performed according to World Health Organization guidelines; however, legal restrictions, stigma, cost, lack of resources, and poor health system accountability limit the availability, accessibility, and use of quality abortion care services. Even as women’s use of safer self-managed medication abortion options becomes more common in some parts of the world, 45% of all abortions annually are unsafe, nearly all of which occur in low- and middle-resource settings, where unsafe abortion remains a primary cause of maternal death. Beyond country-level legal and health care system factors, significant disparities exist in women’s reliance on unsafe abortion. Even among women who receive a safe abortion, quality of care is often poor. Yet abortion’s precarious status as a health care service and its clandestine practice have precluded a systematic focus on quality monitoring and evaluation of service inputs. Improving abortion and postabortion care quality is essential to meeting this reproductive health need, as are efforts to prevent abortion-related mortality and morbidity more broadly. This requires a three-tier approach: primary prevention to reduce unintended pregnancy, secondary prevention to make abortion procedures safer, and tertiary prevention to reduce the negative sequelae of unsafe abortion procedures. Strategies include two complementary approaches: vulnerability reduction and harm reduction, the first focusing on the root causes of unsafe abortion by addressing the determinants of unwanted pregnancy and clandestine abortion, while the latter addresses the harmful consequences of clandestine abortion. Political commitments to extend service coverage of abortion and postabortion care need to be implemented through actions that build the public health system’s capacity. Beyond the model of receiving care exclusively in clinical settings, models of guided self-managed abortion are expanding the capacity of individuals to take evidence-based actions to terminate their pregnancies safely and without the threat of judgment. Research has strived to keep up with the changes in the abortion care landscape, but there remains a continuing need to improve methodologies to generate robust evidence to identify and address inequities in abortion care and its health consequences in a diversified landscape. Doing so will provide information for stakeholders to take actions toward a new era of health care reforms that repositions abortion as an integral component of sexual and reproductive health care.
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全球人工流产流行病学
人工流产是一种常见的生殖经历,全球每年发生7300多万例流产。在世界范围内,每年的堕胎发生率在20世纪90年代和21世纪头几十年有所下降,但这种下降是由高资源环境驱动的,而低资源和中等资源国家的堕胎率保持稳定。如果按照世界卫生组织的准则进行,人工流产是一种非常安全的程序;然而,法律限制、耻辱、成本、资源缺乏和卫生系统问责不力限制了高质量堕胎护理服务的可得性、可及性和使用。尽管妇女使用更安全的自我管理药物流产选择在世界某些地区变得更加普遍,但每年所有流产中仍有45%是不安全的,几乎所有这些流产都发生在低资源和中等资源环境中,在这些环境中,不安全流产仍然是孕产妇死亡的主要原因。除了国家一级的法律和卫生保健制度因素外,妇女对不安全堕胎的依赖也存在重大差异。即使在接受安全堕胎的妇女中,护理质量也往往很差。然而,堕胎作为一项保健服务的不稳定地位及其秘密做法妨碍了对服务投入的质量监测和评价的系统关注。改善堕胎和堕胎后护理质量对于满足这一生殖健康需求至关重要,更广泛地预防与堕胎有关的死亡率和发病率也是如此。这需要采取三层方法:一级预防减少意外怀孕,二级预防使堕胎程序更安全,三级预防减少不安全堕胎程序的负面后果。战略包括两种相辅相成的办法:减少脆弱性和减少伤害,前者侧重于不安全堕胎的根本原因,解决意外怀孕和秘密堕胎的决定因素,后者则解决秘密堕胎的有害后果。需要通过建设公共卫生系统能力的行动来落实扩大堕胎和堕胎后护理服务覆盖面的政治承诺。除了完全在临床环境中接受护理的模式之外,有指导的自我管理堕胎模式正在扩大个人采取循证行动安全终止妊娠的能力,而不会受到审判的威胁。研究努力跟上堕胎护理状况的变化,但仍然需要改进方法,以产生有力的证据,以确定和解决堕胎护理方面的不公平现象及其在多样化情况下对健康的影响。这样做将为利益攸关方提供信息,以便采取行动,迎接保健改革的新时代,将堕胎重新定位为性保健和生殖保健的一个组成部分。
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