Attitudes towards the regulation and provision of abortion among healthcare professionals in Britain: cross-sectional survey data from the SACHA Study.

IF 3.4 3区 医学 Q1 FAMILY STUDIES BMJ Sexual & Reproductive Health Pub Date : 2024-11-05 DOI:10.1136/bmjsrh-2024-202353
Kaye Wellings, Rachel H Scott, Sally Sheldon, Ona McCarthy, Melissa J Palmer, Jill Shawe, Rebecca Meiksin, Maria Lewandowska, Sharon T Cameron, Jennifer Reiter, Rebecca S French
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Abstract

Objectives: To gather views of healthcare professionals on the regulation and provision of abortion in Britain.

Methods: Cross-sectional, stratified cluster sample survey of healthcare professionals working in a range of healthcare services including abortion services. Measures included knowledge of and attitudes towards the regulation and provision of abortion.

Results: A total of 771 healthcare professionals responded. More than nine in ten supported abortion being a woman's choice and a clear majority favoured abortion being treated as a health rather than a legal issue. Some 6.2% saw abortion at any gestational age as contrary to personal beliefs and a similarly small minority (6.7%) opposed abortion after 12 weeks' gestation. One in five of all healthcare professionals and a third of those aged under 30 years were unaware that the law in Britain requires two doctors to authorise an abortion. Free-text comments revealed opposition to the need for this legal requirement. Support for an extended role for nurses in abortion care was high; 65.3% agreed that nurses should be able to prescribe abortion medication. Little more than a third of all healthcare professionals (37.0%) agreed that abortion should be standard practice in their service; the proportion was highest among those in sexual and reproductive health services (58.4%) and lowest among those in general practice (18.7%).

Conclusions: Healthcare professionals in Britain were generally supportive of abortion being treated in the same way as other health issues and would be likely to support any moves to decriminalise abortion.

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英国医疗保健专业人员对人工流产的管理和提供的态度:来自 SACHA 研究的横断面调查数据。
目的收集医疗保健专业人员对英国人工流产的监管和提供情况的看法:方法:对在包括堕胎服务在内的一系列医疗保健服务机构工作的医疗保健专业人员进行横断面分层群组抽样调查。调查内容包括对人工流产的管理和提供的认识和态度:共有 771 名医疗保健专业人员做出了回复。超过十分之九的人支持堕胎是妇女的选择,绝大多数人赞成将堕胎视为健康问题而非法律问题。约有 6.2% 的人认为在任何妊娠年龄堕胎都有违个人信仰,同样有少数人(6.7%)反对在妊娠 12 周后堕胎。五分之一的医护人员和三分之一的 30 岁以下医护人员不知道英国法律规定堕胎需要两名医生授权。自由文本评论显示,反对需要这一法律规定。支持护士在堕胎护理中发挥更大作用的比例很高;65.3% 的人同意护士应能开具堕胎药物处方。略高于三分之一的医护人员(37.0%)同意堕胎应成为其服务的标准做法;该比例在性与生殖健康服务人员中最高(58.4%),在全科医生中最低(18.7%):结论:英国的医疗保健专业人员普遍支持将堕胎与其他健康问题同等对待,并有可能支持任何将堕胎非刑罪化的举措。
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来源期刊
BMJ Sexual & Reproductive Health
BMJ Sexual & Reproductive Health Medicine-Reproductive Medicine
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
6.10%
发文量
38
期刊介绍: BMJ Sexual & Reproductive Health is a multiprofessional journal that promotes sexual and reproductive health and wellbeing, and best contraceptive practice, worldwide. It publishes research, debate and comment to inform policy and practice, and recognises the importance of professional-patient partnership.
期刊最新文献
Shifting discourses, changing interests? How the language of sexual and reproductive health has evolved in the past 50 years. "That's not how abortions happen": a qualitative study exploring how young adults navigate abortion misinformation in the post-Roe era. Attitudes towards the regulation and provision of abortion among healthcare professionals in Britain: cross-sectional survey data from the SACHA Study. Reported side effects from hormonal contraceptives among those seeking abortion care versus contraceptive services. The post-Roe potential of mifepristone and misoprostol in the United States.
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