1 / 19

Medical Abortion Intervention in Nigeria

Medical Abortion Intervention in Nigeria. Ejike Oji MD Expanding Access to Medical Abortion: Building on Two Decades of Experience Lisbon, Portugal March 2-4, 2010. This is part of us. Why should we invest our time resources and energy on Medical abortion?. MMR 1,100/100,000

samira
Download Presentation

Medical Abortion Intervention in Nigeria

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Medical Abortion Intervention in Nigeria Ejike Oji MD Expanding Access to Medical Abortion: Building on Two Decades of Experience Lisbon, Portugal March 2-4, 2010

  2. This is part of us

  3. Why should we invest our time resources and energy on Medical abortion? • MMR 1,100/100,000 • Very restrictive environment. • 760,000 induced abortions with 34,000 deaths and for each death 20 others are maimed • The high level of maternal deaths and injuries from the use of instruments by quacks for terminating pregnancies • Unsafe abortion is the number one cause of infertility in the country

  4. Cassava plant, Leaf and Stem

  5. Alligator pepper, Native Chalk and Native Alum.

  6. A Necrotic Uterus Being removed- A 16 year Old Girl

  7. A 19 year old girl with the necrotic (dead) intestines sticking out from the vagina

  8. Objectives of MA intervention in Nigeria • Reduce abortion related deaths from unsafe abortion • Introduce medical abortion in the country in a way that it is safe for women without a back lash • Create an opportunity for women to act for themselves

  9. Is it available? • Are the drugs available in the country and where? • Are the providers knowledgeable about the use of drugs for uterine evacuation? • What are the regulations around the drug? • What formulations?

  10. Environmental scan • KAP amongst different practitioners especially gynecologists (SOGON) in 2002 • Availability study in the community pharmacies • Mystery client study • Miso for PAC feasibility study 2009

  11. Strategic activities • We worked with other stakeholders to provide information to public and private health care systems • We incorporated MA training interventions in both in-service and pre-service (medical schools and schools of midwifery) • Distribution of FLAGSOG cards and other MA materials

  12. Use of evidence to inform service protocols • Feasibility study documented women’s preference for miso for PAC • We are working with the SOGON and the FMOH to develop standards and guidelines and clinical protocols for the use of miso for all obstetric indications • Working with the National University Commission and the Nursing and Midwifery Council to incorporate the use of miso for all obstetric indications in the curriculum

  13. Women Act • We have been working to leverage Nigerian’s powerful women groups for the past four years. • Moving forward we plan to work with select community based organizations to empower women to seek information and act based on their best interests. • With our training of community pharmacists on medication abortion women will be able to access the drugs.

  14. Challenges • The knowledge of medical abortion is non existent or very low • Very restrictive environment makes it difficult to introduce the concept and the drugs directly into the health care system • The drugs are not always available in the pharmacy outlets except for cytotec brand meant for ulcer • Miso when registered was strictly hospital/clinic based and was for PPH; lowest cadre to prescribe is nurse midwife

  15. Barriers • The restrictive law in Nigeria • The drugs are not yet widely available in Nigeria • The vocal anti choice groups • Not yet integrated in the health care system • No national framework for delivery of legal abortion care or the use of medication for abortion care

  16. Preventing a back lash • Media strategy of recruiting, training and sensitizing of the journalists on women’s sexual and reproductive health and rights issues • Our robust anti choice tracking and engagement through our media strategy • Mobilizing the women groups to speak up • Working with SOGON to address some of the issues, e.g. the unsafe working group of FIGO/SOGON

  17. Facilitating events • Miso was registered for the treatment of Post partum hemorrhage • A recently disseminated study on the use of community health extension workers for the use of miso in the community to treat women with PPH under a strict guidance of NMs. • The feasibility study results from miso for PAC study that shows preferred use of the drug by women for the treatment of PAC

  18. Lessons learned • When you are committed to a cause you will always find a way. • The use of community pharmacists to reach women directly • This gives them added protection and confidence • Giving women the skills and knowledge to act based on their own self interests

  19. Visit us online atwww.ipas.org/medicalabortionor write tomedicalabortion@ipas.org

More Related