Latin American hospitals improve postabortion care. Maternal health.
Popul Briefs
; 3(3): 4, 1997.
Article
in En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-12292990
PIP: Approximately 4 million women undergo illegal abortions each year in Latin America and the Caribbean, and hundreds of thousands of women with postabortion medical emergencies or incomplete abortions seek hospital care. Once in an emergency ward, a woman may await treatment for 24 hours, bleeding, frightened, and in pain. A woman in such a situation may also experience nurses who chastise her for becoming pregnant or committing a sin, be examined with several staff members observing, undergo unexplained treatment without anesthesia, and/or leave the service facility without knowing whether she is still fertile or how to avoid pregnancy. INOPAL, Population Council's operations research program on family planning and reproductive health in the region, is working to find the best ways, medically and financially, for hospitals to deliver high-quality, comprehensive services to postabortion patients. Most maternal deaths and injuries could be prevented by access to family planning services and information about contraceptive use. The Population Council and colleagues from hospitals, governments, and nongovernmental organizations are conducting studies in Guatemala, Peru, and Mexico on the emergency treatment of incomplete abortions with the goal of improving and standardizing postabortion services.^ieng
Key words
Abortion, Induced--complications; Americas; Caribbean; Central America; Delivery Of Health Care; Developing Countries; Family Planning; Family Planning Programs; Fertility Control, Postconception; Guatemala; Health; Health Facilities; Hospitals; Latin America; Mexico; North America; Peru; Postabortal Programs; Postabortion; Reproduction; South America
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Collection:
01-internacional
Database:
MEDLINE
Main subject:
Abortion, Induced
/
Aftercare
/
Hospitals
Country/Region as subject:
America central
/
America do sul
/
Guatemala
/
Mexico
/
Peru
Language:
En
Journal:
Popul Briefs
Year:
1997
Document type:
Article
Country of publication:
United States