Attitudes and intentions of future health care providers regarding termination of pregnancy (TOP) services in South Africa

Includes bibliographical references (leaves 79-84). === Voluntary or induced termination of pregnancy (TOP) is a common reproductive health phenomenon worldwide, whether legal or illegal (WHO, 2004; Schenker and Cain, 1999). Although some countries, including South Africa, have liberalized TOP laws...

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Main Author: Wheeler, Stephanie Brooke
Other Authors: Morroni, Chelsea
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9340
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-93402020-10-06T05:10:52Z Attitudes and intentions of future health care providers regarding termination of pregnancy (TOP) services in South Africa Wheeler, Stephanie Brooke Morroni, Chelsea Public Health Includes bibliographical references (leaves 79-84). Voluntary or induced termination of pregnancy (TOP) is a common reproductive health phenomenon worldwide, whether legal or illegal (WHO, 2004; Schenker and Cain, 1999). Although some countries, including South Africa, have liberalized TOP laws to allow legal and safe provision of abortion, many barriers continue to impede successful rollout of services. Key among these are the following: * recruiting and retaining staff to provide such services, * incorporating TOP observation and training into medical training curricula, preventing burnout, * addressing negative attitudes and stigma of health providers, * diminishing professional discrimination and harassment, and * offering more TOP training modules, counselling workshops, and values clarification workshops over a spread of geographic areas (Adamo, 2003). Identifying future health professionals who may be interested in training and eventually providing TOP care has thus been prioritized by the South African Department of Health. Examining the knowledge, attitudes, beliefs, and intentions of medical students in training could make an important contribution to policy initiatives with respect to abortion provision. The current study measured these parameters among medical students in one of the eight medical training institutions in South Africa. With the liberalization of TOP legislation in South Africa, future health professionals' attitudes and intentions towards abortion services is a critical determinant to equity, access, and availability of women's reproductive care and to the successful implementation of TOP law. 2014-11-07T13:49:29Z 2014-11-07T13:49:29Z 2007 Master Thesis Masters MPH http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9340 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Health Sciences Department of Public Health and Family Medicine
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Public Health
spellingShingle Public Health
Wheeler, Stephanie Brooke
Attitudes and intentions of future health care providers regarding termination of pregnancy (TOP) services in South Africa
description Includes bibliographical references (leaves 79-84). === Voluntary or induced termination of pregnancy (TOP) is a common reproductive health phenomenon worldwide, whether legal or illegal (WHO, 2004; Schenker and Cain, 1999). Although some countries, including South Africa, have liberalized TOP laws to allow legal and safe provision of abortion, many barriers continue to impede successful rollout of services. Key among these are the following: * recruiting and retaining staff to provide such services, * incorporating TOP observation and training into medical training curricula, preventing burnout, * addressing negative attitudes and stigma of health providers, * diminishing professional discrimination and harassment, and * offering more TOP training modules, counselling workshops, and values clarification workshops over a spread of geographic areas (Adamo, 2003). Identifying future health professionals who may be interested in training and eventually providing TOP care has thus been prioritized by the South African Department of Health. Examining the knowledge, attitudes, beliefs, and intentions of medical students in training could make an important contribution to policy initiatives with respect to abortion provision. The current study measured these parameters among medical students in one of the eight medical training institutions in South Africa. With the liberalization of TOP legislation in South Africa, future health professionals' attitudes and intentions towards abortion services is a critical determinant to equity, access, and availability of women's reproductive care and to the successful implementation of TOP law.
author2 Morroni, Chelsea
author_facet Morroni, Chelsea
Wheeler, Stephanie Brooke
author Wheeler, Stephanie Brooke
author_sort Wheeler, Stephanie Brooke
title Attitudes and intentions of future health care providers regarding termination of pregnancy (TOP) services in South Africa
title_short Attitudes and intentions of future health care providers regarding termination of pregnancy (TOP) services in South Africa
title_full Attitudes and intentions of future health care providers regarding termination of pregnancy (TOP) services in South Africa
title_fullStr Attitudes and intentions of future health care providers regarding termination of pregnancy (TOP) services in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Attitudes and intentions of future health care providers regarding termination of pregnancy (TOP) services in South Africa
title_sort attitudes and intentions of future health care providers regarding termination of pregnancy (top) services in south africa
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/9340
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