4.4 Article

Perspectives Among Canadian Physicians on Factors Influencing Implementation of Mifepristone Medical Abortion: A National Qualitative Study

Journal

ANNALS OF FAMILY MEDICINE
Volume 18, Issue 5, Pages 413-421

Publisher

ANNALS FAMILY MEDICINE
DOI: 10.1370/afm.2562

Keywords

abortion; family planning; health policy; health services accessibility; implementation; qualitative research; interview

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research [PHE148161, CPP-329455-107837]
  2. Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research [16743, 16603, 2012-5139, 18270]
  3. Society of Family Planning [SFPRF11-19]
  4. Society of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists of Canada (SOGC)
  5. College of Family Physicians of Canada
  6. Canadian Pharmacists Association
  7. Women's Health Research Institute of British Columbia Women's Hospital and Health Centre of the Provincial Health Services Authority of British Columbia
  8. SOGC

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PURPOSE Access to family planning health services in Canada has been historically inadequate and inequitable. A potential solution appeared when Health Canada approved mifepristone, the gold standard for medical abortion, in July 2015. We sought to investigate the factors that influence successful initiation and ongoing provision of medical abortion services among Canadian health professionals and how these factors relate to abortion policies, systems, and service access throughout Canada. METHODS We conducted 1-on-1 semistructured interviews with a national sample of abortion-providing and nonproviding physicians and health system stakeholders in Canadian health care settings. Our data collection, thematic analysis, and interpretation were guided by Diffusion of Innovation theory. RESULTS We conducted interviews with 90 participants including rural practitioners and those with no previous abortion experience. In the course of our study, Health Canada removed mifepristone restrictions. Our results suggest that Health Canada's initial restrictions discouraged physicians from providing mifepristone and were inconsistent with provincial licensing standards, thereby limiting patient access. Once deregulated, remaining factors were primarily related to local and regional implementation processes. Participants held strong perceptions that mifepristone was the new standard of care for medical abortion in Canada and within the scope of primary care practice. CONCLUSION Health Canada's removal of mifepristone restrictions facilitated the implementation of abortion care in the primary care setting. Our results are unique because Canada is the first country to facilitate provision of medical abortion in primary care via evidence-based deregulation of mifepristone.

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