From political priority to service delivery: complexities to real-life priority of abortion services in Ethiopia

Author:

McLean Emily12ORCID,Miljeteig Ingrid1,Blystad Astrid3,Mirkuzie Alemnesh H45,Haaland Marte E. S3

Affiliation:

1. Bergen Center for Ethics and Priority Setting, Department of Global Public Health and Primary Care, University of Bergen , Årstadveien 21, Bergen 5020, Norway

2. Medical department, Nordland Hospital , Ivar Bergsmoes gate 3, Stokmarknes 8450, Norway

3. Global Health Anthropology Research Group, Department of Global Public Health and Primary Care, University of Bergen , Årstadveien 21, Bergen 5020, Norway

4. John Snow Research and Training Inc , Edna Mall Area, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia

5. Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, University of Washington , 3980 15th Ave NE, Seattle, WA 98195, USA

Abstract

Abstract Improving access to abortion services has been coined a high priority by the Ethiopian Federal Ministry of Health. Nevertheless, many women are still struggling to access abortion services. The dedicated commitment to expanding abortion services by central authorities and the difficulties in further improving access to the services make for an interesting case to explore the real-life complexities of health priority setting. This article thus explores what it means to make abortion services a priority by drawing on in-depth interviews with healthcare bureaucrats and key stakeholders working closely with abortion service policy and implementation. Data were collected from February to April 2022. Health bureaucrats from 9 of the 12 regional states in Ethiopia and the Federal Ministry of Health were interviewed in addition to key stakeholders from professional organizations and NGOs. The study found that political will and priority to abortion services by central authorities were not necessarily enough to ensure access to the service across the health sector. At the regional and local level, there were considerable challenges with a lack of funding, equipment and human resources for implementing and expanding access to abortion services. The inadequacy of indicators and reporting systems hindered accountability and made it difficult to give priority to abortion services among the series of health programmes and priorities that local health authorities had to implement. The situation was further challenged by the contested nature of the abortion issue itself, both in the general population, but also amongst health bureaucrats and hospital leaders. This study casts a light on the complex and entangled processes of turning national-level priorities into on-the-ground practice and highlights the real-life challenges of setting and implementing health priorities.

Funder

Universitetet i Bergen

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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