期刊论文详细信息
Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters 卷:28
Adolescent sexual and reproductive health and universal health coverage: a comparative policy and legal analysis of Ethiopia, Malawi and Zambia
Godfrey Kangaude1  Ernestina Coast2  Tamara Fetters3 
[1] Postdoctoral Fellow, Centre for Human Rights, University of Pretoria;
[2] Professor of Health and International Development, London School of Economics;
[3] Senior Research Advisor, Ipas;
关键词: abortion;    adolescent;    malawi;    ethiopia;    zambia;    law;    policy;    universal health coverage;   
DOI  :  10.1080/26410397.2020.1832291
来源: DOAJ
【 摘 要 】

Universal Health Coverage (UHC) forces governments to consider not only how services will be provided – but which services – and to whom, when, where, how and at what cost. This paper considers the implications for achieving UHC through the lens of abortion-related care for adolescents. Our comparative study design includes three countries purposively selected to represent varying levels of restriction on access to abortion: Ethiopia (abortion is legal and services implemented); Zambia (legal, complex services with numerous barriers to implementations and provision of information); Malawi (legally highly restricted). Our policy and legal analyses are supplemented by comparative vignettes based on interviews (n = 330) in 2018/2019 with adolescents aged 10–19 who have sought abortion-related care in each country. We focus on an under-considered but critical legal framing for adolescents – the age of consent. We compare legal and political commitments to advancing adolescent sexual and reproductive health and rights, including abortion-related care. Ethiopia appears to approach UHC for safe abortion care, and the legal provision for under 18-year-olds appears to be critical. In Malawi, the most restrictive legal environment for abortion, little progress appears to have been made towards UHC for adolescents. In Zambia, despite longstanding legal provision for safe abortion on a wide range of grounds, the limited services combined with low levels of knowledge of the law mean that the combined rights and technical agendas of UHC have not yet been realised. Our comparative analyses showing how policies and laws are framed have critical implications for equity and justice.

【 授权许可】

Unknown   

  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:0次 浏览次数:0次