Purpose: To evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of outpatient medical induction at 13-18 weeks' gestation to limit overnight hospital stays.
Methods: In this prospective cohort study, participants with 13-18-week pregnancies seeking abortions at two government hospitals swallowed mifepristone 200 mg and self-administered misoprostol 400 mcg buccally 24-48 h later, 1-2 h before returning to the outpatient clinic (OPD). Repeat misoprostol was dosed every 3 h until expulsion. Participants requiring care beyond OPD hours were admitted as inpatients. Acceptability was evaluated by exit interview before discharge. Participants were contacted two weeks later to assess any subsequent issues.
Results: Ninety-eight (82%) of 120 participants had successful outpatient abortions using a median two (IQR 2, 3) misoprostol doses. The median induction-to-abortion time was five hours (IQR 4, 7.5). Eleven (9%) participants expelled before clinic arrival. Twenty-two (18%) participants were transferred as inpatients at OPD closing. Transferred participants remained inpatient for a median 18 h (IQR 18, 21.25). There were no serious adverse events and satisfaction with the abortion process was high.
Conclusions: Although the outpatient model did not meet statistical expectations, it is clinically feasible, acceptable, and improves efficiency, expands access, and reduces burdens for women and providers. Operational adjustments may facilitate higher outpatient success.
Keywords: Abortion; Nepal; medical induction; mifepristone; misoprostol; outpatient; second trimester.
Outpatient medical induction at 13-18 weeks’ gestation is feasible, improves efficiency, expands access, reduces staff and patient burdens, and aligns guidelines and practice with evidence.