Research priorities to support evidence-informed policies and advocacy for access to safe abortion care in sub-Saharan Africa

Sex Reprod Health Matters. 2021 Dec;29(1):1881207. doi: 10.1080/26410397.2021.1881207.

Abstract

A key obstacle to advocacy efforts to promote legal and policy reforms that ensure women's and girls' access to comprehensive abortion care (CAC) is the lack of relevant and timely evidence. This commentary outlines a research agenda-setting initiative that identified research priorities to support evidence-informed policy and advocacy for CAC access in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA). It involved three phases: 1) a landscape analysis; 2) research agenda co-creation with stakeholders, and 3) a validation exercise on research priorities. Overall, the priority evidence needs included 1) estimating the incidence and magnitude of unsafe abortion and related costs; 2) examining the role of abortion laws and policies in facilitating or inhibiting access to CAC; 3) developing and documenting successful approaches for addressing societal barriers to the provision of CAC, and fostering a more inclusive and liberal abortion environment, and 4) documenting practice-based evidence on the provision of legal abortion services as well as for advocating for CAC. Various stakeholders, including researchers, policymakers, civil society organizations, and funding agencies, will find the agenda useful as they engage, at different levels, for the full domestication and implementation of forward-looking commitments on access to CAC in SSA.

Keywords: Maputo Protocol; abortion research priorities; advocacy and policy engagement; comprehensive abortion care; post-abortion care; safe abortion; sub-Saharan Africa.

MeSH terms

  • Abortion, Induced*
  • Abortion, Legal
  • Africa South of the Sahara / epidemiology
  • Female
  • Health Policy
  • Humans
  • Pregnancy
  • Research

Grants and funding

This work was part of APHRC’s Challenging the Politics of Social Exclusion project with funding from the African Regional Office of the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency, Sida Contribution No. 12103.