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Citation

Williams, Caitlin R.; Britton, Laura E.; Bullington, Brooke W.; Wambua, Debborah Muthoki; Onyango, Dickens Otieno; & Tumlinson, Katherine (2022). Frequency and Impact of Long Wait Times for Family Planning in Public-Sector Healthcare Facilities in Western Kenya. Global Health Action, 15(1), 2128305. PMCID: PMC9543147

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Long wait times for family planning services are a barrier to high quality care and client satisfaction. Existing literature examining family planning wait times has methodological limitations, as most studies use data collected during exit interviews, which are subject to recall, courtesy, and selection bias.
OBJECTIVE: We sought to employ a mixed methods approach to capture the prevalence, length, causes, and impacts of wait times for family planning services in Western Kenya.
METHODS: We used mystery clients, focus groups, key informant interviews, and journey mapping workshops to measure and describe family planning wait times. Fifteen mystery clients visited 60 public-sector facilities to quantitatively capture wait times. We conducted eight focus group discussions with 55 current or former family planning clients and 19 key informant interviews to understand facility-level barriers to family planning and feasible solutions. Finally, we visualized the process of seeking and providing family planning with journey mapping workshops with nine clients and 12 providers.
RESULTS: Mystery clients waited, on average, 74 minutes to be seen for family planning services. In focus group discussions and key informant interviews, three themes emerged: the nature of wait times, the impact of wait times, and how to address wait times. Clients characterized long wait times as a barrier to achieving their reproductive desires. Key informants perceived provider shortages to cause long wait times, which reduced quality of family planning services. Both providers and family planning clients suggested increasing staffing or offering specialization to decrease wait times and increase quality of care.
CONCLUSION: Our mixed methods approach revealed that wait times for family planning services were common, could be extensive, and were viewed as a barrier to high quality of care by clients, providers, and key informants. Across the board, participants felt that addressing workforce shortages would enhance service delivery and thus promote reproductive autonomy among women in Kenya.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2022.2128305

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2022

Journal Title

Global Health Action

Author(s)

Williams, Caitlin R.
Britton, Laura E.
Bullington, Brooke W.
Wambua, Debborah Muthoki
Onyango, Dickens Otieno
Tumlinson, Katherine

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC9543147

Continent/Country

Kenya

Sex/Gender

Women

ORCiD

Tumlinson - 0000-0001-8314-8219
Bullington - 0000-0002-3341-087X