Search results
As per Bangladesh Maternal Mortality Survey 2011, less than 1% of maternal deaths are due to unsafe abortion. While CPR for modern methods has been increasing, the Guttmacher study estimated that in 2014, 48% (2.8 million) of all pregnancies in Bangladesh were unintended5. The Bangladesh National MR Service Guidelines specify that
2 sty 2024 · In Bangladesh, based on the latest data, the rate of contraceptive use and unmet need among women of reproductive age is 62.7% (modern methods = 59.1%, traditional methods = 3.6%) and 13.7, respectively [19]. Besides, while it is permitted to do menstrual regulation (MR), abortion is not legally possible except to save a woman’s life.
2 sty 2024 · Accordingly, the main goal of this international qualitative study was to investigate the barriers and challenges that both service providers (SP) and women of reproductive age faced in the provision of and access to FP and abortion services in 3 countries: Bangladesh (B), Iran (IR), and the Netherlands (NL) during the first 10 months of the ...
16 cze 2023 · To address this need, the Abortion Service Quality Initiative developed the first global standard for measuring quality of abortion care in low-income and middle-income countries. This prospective cohort study was conducted in Bangladesh, Ethiopia, and Nigeria in 2020–2022.
25 mar 2021 · In Bangladesh, abortion is illegal except to save a woman’s life, though menstrual regulation (MR) is permitted. MR involves the use of manual uterine aspiration or Misoprostol (with or without Mifepristone) to induce menstruation up to 10–12 weeks from the last menstrual period.
11 mar 2017 · Findings demonstrate that it is possible to integrate abortion and family planning services over a relatively short intervention period in a bifurcated health system such as Bangladesh’s, and that integration of services through an intervention focusing on woman-centered abortion care results in higher quality of care.
RESULTS: In 2014, an estimated 1,194,000 induced abortions were performed in Bangladesh (29 per 1,000 women aged 15–49), and 257,000 women were treated for complications of such abortions (a rate of 6 per 1,000 women aged 15–49). Among women with complications, the proportion presenting with hemorrhage increased significantly, from 27% to 48%.