Renner, Regina-Maria; Hu, Vivien; Guilbert, Édith R; Albert, Arianne YK; White, Katharine O'Connell; Jones, Heidi E; Guan, Xiaoning; Norman, Wendy V; (2023) First-trimester surgical abortion practice in Canada in 2012. Canadian family physician, 69 (1). pp. 36-44. ISSN 0008-350X DOI: https://doi.org/10.46747/cfp.690136
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate practices among first-trimester surgical abortion facilities and providers in Canada in 2012 and examine the characteristics of the surgical abortion work force. DESIGN: Self-administered paper or electronic survey adapted from a survey previously fielded in the United States. SETTING: Canada. PARTICIPANTS: Facility administrators and physicians. MAIN OUTCOMES MEASURES: Descriptive statistics on reported first-trimester surgical abortion practice and provider demographic characteristics. RESULTS: Eighty-three percent of identified facilities (78 of 94) and 178 physicians responded. Of the respondents, 99% of facilities and 96% of physicians provided first-trimester surgical abortions. Responding facilities provided 68,154 first-trimester surgical abortions in 2012. This represented 96% of their reported total (combined medical and surgical) first-trimester abortions. More than half (55%) of responding facilities were community based, while 45% were hospital affiliated. Most physician providers were female (68%) and were family doctors (59%). Preoperatively, 96% of physicians routinely used ultrasound and 89% gave perioperative antibiotics. Almost half (48%) used manual vacuum aspiration, but less than 35% did so beyond 9 weeks after the last menstrual period. At most facilities, most procedures were performed under combined local anesthesia and intravenous sedation (73%); only 7% indicated deep sedation or general anesthesia were used exclusively. Postoperatively, 81% of physicians performed immediate tissue examination and 96% offered postabortion contraception on the same day as the abortion. Other assessed outcomes included medication regimens and cervical preparation, with a high degree of consistency among facilities and physicians. CONCLUSION: First-trimester surgical abortion providers are mostly family physicians and most are female. Practices across Canada were mostly uniform and followed evidence-based guidelines. Uptake of the most recent Canadian practice guidelines may help further standardize patient care and improve routine perioperative antibiotic use and immediate tissue examination.
Item Type | Article |
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Faculty and Department | Faculty of Public Health and Policy > Public Health, Environments and Society |
PubMed ID | 36693753 |
Elements ID | 198168 |
Official URL | http://dx.doi.org/10.46747/cfp.690136 |
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