With Training, a Range of Providers Can Give Contraceptive Injections
Service delivery guidelines in some countries restrict who can give injections. They limit provision to doctors and nurses. Studies show, however, that many types of health care providers can give injections if they are appropriately trained (36, 66, 183, 200). Such providers include pharmacists, auxiliary nurses, midwives, medical assistants, community health workers, and others who have been specifically trained to provide family planning, as well as those who have general medical education. Training a wider range of providers to give injections safely can expand access to injectables, reduce unsafe unauthorized injections, and save programs money.
In some cases, particularly when scaling up pilot programs, allowing certain groups of providers to give injectables may require changes in national policy. For example, in Honduras service delivery guidelines did not authorize auxiliary nurses to provide DMPA until 1999. Because an auxiliary nurse is often the only provider at a rural health center, women in rural areas who wanted injectables could not obtain the method easily. When a 1997–98 study demonstrated that auxiliary nurses could provide these services safely and cost-effectively, the Ministry of Health changed the service delivery guidelines (200). As a result, use of injectables increased 19% after three months in clinics where auxiliary nurses began offering injectables, and 35% in clinics where the auxiliary nurses offered injectables and also promoted the new services to clients and the community (112).
Formally training those who may be giving unregulated injections is another way to increase safe access to injectables. For example, a 2003 study in Egypt found that women frequently seek injections, both contraceptive and therapeutic, from informal providers, or "health barbers" (187). Because they often charge less than the cost of a new needle and syringe, it is likely that these providers reuse injection equipment. In this situation, changing guidelines to allow such providers to provide injections, training them appropriately, and supplying them with single-use injection equipment could reduce the potential for unsafe injections (86).
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