This paper utilizes the signal function methodology to assess the capacity of health facilities to provide post-abortion and safe-abortion care in Liberia. The analysis reveals key strengths and weaknesses in the health system’s capacity to provide critical basic and comprehensive abortion-related services. In our sample of 48 facilities, nearly two-thirds (63%) were classified as able to provide the full spectrum of basic PAC services, even though the capacity for basic PAC varied significantly by facility level, with 73% of hospitals and 76% of health centers able to provide basic PAC, compared to only 38% of clinics. Our findings show greater capacity to provide basic PAC among our sample of Liberian health facilities compared to what has been reported in previous studies from other countries, such as Burkina Faso (12.1%), Ethiopia (15.0%), Nigeria (8.6%), Kenya (6.3%), Côte d’Ivoire (37.5%), and Uganda (17.8%) (23, 26, 27). Similarly, Owolabi et al, in a 2019 multicountry study across 10 low and middle-income countries reported that less than 10% of primary-level facilities could provide all elements of basic post-abortion care (16).
Our findings align with those from a study in Senegal, where 53% of facilities were defined as capable of providing basic PAC when excluding staff availability and referral indicators (16). However, there exists slight variations in how the above studies were designed and how the datasets were analyzed that may have also contributed to the findings reported. For instance, there is no consensus on a fixed standard for assessing post-abortion care (either basic or comprehensive), and various studies have included or excluded certain variables (such as availability of staff, facility hours, nature of staff training, and referral services).
The analysis also revealed limited capacity to facilitate referral of patients needing further medical care, with less than three-quarters of health facilities in our sample (71%) fulfilling this signal function. When referral capacity is removed from analysis, capacity to provide basic PAC increases by 17% from 71–88%. Referral capacity was lowest among clinics, which signals a significant gap since primary level facilities often have sub-optimal capacity to provide comprehensive care, and PAC patients visiting these facilities are likely to require further medical care in secondary and tertiary level facilities. The lack of referral capacity likely results in delays to the referral process, worsening of complications, and ultimately poorer outcomes of care, including longer hospital admission periods, higher costs of care, and death (28). This weak referral capacity is not unique to Liberia, but has also been reported in Burkina Faso, Kenya, and Nigeria among other countries (23).
Fewer facilities in the sample (28%) fulfilled all comprehensive PAC signal functions, among which 47% were hospitals and 12% were health centers. Our findings are slightly higher than those reported among referral-level facilities in Ethiopia, in which 11.2% were defined as having comprehensive PAC capacity (27). However, our findings were lower than those from similar studies in the region. For instance, a study by Juma et al reported that about 30% of secondary and tertiary facilities in Burkina Faso and 42.9% in Kenya could deliver the entire package of comprehensive PAC services (23). Similarly, the multicountry analysis by Owolabi and colleagues reported that among referral-level facilities, 33% in Rwanda and 32% in Senegal could provide comprehensive PAC services (16). Nevertheless, the same study reported much higher proportions in Tanzania (53%) and Malawi (58%) (16). Differences in the ability to provide basic and comprehensive PAC by facility level is expected, as lower-level facilities are typically less-resourced and may lack critical human and material resources for providing abortion care. Indeed, several studies have reported differences in the capacity to provide PAC by facility level and even across regions in a country (22, 29). Variations in basic and comprehensive PAC capability across countries may reflect differences in the structure of health systems and the expectations for each level of health facilities. More broadly, these disparities may also be linked to country-level prioritization and investments to strengthen health services linked to maternal health. In this study, we attempted to broadly align the classification of facilities into primary and referral levels similar to classifications in Service Provision Assessment (SPA) surveys.
Nonetheless, this study highlights important gaps in service delivery across facility levels, particularly with regards to the lower-performing items, including uterine evacuation procedures, provisions of short-acting and long-acting contraceptives, referral capacities, surgical procedures and blood transfusion. Considering the critical role of these services in the treatment of post-abortion complications, these gaps certainly affect the quality of services women receive when they seek PAC. Other previous studies have reported the consequences of poor quality of PAC services, including delays in seeking care, repeat unintended pregnancies, repeat abortions, severe complications and higher abortion-related death rates (15, 28). Our review of why facilities had not performed certain procedures over the last six months highlights key leverage points to improve basic and comprehensive PAC capacity in Liberia. While lack of cases was an important barrier to the past six-month provision of PAC and SAC, other important barriers included lack of equipment/supplies, moral or ethical objections to the service, and belief that the service was against hospital policy. No supplies/equipment was also the foremost reason for facilities not offering blood transfusion; stock-out of blood products has also been widely reported in other sub-Saharan countries (11).
Regarding safe abortion care services, only one in four facilities in our sample (27%) could provide basic SAC, with hospitals (27%) and health centers (35%) showing greater capacity compared to clinics (19%), although the differences were not statistically significant. The signal function met by the fewest number of health facilities was the capacity to provide first-trimester legal termination of pregnancy; only 29% of facilities said they had provided this service in the past six months. Only 16% of hospitals and health centers could deliver the full complement of comprehensive SAC services in Liberia. This is mostly attributed to the fact that only 25% of facilities had reported providing second-trimester medical or surgical SAC in the last six months, coupled with the low capacity for blood transfusion and surgical/laparotomy capacity reported above. A study by Stillman et al in Ethiopia reported significantly higher figures for both basic and comprehensive SAC (27). For instance, the indicated study reported that up to 74% (primary) and 96% ( referral-level facilities) could deliver basic SAC. Similarly, about 32.6% of referral-level facilities in Ethiopia could deliver comprehensive SAC (27). Of course, it deserves mention that the legal framework for abortion in Ethiopia is much more liberal than in Liberia, where legal termination of pregnancy is not widely available. Indeed, the lack of cases was the foremost reason for the non-provision of second-trimester SAC mentioned by respondents.
These findings suggest the need for improvements, and they call for the full and comprehensive implementation of the National Guidelines for Comprehensive Abortion Care (8), which would address some of the specific service gaps pointed out, especially within lower-level facilities that attend to a majority of PAC and SAC clients. To address training gaps and ensure the availability of PAC providers, there is a need to invest in in-service PAC training for mid-level health providers (such as nurses and clinicians) to ensure the provision of quality and safe services. This training would also address the confusion around hospital and ministry policies, as all signal functions for basic PAC should be available at all public health facilities. This should be accompanied by strengthening of supply-chain systems for PAC commodities and supplies (30). Further, putting more resources and investment into strengthening primary-level facilities has yielded greater dividends since about 75% of PAC cases are initially attended to in these lower-level facilities (31). There is also a need to enhance referral systems to ensure women needing higher-level care can get the care they need.
This study also makes clear that legal termination of pregnancy is not a commonly provided service among health facilities in Liberia; this is expected, of course, as abortion is largely restricted in Liberia. However, the proposed Public Health Law in Liberia may liberalize abortion and expand access to legal abortion in the public health facilities that form our sample. While the potential liberalization would pave the way for more SAC cases in health facilities and change current restrictions around policy, the barriers posed by the lack of equipment/supplies and the moral and ethical objections of health care providers would likely still impede access. As such, our study makes clear that any changes to the abortion law in Liberia must also be accompanied by comprehensive guidelines that outline the responsibilities of health workers to provide or facilitate care, as well as enhancements in supply chain systems as outlined above.
Study limitations
While the study is the first to report data on the capacity of health facilities to provide PAC and SAC in Liberia, it is nonetheless not without limitations. First, certain key indicators (such as the availability and number of trained providers on PAC/SAC by cadre) were missing in the signal function survey, and this invariably hampered the comprehensive assessment of the health system’s capacity for PAC and SAC. The tool also lacked certain general measures of facility capacity, forcing us in some cases (e.g., first and second trimester SAC, blood transfusion) to use the questions asked about facility service provision in the last six months. In addition, the relatively small sample of health facilities that had complete datasets for the signal function survey also limits the extent to which we can extrapolate these findings to the whole of Liberia. The fact that 75% of facilities in our sample were located in the more developed and urbanized South-Central region means that our sample may capture better-resourced facilities than is representative of the country. As such, our findings may be biased towards better PAC and SAC capacity. Nonetheless, our sample of facilities represented a range of facility levels, giving us an idea of the current characteristics of health facilities by level for PAC and SAC. Future studies should attempt to collect data from a nationally representative sample of health facilities and include data points beyond just the structural indicators of PAC and SAC, but also include the patient care processes and clinical outcomes that can comprehensively inform the quality of PAC and SAC. These are particularly important as the Liberian government debates liberalization of the abortion law.