1. Women with cerebral palsy: A qualitative study about their experiences with sexual and reproductive health education and services
- Author
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David A. Williams, Deborah Gaebler-Spira, Laurie Glader, Rachel Byrne, Eileen Fowler, Susan Hayden Gray, Molly Wylie, Sinead Christensen, and Christina Marciniak
- Subjects
Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Coding (therapy) ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Health Services Accessibility ,Cerebral palsy ,Adult women ,Iterative analysis ,medicine ,Humans ,Qualitative Research ,Reproductive health ,sexual education ,cerebral palsy ,business.industry ,Rehabilitation ,Focus Groups ,medicine.disease ,Focus group ,Reproductive Health ,Health education ,Family medicine ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Reproductive Health Services ,business ,Psychology ,Research Article ,Qualitative research - Abstract
PURPOSE: To explore the recalled experiences of women with CP regarding sexual health education and services they received. METHODS: Semi-structured interviews and focus groups were conducted at four academic tertiary hospitals with 33 adult women with CP. Templates were used to ask about four key content domains: appointment planning (including planning for a gynecologic exam), accessibility of services, experiences with providers, and recommendations for improvement. Sessions were transcribed verbatim and analyzed to generate a coding dictionary. Blinded coding was carried out for each transcript, with duplicate coding used to confirm identified themes. Iterative analysis was used to identify and consolidate coding and key themes. RESULTS: Similar barriers were discussed at the four sites, including lack of accessible exam tables, hospital staff unfamiliar with physical disabilities, and assumptions that women with CP are not sexually active. Many described the sexual education they received as brief, omitted, or mistimed. Self-advocacy was crucial, and recommended strategies ranged from pre-gynecologic exam medication to visit checklists. CONCLUSION: Reproductive health education for young women with CP is frequently inadequate. Medical professionals lack relevant knowledge and awareness; medical facilities lack necessary infrastructure. Recommendations for improvements are made.
- Published
- 2021