Pace, Lydia, Daniel Grossman, Susana Chavez, Luis Tvara, Diana Lara,
and Rossina Guerrero Vasquez. 2006. "Legal abortion in Peru: Knowledge,
attitudes and practices among a group of physician leaders," Gaceta
Médica de México 142(3): 83–86.
Objectives
We sought to examine knowledge, attitudes, and practices regarding legal
abortion among a group of Peruvian physicians.
Methods
A pre-conference survey was mailed to Peruvian physicians invited to a
workshop on legal abortion. A post-conference survey was distributed
following the event.
Results
Eighty-six percent of 35 respondents correctly indicated that abortion is legal in Peru
when a pregnancy endangers a woman's life while less than 50 percent knew it is
also legal when necessary to protect a woman's health. Knowledge about
abortion techniques was lower for induced abortion than for management of
incomplete abortions. Dilation and curettage was used more frequently than
manual vacuum aspiration and medications. Half of physicians reported having
performed a legal abortion. The vast majority of physicians surveyed thought
legal indications for abortion should be expanded to include cases of rape
or fetal malformations. Most considered their abortion training to be
inadequate. They identified lack of training and administrative and
professional support as barriers to legal abortion provision.
Conclusions
Physicians surveyed were willing to provide legal abortions but lacked the
knowledge, skills, and support to do so. Improved training of health
professionals, increasing institutional support, and developing
administrative and legal procedures to guide management of women seeking
abortions could increase women's access to legal abortion services and
diminish the occurrence of unsafe abortion in Peru.
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