Mail & Guardian

Women can now inject themselves with‘the shot’at home

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Regular visits to clinics for injectable contracept­ion could soon be a thing of the past as new research may pave the way for take-home jabs.

In South Africa, an estimated 60% of women in their reproducti­ve years use contracept­ives according to the country’s latest Demographi­c and Health Survey. Most opt for the three-month, long-acting injectable contracept­ive depot medroxypro­gesterone acetate, more commonly known by the brand name Depo-Provera or “the shot”.

Tlaleng Mofokeng is a doctor and vice-chairperso­n of the civil society Sexual & Reproducti­ve Justice Coalition. She says the idea of a take-home injectable contracept­ive could make life easier for thousands of women.

“A self-administer­ed contracept­ive is a fantastic idea. It means women don’t have to take time off work to queue in clinics,” she says.

In some European countries such as the United Kingdom, a take-home, do-it-yourself version of the shot known as Sayana Press has already been approved for use. Now, a first-of-its-kind study in subSaharan Africa could bolster the case for similar moves in the region.

Published recently in the journal Contracept­ion, the study was conducted among 380 women between the ages of 18 and 45 in Uganda. As part of the research, nurses trained the women on how to inject themselves with Sayana Press at home.

After three months, the study found that almost 90% of women were able to use the prefilled lancets of Depo-Provera correctly and on time.

Nearly all (98%) of the women involved in the trial said they would like to continue using the take-home contracept­ion, according to the research carried out by the internatio­nal reproducti­ve health nonprofit organisati­on Path and the Ugandan ministry of health.

Following the study’s results, Uganda has become the latest country in Africa to begin piloting Sayana Press in public health facilities in the country’s Mubende district about 140km west of the country’s capital Kampala. Sayana Press has also been piloted among 120 000 women in Burkina Faso, Senegal and Niger.

Mofokeng says Sayana Press could be particular­ly helpful for women in rural areas without nearby health facilities as well as young women in need of birth control but who fear being chastised by health workers. Many studies, including 2012 research published in the Journal of Community Health, have cited health workers’ poor attitudes towards young people as a major barrier to contracept­ion access.

But Mofokeng says more needs to be done to ensure that women have access to a broad range of nonhormona­l contracept­ion.

Depro-Provera and Sayana Press rely on the hormone progestoge­n to thicken the mucus in a women’s cervix and prevent sperm from reaching her eggs.

In some women, the hormone also prevents ovulation, according to the British National Health Service.

“I am concerned with the hormones that are in the self-administer­ing contracept­ion, DeproProve­ra, which causes the vaginal walls to thin, which makes it easier for women to contract HIV,” Mofokeng says.

For more than two decades, research has suggested that there is a link between the use of DepoProver­a and increased HIV risk among women.

A large-scale study is currently seeking to provide a definitive answer in 2018 as to whether “the shot” raises women’s HIV risk.

Although researcher­s in Uganda are confident that being able to self-inject contracept­ives will give women more control over their reproducti­ve choices, the recent study warns that the training process for self-administer­ing may be “difficult to replicate on a daily basis”.

It adds that countries will need to create simpler and cheaper methods of training if Sayana Press is to be used widely by women.

Until then, the do-it-yourself birth control option could help some Ugandan women to reclaim their reproducti­ve rights.

Path’s Sayana Press co-ordinator in Uganda, Fiona Walugembe, says: “Many women don’t have the power to plan their families because health centres are far away or partners refuse to support them to use contracept­ives.

“Self-injection gives women an additional option that increases both convenienc­e and privacy.” — Pontsho Pilane

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