Healthcare professionals' and students' willingness to perform abortion: A systematic review and meta-analysis, 2014-2025

Women's health (London, England), 22(5), 17455057251410331

DOI 10.1177/17455057251410331 PMID 41480927 Source

Abstract

Background

Healthcare professionals' and students' willingness to provide abortion influences access to care and workforce readiness.

Objective

We conducted a literature synthesis to identify patterns in willingness across various clinical scenarios.

Design

Systematic review and meta-analysis.

DATA SOURCES: We searched five databases (PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, Medline, and CINAHL) and gray literature for studies (January 2014 to February 2025) without language restrictions. Eligible studies reported cross-sectional data on providers' willingness, while we excluded conditionally framed scenarios. Willingness was defined as the intent, readiness, or affirmative response to provide abortion.

Methods

Summary-level data on theme-specific willingness were extracted and re-coded into binary or proportional format (yes/no or n/N). Estimates were pooled using random-effects models. Meta-regression and publication bias assessments were performed. Study quality was assessed using a novel in-house tool tailored for survey-based research.

Results

We included 36 studies (n = 18,779), reporting 137 estimates across 24 themes. Willingness to provide was highest for lethal fetal anomalies (88.7%, 95% CI: 76.1%-95.1%) and maternal physical health risks (88.6%, 95% CI: 55.7%-98.0%) but substantially lower for on-request scenarios (33.1%, 95% CI: 14.9%-58.4%), surgical abortion (32.1%, 95% CI: 11.6%-63.0%), and social reasons (range 20.1%-32.0%). Multilevel modeling captured both converging and diverging response patterns across categories. Meta-regression indicated that students had consistently higher willingness than professionals. Dominant religion was also observed to be more strongly associated than legal status and other country-level indices. Evidence of small-study effects was limited apart from in a few themes. Risk of bias was high in 31% of studies, with our tool showing strong structural overlap with Checklist for Reporting Results of Internet E-Surveys (CHERRIES) and Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology (STROBE) frameworks.

Conclusions

Providers often prioritized abortion in life-threatening contexts but hesitated in non-urgent scenarios. Values-based training and systemic reforms are needed for equitable access to and expansion of abortion care.

REGISTRATION: PROSPERO: CRD42025634868.

Topics

healthcare professional willingness abortion, medical student abortion attitudes, physician abortion provision, conscientious objection abortion, abortion workforce readiness, abortion access provider availability, systematic review abortion willingness, clinical scenario abortion intent, reproductive healthcare workforce, termination of pregnancy provider perspectives
PMID 41480927 41480927 DOI 10.1177/17455057251410331 10.1177/17455057251410331

Cite this article

Hilgers, T. W. (1995). Abortion and the maternal-fetal medicine physician. *The Hastings Center Report*, *25*(5), 2-3.

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