Background
Inconsistent provision of subcutaneous depot medroxyprogesterone acetate (DMPA-SC) for self-injection (SI) undermines efforts to improve women's reproductive health agency and access to self-care. In Nigeria, providers feel pro-social responsibility as frontline health workers to support their clients' wellbeing. However, their pronatalist beliefs censure premarital sexual activity and inhibit access to contraceptives for young, unmarried women. How pro-social tendencies and provider biases interact to affect service delivery is a critical but underexplored question.Methods
We conducted a mixed-methods study comparing stated pro-social tendencies and intentions to dispense DMPA-SC for SI (N = 81 in-depth interviews (IDIs)) with actual dispensing behavior during mystery client (MC) visits (N = 162 post-interaction surveys) across private and public facilities in Lagos, Enugu and Plateau. Qualitative analysis of providers' pro-social tendencies, biases, and reasons for not offering DMPA-SC for SI complemented quantitative analysis exploring the associations between pro-social tendencies and dispensing behavior.Results
Providers showed substantial levels of both pro-social tendencies and bias against young, unmarried women. High levels of stated intentions to dispense in IDIs (91% to older, married women vs 78% to young, unmarried women) did not translate to actual willingness to dispense in MC visits (30% to older, married women vs 27% to young, unmarried women). Young, unmarried actors were twice as likely to perceive differential treatment from providers (33%) relative to older, married women actors (17%). From IDIs, providers expressed biases about the appropriateness of family planning and SI specifically based on a client's age, marital status, parity, and covert use. In some cases, pro-social tendencies reinforced bias when providers sought to uphold social norms as a gatekeeper; in other cases, pro-social tendencies on self-defined client needs helped overcome bias. Providers described other factors that deterred them from dispensing DMPA-SC for SI, including elements of self-care that posed risks to their practice or business.Conclusions
Provider biases may limit provision of DMPA-SC for SI, which could affect contraceptive equity and women's control over their own fertility, especially for younger, unmarried women. Targeted interventions that effectively address provider biases against young, unmarried women, potentially leveraging providers' underlying pro-social tendencies, may help ensure equity in client access to contraceptive self-care.