Literature DB >> 19577750

Dissatisfaction with traditional birth attendants in rural Tanzania.

Godfrey Mbaruku1, Beverly Msambichaka, Sandro Galea, Peter C Rockers, Margaret E Kruk.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess women's satisfaction with traditional birth attendants (TBAs) in rural Tanzania.
METHOD: A population-representative sample of households in Kasulu district was used to collect data on demographics, childbirth history, and perception of TBAs and doctors/nurses from women who had recently had a child and from their partners.
RESULTS: Two-thirds of women who gave birth in a health facility reported being very satisfied with the experience, compared with 21.2% of women who delivered at home with TBAs. A sizeable proportion of women felt that TBAs had poor medical skills (23.1%), while only 0.3% of women felt the same about doctors' and nurses' skills. Of women who delivered with a TBA, 16.0% reported that TBAs had poor medical skills whereas 0.5% stated the same for doctors and nurses.
CONCLUSION: Although many women delivered at home in this rural study district, women and their partners reported higher confidence in doctors and nurses than in TBAs. Policymakers and program managers should not assume that women prefer TBAs to trained professionals for delivery but should consider system barriers to facility delivery in interventions aimed at reducing maternal mortality.

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Year:  2009        PMID: 19577750     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijgo.2009.05.008

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Gynaecol Obstet        ISSN: 0020-7292            Impact factor:   3.561


  14 in total

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7.  "Once the delivery is done, they have finished": a qualitative study of perspectives on postnatal care referrals by traditional birth attendants in Ebonyi state, Nigeria.

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8.  Delivering at home or in a health facility? health-seeking behaviour of women and the role of traditional birth attendants in Tanzania.

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9.  How perceptions of HIV-related stigma affect decision-making regarding childbirth in rural Kenya.

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Authors:  Anna Tynan; Peter S Hill; Angela Kelly; Martha Kupul; Herick Aeno; Richard Naketrumb; Peter Siba; John Kaldor; Andrew Vallely
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