Literature DB >> 22789089

Registration and monitoring of pregnant women in Tamil Nadu, India: a critique.

Rakhal Gaitonde1.   

Abstract

In 2008 a pregnancy registration system was introduced in rural Tamil Nadu, India, which is now being scaled up. It will collect data on antenatal, delivery and post-partum care in pregnant women and infant health. This is seen as an important public health intervention, justified for its potential to ensure efficiency in provision and use of maternity services. However, from another perspective, it can be seen as a form of control over women, reducing the experience of safe pregnancy and delivery to a few measurable variables. The burden of implementing this task falls on Village Health Nurses, who are also women, reducing their time for interacting with and educating people and visiting communities, which is their primary task and the basis on which they are evaluated. In addition, they face logistical constraints in rural settings that may affect the quality of data. In a health system with rigid internal hierarchies and power differentials, this system may become more of a supervisory and monitoring tool than a tool for a learning health system. It may also lead to a victim-blaming approach ("you missed two antenatal visits") rather than health system learning to improve maternal and infant health. The paper concludes by recommending ways to use the system and the data to tackle the broader social determinants of health, with women, health workers and communities as partners in the process.
Copyright © 2012 Reproductive Health Matters. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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Year:  2012        PMID: 22789089     DOI: 10.1016/S0968-8080(12)39619-5

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Reprod Health Matters        ISSN: 0968-8080


  3 in total

Review 1.  Lenses and levels: the why, what and how of measuring health system drivers of women's, children's and adolescents' health with a governance focus.

Authors:  Asha George; Amnesty Elizabeth LeFevre; Tanya Jacobs; Mary Kinney; Kent Buse; Mickey Chopra; Bernadette Daelmans; Annie Haakenstad; Luis Huicho; Rajat Khosla; Kumanan Rasanathan; David Sanders; Neha S Singh; Nicki Tiffin; Rajani Ved; Shehla Abbas Zaidi; Helen Schneider
Journal:  BMJ Glob Health       Date:  2019-06-24

2.  An in-depth assessment of India's Mother and Child Tracking System (MCTS) in Rajasthan and Uttar Pradesh.

Authors:  Rajeev Gera; Nithiyananthan Muthusamy; Amruta Bahulekar; Amit Sharma; Prem Singh; Amrita Sekhar; Vivek Singh
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2015-08-11       Impact factor: 2.655

3.  Gender dynamics in digital health: overcoming blind spots and biases to seize opportunities and responsibilities for transformative health systems.

Authors:  A S George; R Morgan; E Larson; A LeFevre
Journal:  J Public Health (Oxf)       Date:  2018-12-01       Impact factor: 2.341

  3 in total

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