| Literature DB >> 29091916 |
Martin Amogre Ayanore1,2,3, Milena Pavlova2, Regien Biesma4, Wim Groot2,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In Ghana, priority-setting for reproductive health service interventions is known to be rudimentary with little wider stakeholder involvement. In recognizing the need for broad stakeholder engagement to advance reproductive care provision and utilization, it is necessary to jointly study the varied stakeholder views on reproductive care services.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29091916 PMCID: PMC5665529 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0186908
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Sample structure of questions used to assess all stakeholder groups.
| a. | What experiences, expectations do you have with regards to using/providing reproductive health care? Probe further on social, gender and environmental drivers for women independent life choices in reproductive health care. |
| b. | What experiences underpin reproductive preferences/needs among users and providers in the facility/districts level? Probe further on challenges, barriers that affect your ability to deliver basic and comprehensive reproductive care services at the facility/district level? |
| c. | What expectations define the reproductive preferences in provision (health staff, policymakers) and its use (women)? Probe on how each stakeholder meets and unmet expectations. |
| d. | What priority setting informs reproductive health choices and preferences in facility/district? Probe on concerns policy decision making process have for users in rural settings. Probe further on policy standards in use and what they seek to attain in reproductive rights issues. |
| e. | How does policy processes address user preferences for reliable and user-friendly services for women, health staff and policy makers. Probe further on services delivery mode, previous experiences impact on current reproductive needs? Follow up with probes on reproductive policy implementation processes and inclusiveness and how this relates to meeting user reproductive care preferences. |
Women views on gender role impacts on attaining their reproductive care needs.
| Theme 1 | Women accounts |
|---|---|
| Gendered role impacts on reproductive care | “Of choices, we often have them before we arrive at the facility. But sometimes we make these decisions with other women and peers since we cannot discuss these issues with our husbands”-w1. |
| “we value our social norms on fertility too, so we often struggle to balance this with reproductive services that demand we stop childbearing”-w2 | |
| “Our society requires male spouses to dictate how and when we should have sex and pleasure, but women ability to support as breadwinner makes other household decisions helps us sometimes have autonomy for our childbearing needs.”-w3 | |
| “some women covertly use contraceptives to avoid conflict at home, and keep men responsive to their needs”-w4 | |
| “Our male spouses have power to demand sex we cannot deny, but we too have power to deny the effects when we use family planning services provided us at facility.”-w5 | |
| “Although people advocate for male spouse to limit or space births, we will be happy if the conversation should be asking males spouses to respect our individual psychological needs because childbearing puts so much stress on us and our children…”-w6 | |
| “advocating for us to make our birthing and postpartum services inclusive with our male spouses will be problematic because we need to take good decisions concerning our well-being”-w7 | |
| “Health staff just listen and ignore our problems on clinic opening times, sometimes when you live far and would wish to hold you in a holding bay until your labor starts….”-w8 | |
| “They shout when we are going through pain at childbirth, simply because your life is dependent upon them ….such experiences will inform us change different facility or consider friendlier home care using a traditional birth attendant…”w9 | |
| “I just obey what the nurse say I should do without questioning at antenatal, otherwise, you are skipped since so many women are waiting for the same service”-w10 | |
| “Male volunteers help us a lot, always willing to listen and refer us to nurses when we have concerns on reproductive services”-w11 |
Wn -W represents women views and superscript indicates number of record presented in table
Stakeholder experience with service provision to meet user reproductive preferences.
| Theme 2 | Women | Health Staff | Policymakers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Experiences relating to meeting user reproductive needs | “health staff provide services in a general form, without differentiating our individual sexuality states and preferences”-w1 | “Many reproductive health services outlined in Cairo are not delivered; we cannot diagnosis conditions such as reproductive cancers and offer post abortion services in this facility or the district. A woman has to go to the regional level”-hs1 | “Some health facilities started in already existing structures originally designed for other purposes. Some users assertions of poor clinic facilities arrangements and privacy issues are been considered in building new facility infrastructure”-p1 |
| “My last experience with induced abortion care was really worrisome…I lost my baby and was asked to pay (USD 25.00) in order to clean my womb. Whiles we are told childbirth care is free under free fee user policy”-w2 | “In instances where we cannot address women reproductive need, we just refer them to the district”-hs2 | “At the community facility or district facilities, post abortion services are not provided…supplies to undertake post abortion caring services are not covered under the fee exemption ANC/ Postnatal policy under the health insurance, these charges will need to be accounted for if rising cost at the higher policy level”-p2 | |
| “Nurses contribute to some women unwillingness for contraceptive use because of poor communication…”-w3 | “We have yearly plans we submit to our facility in-charge and to the district level on reproductive services, the money is just not available to do a or be that you have outlined to do”-hs3 | “We acknowledge most of our services are stigmatized. Users seeking abortion care, HIV/AIDS, STIs and even fertility treatments are perceived as ill intended by general populace, private providers providing these services are even labeled in the public eye”-p3 | |
| “I stopped going to my community clinic, over three years, they have always have one type of family planning products”-w4 | “Our targets on post-partum family planning is usually not continuous, hence many barriers for women use after birthing practices”-hs4 | “Most stigmatization issues may results in underestimating women experiences, something the formal health system must design structures to address”–p4 | |
| “When my daughter got pregnant whiles in school, we were traumatized and stigmatized because we are also insulted and mocked when I come with her to the clinic for antenatal care.”-w5 | “We have facility procedures to engage users and local actors on better addressing their needs.”-hs5 | ||
| “Services are delivered in one facility room, young women, adolescents. This does not make them friendlier since most young people do not come whiles teenage pregnancy is rising”-w6 | “I think it’s still problematic in delivering integrated services because many service needs in reproductive health are not supported in facility level expenditures”-hs6 | ||
| “Societal stigma and name calling for our girls who become pregnant in the course of their studies is a challenge, and we will prefer they are provided with family planning services too because they will all grow soon as mothers”-w7 | “we never receive women complaints on unmet preference needs, we rather hear of these complaints outside the facility level”-hs7 | ||
| “there are certain factors that goes beyond us, such as women demands for home visits when they choose to deliver at home”-hs8 |
Wn, hsn, pn denotes women, health staff and policymaker’s expressions. Superscript denotes the number of view counts expressed by participants.
Stakeholder expectations on provision and meeting women reproductive care preferences.
| Theme 3 | Women | Health Staff | Policymakers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Expectations on reproductive care needs | “At first we use to think more of family planning, now we will prefer health personnel talk more also on sexual disease prevention because of recent diseases we hear of these days”-w1 | “some stuff do not know all the components of the Cairo targets on reproductive health…they are basically involved in family planning and few components of antenatal and postnatal care”-hs1 | “Improving staff skills is something the ministry and at our level we continue to undertake. We acknowledge current inabilities to provide services such as abortion care, post-abortion, and fertility treatments mostly in the public sectors”-p1 |
| “We are always told of contraceptive side effects, but they don’t give us appropriate information on how to overcome or address these issues”w2 | “even when we know what women need, can we meet that simply by knowing, more has to be done from the Ministry of health to support in early diagnosis and treatment such as opportunistic infections on STIs, reproductive cancers, and safe abortion care”-hs2 | “What we need to do more in meeting user expectations is to invest more in infrastructure. At our policy level we acknowledge the difficulties although we cannot drive this big policy push”–p2 | |
| “We always want opportunity to ask questions most times this is difficult because some nurse don’t understand our language when we explain”-w3 | “I did not know we are expected to provide infertility services, I always thought it was the role of the private sector in such services”-hs3 | “The health centres or district hospitals although some staff have received training cannot even provide safe abortion services, this sector has entirely been taken over by the private sector where limited people may access services because of cost and stigma”-p3 | |
| “I did have concerns about the health effects of my family planning method choice, after complaining to the nurse, she just asked me to cope since she couldn’t do anything”-w4 | “Sometimes we have difficulty dealing with women own difficulties when we don’t know the appropriate health counseling demands to meet their need”-hs4 | “Helping women manage health consequences is a key component of our counseling services. One of the greatest challenge is addressing meeting individualized focused preference needs where health staff are limited”-p4 | |
| “When they want to meet us to provide services, they just inform us through a volunteer, forgetting we have we need convenient times to better use services… we use to be fine but working demands making some women unable to attend these sessions from health staff”-w5 | “Sometimes women encounter psychosocial problems; they come to us instead of a psychologist. We can do little in this regard to support them, we need health psychologist to help provide care for such women”-hs5 | “Because of community engagements with staff, users and using community volunteers who communicate our messages to build trust among users and the health care system. These strategies are aimed at improving user complaints on unfriendly health staff and often unsatisfied conditions”-p5 | |
| “I won’t go out to the child welfare center for reproductive services, the place is not only open but services are supported by non-experienced community volunteers”-w6 | “comprehensive reproductive care can be met when several skilled staff provide services, women do not recognize that and assume facility level staff alone should be able to meet all their demands at all time”-hs6 | “Contextualization of polices for health staff go beyond meeting user expectations to disseminating standards of care”-p6 | |
| “An NGO working here few years ago made it possible to have community volunteers that visited us to at home after childbirth to give our child an injection…this has changed since we need to travel long hours in the sun with my children…”w7 | “Most of the reproductive targets set up in the country reproductive policies have not been contextualized for us, and no adequate training for health staff. Contextualizing would enable professional psychological care for intended user’s”-hs7 | “The difficulty has always to do with who disseminates these policies/protocols and how much we are committed to spend on improving continually these standards together with providers to meet user expectations”-p7 | |
| “Our mother-to-mother support groups are supportive. We wish health nurses learn how to incorporate this as part of their outreach services”w8 | “informal groups such as mother-to-mother support groups spoken by women is helping us address myths and misinformation on reproductive services offered at facility level, we support such efforts since it promotes our work as nurses”-hs8 | “we are working to make informal structures and groups at community level more involving, accountable and supportive to address users expectation at our facilities”-p8 |
Wn, hsn, pn denotes women, health staff and policymaker’s expressions. Superscript denotes the number of view counts expressed by participants.
Policy setting and decision making expressions in meeting women reproductive preferences.
| Theme 4 | Women | Health Staff | Policymakers |
|---|---|---|---|
| Policy setting and decision making | “people come to the community to meet us and ask us question on how satisfied we are with services, but we never see any differences in what they provide now from the old”-w1 | “At the facility, we don’t procure or singly adopt an intervention without prior authorization from the district or regional level”-hs1 | “Our priorities sometimes are largely defined by what donor money is available and what needs can be met at any particular time”–p1 |
Wn, hsn, pn denotes women, health staff and policymaker’s expressions.Superscript denotes the number of view counts expressed by participants.