Literature DB >> 29127584

'If You Choose to Abort, You Have Acted As an Instrument of Satan': Zimbabwean Health Service Providers' Negative Constructions of Women Presenting for Post Abortion Care.

Malvern Chiweshe1, Catriona Macleod2.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Health service providers play a crucial role in providing post abortion care in countries where abortion legislation is restrictive and abortion is stigmatised. Research in countries where these factors apply has shown that health service providers can be barriers to women accessing post abortion services. Much of this research draws from attitude theory. In this paper, we utilise positioning theory to show how the ways in which Zimbabwean health service providers' position women and themselves are rooted in cultural and social power relations. In light of recent efforts by the Zimbabwean Ministry of Health and foreign organisations to improve post abortion care, we explore the implications that these positionings have for post abortion care.
METHOD: As part of a larger study on abortion decision-making, the data featured in this article were collected using in-depth semi-structured interviews with six health service providers working in different facilities in Harare, Zimbabwe. Discursive and positioning thematic analysis was used to analyse the data.
RESULTS: Our analysis points to women who have abortions being positioned in negative terms, as transgressors of acceptable norms; irresponsible and manipulative; and ignorant. The health service providers drew from cultural, religious, gender and trauma discourses that portray abortion as evil and socially unacceptable. Reflexive positions taken up by the health service providers include positions as being experts, helpers and protectors of culture/religion, sympathisers and professional positions as health care providers.
CONCLUSION: The continued strengthening of post abortion services should be conducted in conjunction with dialogical interventions that challenge health service providers to reflect on the power relations within which women who terminate pregnancies are located, that contest their negative positionings of these women and that present alternative narratives and subject positionings for both the women who have abortions and the health service providers.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Abortion; Health service providers; Positioning; Post abortion care

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 29127584     DOI: 10.1007/s12529-017-9694-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Behav Med        ISSN: 1070-5503


  14 in total

1.  Abortion: attitudes and perceptions of health professionals in Zimbabwe.

Authors:  J Kasule; M T Mbizvo; V Gupta
Journal:  Cent Afr J Med       Date:  1999-09

2.  Why are women still aborting outside designated facilities in metropolitan South Africa?

Authors:  Rachel K Jewkes; Tebogo Gumede; Margaret S Westaway; Kim Dickson; Heather Brown; Helen Rees
Journal:  BJOG       Date:  2005-09       Impact factor: 6.531

3.  Nurse-midwives' attitudes towards adolescent sexual and reproductive health needs in Kenya and Zambia.

Authors:  Linnéa U Warenius; Elisabeth A Faxelid; Petronella N Chishimba; Joyce O Musandu; Antony A Ong'any; Eva B-M Nissen
Journal:  Reprod Health Matters       Date:  2006-05

4.  Perceptions of misoprostol among providers and women seeking post-abortion care in Zimbabwe.

Authors:  M Catherine Maternowska; Alexio Mashu; Precious Moyo; Mellissa Withers; Tsungai Chipato
Journal:  Reprod Health Matters       Date:  2015-02

5.  Abortion beliefs and practices among midwives (parteras) in a rural Mexican township.

Authors:  Xóchitl Castañeda; Deborah Lynn Billings; Julia Blanco
Journal:  Women Health       Date:  2003

6.  Physicians' agreement with and willingness to provide abortion services in the case of pregnancy from rape in Mexico.

Authors:  Martha Silva; Deborah L Billings; Sandra G García; Diana Lara
Journal:  Contraception       Date:  2008-09-18       Impact factor: 3.375

7.  Pathways to unsafe abortion in Ghana: the role of male partners, women and health care providers.

Authors:  Hilary M Schwandt; Andreea A Creanga; Richard M K Adanu; Kwabena A Danso; Tsiri Agbenyega; Michelle J Hindin
Journal:  Contraception       Date:  2013-03-22       Impact factor: 3.375

Review 8.  Health care providers' perceptions of and attitudes towards induced abortions in sub-Saharan Africa and Southeast Asia: a systematic literature review of qualitative and quantitative data.

Authors:  Ulrika Rehnström Loi; Kristina Gemzell-Danielsson; Elisabeth Faxelid; Marie Klingberg-Allvin
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2015-02-12       Impact factor: 3.295

9.  Shaping legal abortion provision in Ghana: using policy theory to understand provider-related obstacles to policy implementation.

Authors:  Patience Aniteye; Susannah H Mayhew
Journal:  Health Res Policy Syst       Date:  2013-07-06

10.  Health care providers' attitudes towards termination of pregnancy: a qualitative study in South Africa.

Authors:  Jane Harries; Kathryn Stinson; Phyllis Orner
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2009-08-18       Impact factor: 3.295

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  2 in total

1.  Women's Reproductive Health in Sociocultural Context.

Authors:  Yael Benyamini; Irina Todorova
Journal:  Int J Behav Med       Date:  2017-12

2.  When the law makes doors slightly open: ethical dilemmas among abortion service providers in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

Authors:  Emily McLean; Dawit Nima Desalegn; Astrid Blystad; Ingrid Miljeteig
Journal:  BMC Med Ethics       Date:  2019-09-05       Impact factor: 2.652

  2 in total

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