| Literature DB >> 31496890 |
Norain Ahmad1, Sharifah Fazlinda Syed Nor1, Faiz Daud1.
Abstract
The trend of choosing natural birth at home without proper supervision is gaining more attention and popularity in Malaysia. This is partly due to wrong beliefs of modern medical care. It prompts the need to explore further into other myths and wrong beliefs present in communities around the world surrounding pregnancy and childbirth that may lead to harmful consequences. A total of 25 literatures were selected and reviewed. The most reported wrong belief is the eating behaviour such as avoiding certain nutritious fruits besides eating saffron to produce fairer skinned babies which in fact contains high doses of saffron that may lead to miscarriage. The most worrying myth however, is that unregulated birth attendants such as doulas have the necessary knowledge and skills to manage complications in labour which may well end up in perinatal or even maternal death. Other myths suggested that modern medical care such as vaginal examinations and baby's heart monitoring in labour as unnecessary. A well-enforced health education programme by well-trained healthcare personnel besides sufficient number of antenatal care visits are needed to overcome these myths, wrong beliefs and practices. In conclusion, potential harmful beliefs and practices in pregnancy and childbirth are still abound in today's communities, not just in least developed and developing countries but also in developed countries. Women and children are two very vulnerable groups, therefore debunking myths and eliminating harmful practices should be one of a healthcare provider priority especially those in the primary care settings as they are the closest to the community.Entities:
Keywords: complications; culture; parturition; perception; pregnancy
Year: 2019 PMID: 31496890 PMCID: PMC6719884 DOI: 10.21315/mjms2019.26.4.3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malays J Med Sci ISSN: 1394-195X
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart of article selection
Characteristics of included studies
| No. | First author | Study Population | Study Design/Tools | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Parmar et al. ( | Women above 18 years old in rural Khodu, Surendranagar, India | Cross-sectional study, questionnaire | Taboos and misconceptions in pregnancy |
| 2. | Sharma et al. ( | Women with recent pregnancy and/or with a child under the age of 2, their mother-in-laws, husbands and health service providers in Nepal | Qualitative, in-depth interview, focused group discussion | Beliefs around childbirth |
| 3. | Lennox et al. ( | Pregnant women in Masaai, northern Tanzania | Qualitative, semi-structured individual interview, 24 h diet recall | Dietary pattern and nutrition in pregnancy |
| 4. | Marshall et al. ( | Pregnant women in rural community of southeast USA | Qualitative, questionnaire | Barriers to physical activity in pregnancy |
| 5. | Burns ( | Pregnant women planning for home birth or women who gave birth at home in the last 3 years in Victoria, Australia | Qualitative, in-depth interviews | Placenta beliefs and rituals |
| 6. | Atif et al. ( | Patients who attended Combined Military Hospital, Peshawar Pakistan | Cross-sectional study, questionnaire | Prevalence of myths in reproductive age women |
| 7. | Rigg et al. ( | Women and unregulated birth workers in Australia | Qualitative, in-depth interviews | Perception of women choosing unregulated birth worker |
| 8. | Bermio, Reotutar ( | Multigravida women of Ilocos Sur District Hospital, Phillipines | Cross-sectional study, questionnaire | High extend of cultural beliefs and practices among the women |
| 9. | Bernhard et al. ( | Pregnant women in doula class in western Michigan, USA | Qualitative study, focused group discussion | Perception of current delivery intervention and beliefs in birthing mechanism |
| 10. | Guggino et al. ( | First trimester pregnant mother admitted to St. Anna Hospital of Turin, Italy | Cross-sectional study, semi-quantitative food-frequency questionnaire | Myths in nutritional intake in pregnancy |
| 11. | Roudsari et al. ( | Pregnant women, women with previous childbirth experience, midwives, obstetricians and non pregnant women in Tonekabon, northern of Iran | Qualitative study-focused, ethnographic semi-structured interviews and participant observations | Myths and wrong beliefs regarding birth process |
| 12. | Gogoi ( | Bodo community of Nic-Chinakona, Assam, India | Qualitative-ethnographic study, interviews | Myths and food taboos in pregnancy |
| 13. | Preis, Benyamini ( | Pregnant women in Tel Aviv, Israel | Quantitative and qualitative study, birth belief scale-questionnaire | Beliefs in birth process |
| 14. | Ezeama, Ezeamah et al. ( | Women who had delivered babies a year prior in Akin Yele LGA, Oyo State Nigeria | Quantitaive and qualitative study, questionnaire and focused group discussion | Atitude and sociocultural pactice during pregnancy |
| 15. | Otoo et al. ( | Pregnant women and women who delivered within 12 months prior in Shama district of the western region of Ghana | Qualitative, focussed group discussion and in-depth interview | Traditional practices associated with pregnancy and childbirth |
| 16. | Sarker et al. ( | Stakeholders, healthcare workers and women in Sunamganj district of Bangladesh | Qualitative cross-sectional, in-depth interview | Preference of home delivery with traditional birth attendants and the associated factors |
| 17. | Riang’a et al. ( | Pregnant and postnatal women in Kalenjin, Kenya | Qualitative, semi-structured interview | Restricted and recommended food in pregnancy |
| 18. | Ekwochi et al. ( | Women who had carried at least one pregnancy to term in Enugu south east Nigeria | Qualitative cross-sectional, questionnaire | Food avoidance and the associated factors |
| 19. | Taşçı-Duran, Sevil ( | Pregnant women (15–49 years old) in Bornova Izmir, Turkey | Qualitative ethnonursing, in-depth face-to-face semi-structured interview | Health behaviours during prenatal period |
| 20. | Mohamad, Chong ( | Malay pregnant women in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia | Cross-sectional, face-to-face questionnaire | Prevalence and types of food taboos and its reason for avoidance |
| 21. | Zepro ( | Pregnant women in Shashemene district of Ethiopia | Cross-sectional questionnaire | Prevalence of taboos/misconceptions in pregnancy and its associated factors |
| 22. | Law, Soon ( | Antenatal and postnatal mothers admitted to Hospital Universiti Sains Malaysia, Kelantan, Malaysia | Cross-sectional interview, structured questionnaire | Prevalence and description of herbal medicine usage in pregnancy |
| 23. | Roro et al. ( | Women and their men/partners who delivered past 2 years in Butajira, Ethiopia | Qualitative, focussed group discussion | Reasons for not choosing to deliver at health facilities |
| 24. | Sychareun et al. ( | Postnatal women, husbands, mothers, traditional birth attendants, head villagers, Lao Women’s Union members and healthcare workers in central Laos | Qualitative interview, focussed group discussion | Cultural beliefs and practices surrounding pregnancy, antenatal and postpartum care |
| 25. | Okafor et al. ( | Women (15–45 years old) who delivered 2 years prior to study in southwest Nigeria | Qualitative, focussed group discussion | Determinants and reasons of choosing orthodox versus unorthodox care |