Literature DB >> 32379843

Exploring women's experience of healthcare use during pregnancy and childbirth to understand factors contributing to perinatal deaths in Pakistan: A qualitative study.

Jamil Ahmed1,2, Ashraful Alam2, Saadat Khokhar3, Sadiq Khowaja4, Ramesh Kumar5, Camille Raynes Greenow2.   

Abstract

Understanding key healthcare system challenges experienced by women during pregnancy and birth is crucial to scale up available interventions and reduce perinatal mortality. A community perspective about preferences and experience of care during this period can be used to improve community-based programs to reduce perinatal mortality. Using a qualitative exploratory approach, we examined women's experience of perinatal loss, aiming to understand the main factors, as perceived and experienced by women, leading to perinatal loss. Qualitative in-depth Interviews were conducted with 25 mothers with a recent perinatal loss, three family members, six healthcare officials, and two focus group discussions with 17 lady health workers. Data were analysed using inductive and deductive coding, by thematic analysis. Our findings revealed three distinct but interrelated themes, which include: 1) poor access to care during pregnancy and birth, 2) unavailability of appropriate healthcare services, and 3) poor quality of care during pregnancy and birth. Women frequently delayed seeking formal care around birth because of delays by themselves, their family members, or the local traditional birth attendants who frequently induced births at women's homes without recognising the dangers to the mothers or their babies. Preference for private care was common, however they often could not bear the cost of care when they needed caesarean section or in-patient care for their sick newborns because these services were absent in public health facilities of the district. Referral to the regional tertiary care hospital was often not officially arranged leading to risky births in small and crowded private clinics. Women's views about negative staff attitudes and the lack of attention given to them in public health facilities highlighted a lack of quality and respectful antenatal care. Improvement in women's access to essential care during pregnancy and around birth, availability of emergency obstetric and newborn care, improving the quality of maternal and newborn care in both public and private health facilities at the district level might reduce perinatal mortality in Pakistan.

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 32379843     DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0232823

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  PLoS One        ISSN: 1932-6203            Impact factor:   3.240


  4 in total

1.  Care-Seeking Behavior for Newborns in Rural Zambia.

Authors:  Lucy Thairu; Hanna Gehling; Sarah Kafwanda; Kojo Yeboah-Antwi; Davidson H Hamer; Karsten Lunze
Journal:  Matern Child Health J       Date:  2022-01-14

2.  The unspoken grief of multiple stillbirths in rural Pakistan: an interpretative phenomenological study.

Authors:  Muhammad Asim; Sehrish Karim; Hajra Khwaja; Waqas Hameed; Sarah Saleem
Journal:  BMC Womens Health       Date:  2022-02-22       Impact factor: 2.809

3.  Determinants of birthplace among middle-to lower-class women in Indonesia: A study using the Indonesian Demographic and Health Survey.

Authors:  Angga Kresna Pranata; Andri Setiya Wahyudi; Lukman Handoyo; Ferry Efendi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-10-29       Impact factor: 3.240

4.  Feasibility of a birth-cohort in Pakistan: evidence for better lives study.

Authors:  Siham Sikander; Assad Hafeez; Yasmeen Anwer; Fahad Abbasi; Ariba Dar; Abdullah Hafeez; Sara Valdebenito; Manuel Eisner
Journal:  Pilot Feasibility Stud       Date:  2022-02-07
  4 in total

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