Jamil Ahmed1, Camille Raynes-Greenow2, Ashraful Alam3. 1. The University of Sydney, Sydney School of Public Health, Camperdown, NSW 2006, Australia; Department of Family and Community Medicine, College of Medicine and Medical Sciences, Arabian Gulf University, Bahrain. Electronic address: jamil.ahmed@sydney.edu.au. 2. The University of Sydney, Sydney School of Public Health, Camperdown, NSW 2006, Australia. Electronic address: camille.raynes-greenow@sydney.edu.au. 3. The University of Sydney, Sydney School of Public Health, Camperdown, NSW 2006, Australia. Electronic address: neeloy.alam@sydney.edu.au.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Understanding the sociocultural context and local practices during pregnancy and birth is imperative to identify factors related to perinatal mortality in countries where its burden is high. This study aims to explore the pregnancy and birth related cultural practices and the perceptions of women with a recent perinatal death in Sindh province, Pakistan. DESIGN: This qualitative exploratory study consisted of in-depth interviews with women who had experienced a perinatal death in the year preceding the study. Women were identified and recruited with the help of lady health workers. After consent, women were interviewed in their homes and in their own language (Sindhi) by a local female interviewer. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Interviews were conducted with women from predominantly rural district of the southern province of Sindh in Pakistan between May and August 2018. The data were coded both inductively and deductively and then analysed using themes. FINDINGS: Twenty-five women were interviewed. Traditional home remedies were commonly used to alleviate pregnancy symptoms such as general aches and pains. The health providers often delayed the information about the perinatal deaths in health facilities, which saddened the women. Most women had fatalistic opinions about what caused their losses, and explained the cause based on their own interpretation, which were not necessarily consistent with known causes of perinatal death. The women also desired to use contraception and believed that it would prevent future pregnancy loss; however, many women were unable to make that decision themselves. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: The high use of traditional home-based remedies may be a proxy measure for poor access to formal healthcare services. Many women described poor acknowledgement of their grief which may be harmful. Women's knowledge about the causes of perinatal mortality in general was very low, improving this knowledge may help women to seek appropriate healthcare services during pregnancy.
OBJECTIVE: Understanding the sociocultural context and local practices during pregnancy and birth is imperative to identify factors related to perinatal mortality in countries where its burden is high. This study aims to explore the pregnancy and birth related cultural practices and the perceptions of women with a recent perinatal death in Sindh province, Pakistan. DESIGN: This qualitative exploratory study consisted of in-depth interviews with women who had experienced a perinatal death in the year preceding the study. Women were identified and recruited with the help of lady health workers. After consent, women were interviewed in their homes and in their own language (Sindhi) by a local female interviewer. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Interviews were conducted with women from predominantly rural district of the southern province of Sindh in Pakistan between May and August 2018. The data were coded both inductively and deductively and then analysed using themes. FINDINGS: Twenty-five women were interviewed. Traditional home remedies were commonly used to alleviate pregnancy symptoms such as general aches and pains. The health providers often delayed the information about the perinatal deaths in health facilities, which saddened the women. Most women had fatalistic opinions about what caused their losses, and explained the cause based on their own interpretation, which were not necessarily consistent with known causes of perinatal death. The women also desired to use contraception and believed that it would prevent future pregnancy loss; however, many women were unable to make that decision themselves. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: The high use of traditional home-based remedies may be a proxy measure for poor access to formal healthcare services. Many women described poor acknowledgement of their grief which may be harmful. Women's knowledge about the causes of perinatal mortality in general was very low, improving this knowledge may help women to seek appropriate healthcare services during pregnancy.