| Literature DB >> 33883187 |
Nicole Minckas1, Lu Gram2, Colette Smith2, Jenevieve Mannell2.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Globally, a substantial number of women experience abusive and disrespectful care from health providers during childbirth. As evidence mounts on the nature and frequency of disrespect and abuse (D&A), little is known about the consequences of a negative experience of care on health and well-being of women and newborns. This review summarises available evidence on the associations of D&A of mother and newborns during childbirth and the immediate postnatal period (understood as the first 24 hours from birth) with maternal and neonatal postnatal care (PNC) utilisation, newborn feeding practices, newborn weight gain and maternal mental health.Entities:
Keywords: health services research; maternal health; obstetrics; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33883187 PMCID: PMC8061800 DOI: 10.1136/bmjgh-2020-004698
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Glob Health ISSN: 2059-7908
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flowchart of included studies.
Categorisation of the domains of D&A extracted from included quantitative studies based on existing typologies
| Domains as extracted from article | Domains categorised based on D&A typology* | Domains categorised based on MDC typology† |
| Experiencing physical violence during delivery‡§ | Physical abuse | Physical abuse |
| Experiencing verbal violence during delivery§ | Non-dignified care | Verbal abuse |
| Receiving undesired procedures§ | Failure to meet professional standards of care | |
| Being denied care§ | ||
| Experiencing neglect during delivery‡ | ||
| Perceiving that staff does not provide high quality services¶ | ||
| Not being offered choice of birth position** | Poor Rapport between women and providers | |
| Not being offered or not having a companion at labour or/and delivery**‡ | Abandonment of care | |
| Not being offered or not having a companion during post partum‡ | ||
| No rooming-in‡ | ||
| Perceiving that staff does not ensure patients’ privacy¶ | Non-confidential care | Health systems conditions and constraints |
| Perceiving facility not to have good cleanliness¶** | Non-apply | |
| Receiving any type of mistreatment**§ | Receiving any type of D&A **§ | Receiving any type of mistreatment**§ |
*Source: Browser and Hill.3
†Source: Bohren et al.4
‡Bandeira de Sà et al.52
§Silveira et al.53
¶Creanga et al.51
**Bishanga et al.50
D&A, disrespect and abuse; MDC, mistreatment during childbirth.
Figure 2Summary of quantitative findings of the association between different domains of disrespect and abuse and PNC utilisation, breastfeeding and postpartum depression. (1) Creanga et al;51 (2) Bishanga et al:50 measures of effect were transformed from risk ratios to ORs; (3) Bandeira de Sà et al:52 measures of effect were transformed from prevalence ratio to OR; (4) Silveira et al.53 *All domains were operationalised in the dichotomous form (yes/no). ¥p<0.005. ***Includes any procedure conducted against women’s will or without explaining the need to conduct it, such as episiotomy or medication to induce labour. EPDS, Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale.
Characteristics of included quantitative studies
| Study | Country | Study aims | Participants’ characteristics | Sample size | Study design | Exposure definition | Exposure prevalence | Outcome measured | Outcome prevalence |
| Bishanga | Tanzania | To explore women’s experience of facility-based childbirth care, including D&A, choice of birth position, offer of a birth companion and perceived facility cleanliness. | Women aged 15–49 years who had given birth in health facilities during the 2 years preceding the survey. | 732 | Cross-sectional | Self-report of any of the following: left alone for a long period of time, left to deliver unassisted/alone, verbally abused, shared a bed with another person during labour, level of privacy, provided with no bed sheet, physical violence, inappropriate touching, discrimination, denied services, detained for payment, denied food/drink or care without consent. | 73.1% | PNC use—any healthcare services given to women or baby by a professional health worker at a health facility within 48 hours of delivery. | Early postnatal check for women: 339 (46.3%); |
| Creanga | Malawi | To examine predictors of perinatal health service utilisation and to assess patient satisfaction with these services when last obtained. | Women aged 15–49 years who have given birth within the last 12 months and whose babies were alive at the time of the survey. | 1301 | Cross-sectional (baseline data from a cluster RCT) | Perceptions regarding the cleanliness of the facility, patients’ privacy, providers availability at the facility, quality of services offered, unmarried woman lack of access to services. Assessed by a 5-point agreement Likert scale. | Cleanliness: 3.5%; privacy: 6.7%; provider availability: 10.2%; low quality services: 10.9%; access to FP/RHs for unmarried women: 31.5%. | Maternal and neonatal PNC use—use after last delivery and number of checks within 2 months post partum. | 77.5% |
| Bandeira de Sá | Brazil | To identify factors associated with breast feeding in the first hour of life. | Mother–child pairs aged 0–12 months who attended health units. | 1027 | Cross-sectional | Self-report of any of the following during labour or delivery: physical violence (painful medical examination, being hit pushed or tied up), verbal violence (being yelled at), neglect (denial of care, fail to provide pain relief or lack on information about procedures), rooming in. | Verbal violence: 17.8%; physical violence: 17.3%; neglect: 16.7%; no rooming-in: 10.1%. | Child placed in the chest to breast feed in the first hour of life. | 77.3% |
| Silveira | Brazil | To examine the effect of the different types of disrespectful and abusive experiences on maternal postpartum depression occurrence and to explore if the associations differ according to women’s antenatal depressive symptoms status. | All women resident in the urban area, with confirmed pregnancy estimated delivery date in the year 2015. | 3065 | Cohort | Self-reported information on disrespect and abuse as any of the following: verbal abuse, denial of care (abandonment of care), physical abuse and undesired procedures (non-consented care) during the process of childbirth. | 18.0% | Maternal postpartum depression- assessed by EPDS with cut-off of ≥13 points for moderate signs of depression and ≥15 points for severe signs of depression. | EPDS score ≥13: 9.4%; EPDS score ≥15: 5.7% |
EPDS, Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale; FP, family planning services; PNC, postnatal care; RCT, Randomised controlled trial; RH, reproductive health services.
Characteristics of included qualitative studies
| Study | Country | Study aims | Participants’ characteristics | Study design and data collection | Aspects of D&A explored* |
| Chen | China | To explore coverage, quality of care, reasons for not receiving care and barriers to providing postnatal care after introduction of new policy. | Caregivers of children younger than 2 years of age and township maternal and child healthcare workers. | Mixed methods combining a quantitative household survey and qualitative semi-structured interviews. | Health system level issues such as workload, income and training. |
| Dol | Tanzania | To explore the experience of newborn care discharge education at a national hospital in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania from the perspective of mothers and nurse midwives. | Mothers who recently gave birth at national hospital and nurse midwives working on the postnatal and labour ward. | Qualitative descriptive research using in-depth interviews. | Woman-provider communication, and social, institutional and cultural influences when providing care. |
| Ganle and Dery | Ghana | To explore the barriers to and opportunities for men’s involvement in maternal healthcare in the Upper West Region of Ghana. | Men and their spouses, community chiefs, women leaders, assembly men, community health nurses, community health officers and mother-to-mother support group leaders. | Qualitative focus group discussions, in-depth interviews and key informant interviews. | Challenges to male involvement in maternal healthcare, including institutional constraints and providers attitudes. |
| Kane | Sudan | To gain insight into what hinders women from using maternal health services. | Community members, traditional leaders and traditional birth attendants. | Qualitative focus group discussions and in-depth interviews. | Social fears, social expectations and social interactions. |
| Mahiti | Tanzania | To explore women’s views about the maternal health services (pregnancy, delivery and postpartum period) that they received at health facilities in rural Tanzania. | Women attending a health facility for vaccination at Kongwa District Hospital and Ugogoni Health Centre. | Qualitative focus group discussions and non-participant observation. | Women-provider interaction, waiting times, informal payments and material constraints (drug shortage and dirtiness). |
| McMahon | Tanzania | To explore how rural Tanzanian women and their male partners describe disrespect and abuse experienced during childbirth in facilities and how they respond to abuse in the short or long-term. | Women, male partners, community health workers (CHWs) and community leaders from eight health centres across four districts. | Qualitative, cross-sectional study using in-depth interviews. | Types of verbal and physical abuse, discriminatory treatment, unpredictable financial charges and fear of detention. |
| Melberg | Burkina Faso | To explore how communities in rural Burkina Faso perceive the promotion and delivery of facility pregnancy and birth care, and how this promotion influences health-seeking behaviour. | Women with recent health centre birth, women with a recent home birth, their partners and community men and women. | In-depth interviews and focus group discussions. | Fear of reprimands, economic sanctions, denial of care, stigma and discriminatory practices. |
| Mselle | Tanzania | To examine how postpartum care was delivered in three postnatal healthcare clinics in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania. | Nurse-midwives and obstetricians from Dar es Salaam Referral Regional Hospitals. | Semi-structured interviews. | Relations of power among providers and women, focusing on beliefs, values, practices, language, meaning. |
| Morgan | Uganda | To understand the role of gender power relations in relation to access to resources, division of labour, social norms and decision-making affect maternal healthcare access and utilisation in Uganda. | Women who had given birth recently, fathers whose wives had given birth recently, and transport drivers. | Qualitative focus group discussions. | Access to resources, division of labour (including male involvement), and social norms (including health workers attitudes and behaviours). |
| Ochieng and Odhiambo | Kenya | To understand what factors are leading to low healthcare seeking during pregnancy, childbirth and postnatal period in Siaya County in Kenya. | Women attending ANC in Kenyan public primary healthcare facilities. | Qualitative focus group discussions. | Transportation issues, affordability, attitudes of health providers, embarrassment, autonomy in decision making, denial of care or punishment for delaying care. |
| Ongolly and Bukachi | Kenya | To explore the barriers to men’s involvement in antenatal and postnatal care in Butula subcounty, Western Kenya. | Married men of the Butula subcounty who had had children in the past 1 year and healthcare workers in charge of maternal health services. | Mixed methods using quantitative surveys, focus group discussions and key informant interviews. | Health systems barriers including long waiting limes, lack of privacy, infrastructure constraints and providers’ attitudes. |
| Probandari | Indonesia | To explore barriers to utilisation of postnatal care at the village level in Klaten district, Central Java Province, Indonesia. | Mothers with postnatal complications, family members and village midwives. | Qualitative data using in-depth interviews. | Suboptimal patient-centred care including lack of communication, availability of providers, insufficient time, inadequate education, selective care, cultural beliefs and practices, social power. |
| Sialubanje | Zambia | To identify psychosocial and environmental factors contributing to low utilisation of maternal healthcare services in Kalomo, Zambia. | Women of reproductive age (15–45 years) who gave birth within the last year, traditional leaders, mothers, fathers, community health workers and nurse-midwives. | Qualitative focus group discussions and in-depth interviews. | Provider’s attitude such as verbal abuse and health systems constraints. |
| Sacks | Uganda and Zambia | To examine experiences with, and barriers to, accessing postnatal care services in the context of a maternal health initiative. | Women who had delivered in the preceding year and lived within the eight districts. | Qualitative focus group discussions. | Fear of verbal or physical abuse, fear of denial of care or threat of denial of care, and neglect. |
| Yakong | Ghana | To describe rural women’s perspectives on their experiences in seeking reproductive care from professional nurses. | Women 15 and 49 years of age and who had received care from two rural clinics and clinic nurses and community-based surveillance volunteers. | Qualitative study with in-depth interviews, focus group discussions and participant observation. | Intimidation and verbal abuse, experiences of limited choices, of receiving silent treatment and of lack of privacy. |
| Yevoo | Ghana | To explore ‘how’ and ‘why’ pregnant women in Ghana control their past obstetric and reproductive information as they interact with providers at their first antenatal visit, and how this influences providers’ decision-making at the time and in subsequent care encounters. | Pregnant women who were within a gestational age of between 12 and 20 weeks and focus group discussions with pregnant and postnatal women. | Ethnographic study using participant observation, semi-structured interviews, and focus group discussions. | Healthcare providers’ ideological ‘domination and humiliation, including derogatory comments and verbal abuse, stigmatisation and discrimination, privacy and confidentiality. |
| Zamawe | Malawi | To examine the perceptions of parents toward the postpartum period and postnatal care in order to deepen the understanding of the maternal care-seeking practices after childbirth. | Women and men who had either given birth or fathered a baby within 12 months prior to the study (new parents). | Descriptive qualitative study using focus group discussions. | Health system constraints related to long waiting times, costs, distance. |
*The information presented in this column has been extracted during the initial coding phase of the qualitative analysis. No explicite conceptual definition of D&A was provided in most of the included studies.
D&A, disrespect and abuse.