Department of Women's and Children's Health (IMCH), Uppsala University Hospital, 75185 Uppsala, Sweden.
Soc Sci Med. 2012 Dec;75(11):2028-36. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.08.010. Epub 2012 Aug 21.
Women from high-mortality settings in sub-Saharan Africa can remain at risk for adverse maternal outcomes even after migrating to low-mortality settings. To conceptualise underlying socio-cultural factors, we assume a 'maternal migration effect' as pre-migration influences on pregnant women's post-migration care-seeking and consistent utilisation of available care. We apply the 'three delays' framework, developed for low-income African contexts, to a high-income western scenario, and aim to identify delay-causing influences on the pathway to optimal facility treatment. We also compare factors influencing the expectations of women and maternal health providers during care encounters. In 2005-2006, we interviewed 54 immigrant African women and 62 maternal providers in greater London, United Kingdom. Participants were recruited by snowball and purposive sampling. We used a hermeneutic, naturalistic study design to create a qualitative proxy for medical anthropology. Data were triangulated to the framework and to the national health system maternity care guidelines. This maintained the original three phases of (1) care-seeking, (2) facility accessibility, and (3) receipt of optimal care, but modified the framework for a migration context. Delays to reciprocal care encounters in Phase 3 result from Phase 1 factors of 'broken trust, which can be mutually held between women and providers. An additional factor is women's 'negative responses to future care', which include rationalisations made during non-emergency situations about future late-booking, low-adherence or refusal of treatment. The greatest potential for delay was found during the care encounter, suggesting that perceived Phase 1 factors have stronger influence on Phase 3 than in the original framework. Phase 2 'language discordance' can lead to a 'reliance on interpreter service', which can cause delays in Phase 3, when 'reciprocal incongruent language ability' is worsened by suboptimal interpreter systems. 'Non-reciprocating care conceptualisations', 'limited system-level care guidelines', and 'low staff levels' can additionally delay timely care in Phase 3.
来自撒哈拉以南非洲高死亡率环境的女性,即使移民到低死亡率环境中,仍可能面临不良产妇结局的风险。为了概念化潜在的社会文化因素,我们假设存在“产妇迁移效应”,即迁移前对孕妇迁移后寻求医疗照顾和持续利用现有医疗服务的影响。我们将适用于低收入非洲背景的“三个延迟”框架应用于高收入的西方情景,并旨在确定导致产妇寻求最优医疗服务过程中出现延迟的因素。我们还比较了影响女性和产妇保健提供者在医疗照护接触期间的期望的因素。2005-2006 年,我们在英国伦敦大都会区采访了 54 名移民非洲妇女和 62 名产妇保健提供者。参与者是通过滚雪球和目的性抽样招募的。我们使用解释学、自然主义研究设计,为医学人类学创建了一个定性代理。数据与框架和国家卫生系统产妇保健指南进行三角分析。这保持了(1)寻求医疗照顾、(2)获得医疗设施的便利性、(3)获得最优医疗照顾的原框架的三个阶段,但对迁移背景下的框架进行了修改。第三阶段的相互照顾接触延迟是由第一阶段的“信任破裂”因素引起的,这种信任破裂可能在妇女和提供者之间相互存在。另一个因素是妇女“对未来医疗照顾的负面反应”,其中包括在非紧急情况下对未来预约推迟、低遵从性或拒绝治疗的合理化。在照顾接触期间发现最大的延迟潜力,这表明感知到的第一阶段因素对第三阶段的影响比原始框架更大。第二阶段的“语言不和谐”可能导致“依赖口译服务”,这可能会在第三阶段造成延迟,当“相互不一致的语言能力”因口译系统不佳而恶化时。“非互惠性医疗照顾概念化”、“有限的系统层面医疗照顾指南”和“低员工水平”也可能在第三阶段延迟及时医疗照顾。