Ganle John Kuumuori, Otupiri Easmon, Obeng Bernard, Edusie Anthony Kwaku, Ankomah Augustine, Adanu Richard
Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health, School of Public Health, University of Ghana, Legon, Accra, Ghana.
Department of Population, Family and Reproductive Health, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana.
PLoS One. 2016 Jun 27;11(6):e0158361. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0158361. eCollection 2016.
While a number of studies have examined the factors affecting accessibility to and utilisation of healthcare services by persons with disability in general, there is little evidence about disabled women's access to maternal health services in low-income countries and few studies consult disabled women themselves to understand their experience of care and the challenges they face in accessing skilled maternal health services. The objective of this paper is to explore the challenges women with disabilities encounter in accessing and using institutional maternal healthcare services in Ghana.
A qualitative study was conducted in 27 rural and urban communities in the Bosomtwe and Central Gonja districts of Ghana with a total of 72 purposively sampled women with different physical, visual, and hearing impairments who were either lactating or pregnant at the time of this research. Semi-structured in-depth interviews were used to gather data. Attride-Stirling's thematic network framework was used to analyse the data. Findings suggest that although women with disability do want to receive institutional maternal healthcare, their disability often made it difficult for such women to travel to access skilled care, as well as gain access to unfriendly physical health infrastructure. Other related access challenges include: healthcare providers' insensitivity and lack of knowledge about the maternity care needs of women with disability, negative attitudes of service providers, the perception from able-bodied persons that women with disability should be asexual, and health information that lacks specificity in terms of addressing the special maternity care needs of women with disability.
Maternal healthcare services that are designed to address the needs of able-bodied women might lack the flexibility and responsiveness to meet the special maternity care needs of women with disability. More disability-related cultural competence and patient-centred training for healthcare providers as well as the provision of disability-friendly transport and healthcare facilities and services are needed.
虽然已有多项研究探讨了影响一般残疾人士获得和利用医疗服务的因素,但在低收入国家,关于残疾妇女获得孕产妇保健服务的证据很少,而且很少有研究咨询残疾妇女自身,以了解她们的护理体验以及在获得熟练的孕产妇保健服务方面所面临的挑战。本文的目的是探讨加纳残疾妇女在获得和使用机构孕产妇保健服务时遇到的挑战。
在加纳博苏姆推和中戈贾区的27个农村和城市社区开展了一项定性研究,共有72名有不同身体、视力和听力障碍的妇女作为目标样本,她们在研究时处于哺乳期或孕期。采用半结构化深度访谈收集数据。运用阿特里德-斯特林的主题网络框架分析数据。研究结果表明,虽然残疾妇女确实希望获得机构孕产妇保健服务,但她们的残疾常常使她们难以前往获得熟练护理,也难以使用不友好的医疗卫生基础设施。其他相关的获得服务挑战包括:医疗服务提供者对残疾妇女的孕产妇护理需求不敏感且缺乏了解、服务提供者的消极态度、健全人认为残疾妇女不应有性需求的观念,以及在满足残疾妇女特殊孕产妇护理需求方面缺乏针对性的健康信息。
旨在满足健全妇女需求的孕产妇保健服务可能缺乏灵活性和响应能力,无法满足残疾妇女的特殊孕产妇护理需求。需要为医疗服务提供者提供更多与残疾相关的文化能力和以患者为中心的培训,以及提供对残疾友好的交通、医疗设施和服务。