Moyer Cheryl A, Rominski Sarah, Nakua Emmanuel Kweku, Dzomeku Veronica Millicent, Agyei-Baffour Peter, Lori Jody R
University of Michigan Medical School, 1111 Catherine Street, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Accra Road, Kumasi, Ghana.
Midwifery. 2016 Oct;41:39-44. doi: 10.1016/j.midw.2016.07.009. Epub 2016 Jul 9.
to determine what midwifery students throughout Ghana were witnessing, perceiving, and learning with regard to respectful care during labour and childbirth.
cross-sectional survey.
public midwifery schools in all 10 regions of Ghana.
all graduating midwifery students in Ghana.
929 final-year students at 15 public midwifery schools in Ghana were asked to complete a self-administered computerised survey addressing a range of topics, including experiences during training. All data were collected anonymously and analyzed using Stata 13.0.
853 students completed the questionnaire (91.8% response rate): 72.0% said maltreatment was a problem in Ghana and 77.4% said women are treated more respectfully in private than public facilities. Students described providers: telling women to stop making noise (78.5%), shouting at women (68.8%), scolding women if they didn't bring birth supplies (54.5%), treating educated/wealthy women better than less educated / poor women (41.5%/38.9%), detaining women who couldn't pay (37.9%), and speaking disrespectfully to women (34%). Only 4% of students reported not witnessing any disrespectful treatment. Students reported providers being overworked (76.5%), stressed (74.2%), and working without adequate resources (64.1%). Where students performed their clinical training (teaching hospital, district hospital, public health clinic, private facility) had no effect on perception of maltreatment as a problem. However, students who trained in district hospitals witnessed more types of disrespectful care than those who did not train in district hospitals (p=0.01).
a majority of midwifery students throughout Ghana witness disrespectful care during their training. Implications include the need for provider curricula that address psychosocial elements of care, as well as the need to improve monitoring, accountability, and consequences for maltreatment within facilities without creating a culture of blame.
确定加纳各地的助产专业学生在分娩过程中关于尊重性照护所目睹、感知和学到的内容。
横断面调查。
加纳所有10个地区的公立助产学校。
加纳所有即将毕业的助产专业学生。
加纳15所公立助产学校的929名最后一年学生被要求完成一份自我管理的计算机化调查问卷,该问卷涉及一系列主题,包括培训期间的经历。所有数据均匿名收集,并使用Stata 13.0进行分析。
853名学生完成了问卷(回复率为91.8%):72.0%的学生表示虐待在加纳是个问题,77.4%的学生表示女性在私立机构比在公立机构受到更尊重的对待。学生描述医护人员的行为包括:叫女性别出声(78.5%)、对女性大喊大叫(68.8%)、如果女性没带分娩用品就责骂她们(54.5%)、对受过教育/富有的女性比对受教育程度低/贫穷的女性待遇更好(41.5%/38.9%)、扣留付不起钱的女性(37.9%)以及对女性言语不尊重(34%)。只有4%的学生报告未目睹任何不尊重的对待。学生报告医护人员工作过度劳累(76.5%)、压力大(74.2%)且工作资源不足(64.1%)。学生进行临床培训的地点(教学医院、地区医院、公共卫生诊所、私立机构)对将虐待视为问题的认知没有影响。然而,在地区医院接受培训的学生目睹的不尊重照护类型比未在地区医院接受培训的学生更多(p=0.01)。
加纳各地的大多数助产专业学生在培训期间目睹了不尊重照护。启示包括需要为医护人员制定涉及照护心理社会因素的课程,以及需要在不营造指责文化的情况下,改善医疗机构内对虐待行为的监督、问责和后果处理。