Treacy Laura, Bolkan Håkon A, Sagbakken Mette
Nadheim Kirkens Bymisjon, Norbygata 45, 0190 Oslo, Norway.
Institute of Cancer Research and Molecular Medicine, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), Trondheim, Norway.
PLoS One. 2018 Feb 20;13(2):e0188280. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0188280. eCollection 2018.
Sierra Leone has one of the highest maternal mortality ratios in the world. Efforts to reduce maternal mortality have included initiatives to encourage more women to deliver at health facilities. Despite the introduction of the free health care initiative for pregnant women, many women still continue to deliver at home, with few having access to a skilled birth attendant. In addition, inequalities between rural and urban areas in accessing and utilising health facilities persist. Further insight into how and why women make decisions around childbirth will help guide future plans and initiatives in improving maternal health in Sierra Leone. The objective of this study was to explore the perceptions and decision-making processes of women and their communities during childbirth in rural Sierra Leone.
Data were collected through seven focus group discussions and 22 in-depth interviews with recently pregnant women and their community members in two rural villages. Data were analysed using systematic text condensation. Findings revealed that decision-making processes during childbirth are dynamic, intricate and need to be understood within the broader social context that they take place. Factors such as distance and lack of transport, perceived negative behaviour of hospital staff, direct and indirect financial obstacles, as well as the position of women in society all interact and influence how and what decisions are made.
Pregnant women face multiple interacting vulnerabilities that influence their healthcare-seeking decisions during pregnancy and childbirth. Future initiatives to improve access and utilisation of safe healthcare services for pregnant women need to be based on adequate knowledge of structural constraints and health inequities that affect women in rural Sierra Leone.
塞拉利昂是世界上孕产妇死亡率最高的国家之一。为降低孕产妇死亡率所做的努力包括鼓励更多妇女在医疗机构分娩的倡议。尽管为孕妇推出了免费医疗保健倡议,但许多妇女仍继续在家中分娩,很少有机会获得熟练的助产士服务。此外,农村和城市地区在获得和利用医疗设施方面的不平等现象依然存在。进一步深入了解妇女如何以及为何做出分娩相关决策,将有助于指导塞拉利昂未来改善孕产妇健康的计划和举措。本研究的目的是探讨塞拉利昂农村地区妇女及其社区在分娩期间的认知和决策过程。
通过对两个农村村庄的近期孕妇及其社区成员进行七次焦点小组讨论和22次深入访谈收集数据。使用系统文本浓缩法对数据进行分析。结果显示,分娩期间的决策过程是动态、复杂的,需要在其发生的更广泛社会背景中去理解。诸如距离和交通不便、对医院工作人员负面行为的认知、直接和间接的经济障碍以及妇女在社会中的地位等因素相互作用,影响着如何做出决策以及做出何种决策。
孕妇面临多种相互作用的脆弱性,这些脆弱性影响着她们在孕期和分娩期间寻求医疗保健的决策。未来旨在改善孕妇获得和利用安全医疗服务的举措,需要基于对影响塞拉利昂农村妇女的结构限制和健康不平等的充分了解。