Department of Public Administration & Health Services Management, University of Ghana Business School, Accra, Ghana.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2019 Jan 28;19(1):47. doi: 10.1186/s12884-019-2197-7.
The concern of all maternal health stakeholders is to improve maternal health and reduce maternal deaths to the barest minimum. This remains elusive in low and middle-income countries as the majority of factors that drive maternal deaths stem from the socio-cultural environment especially in rural settings. This study was aimed at finding out if knowledge on socio-cultural factors related to maternal mortality affects maternal health decisions in rural Ghana.
Community-based cross-sectional in design, the study involved 233 participants from 3 rural districts in the Greater Accra Region. Mixed-method of data collection was employed after informed consent. Quantitative data were analyzed using simple statistics, Fisher's Exact Test of independence and crude odds ratio were used to interpret the results, whilst the FGDs were recorded, transcribed and analyzed based on themes.
Statistically, significant relationship exists between all the socio-cultural factors studied (Traditional Birth Attendants (TBAs), religious beliefs and practices, herbal concoctions, and pregnancy and childbirth-related taboos) and maternal health decisions (p = 0.001 for all the variables) with very strong associations between maternal health decisions and knowledge on pregnancy and childbirth related taboos, TBA patronage, and religious beliefs and practices (OR = 21.06; 13; 7.28 respectively). However, misconceptions on factors associated with maternal mortality deeply rooted in rural communities partly explain why maternal morbidity and mortality are persistent in Ghana.
Meaningful and successful interventions on maternal mortality can only be achieved if misconceptions on causes of maternal mortality especially in rural areas of the country are tackled through mass education of communities. This should be done consistently over a long period of time for sustained behavioral change.
所有孕产妇健康利益相关者都关注改善孕产妇健康状况并将孕产妇死亡人数降至最低。在中低收入国家,这一目标仍然难以实现,因为导致孕产妇死亡的大多数因素都源于社会文化环境,尤其是在农村地区。本研究旨在了解与孕产妇死亡相关的社会文化因素的知识是否会影响农村加纳的孕产妇健康决策。
本研究采用社区为基础的横断面设计,涉及大阿克拉地区 3 个农村地区的 233 名参与者。在获得知情同意后,采用混合数据收集方法。使用简单统计、独立性 Fisher 精确检验和粗比值比来解释结果,同时记录、转录和分析焦点小组讨论的结果,并根据主题进行分析。
统计上,所有研究的社会文化因素(传统助产妇、宗教信仰和实践、草药制剂以及与妊娠和分娩相关的禁忌)与孕产妇健康决策之间存在显著关系(所有变量的 p 值均为 0.001),并且孕产妇健康决策与妊娠和分娩相关禁忌、助产妇光顾和宗教信仰和实践之间存在很强的关联(OR 分别为 21.06、13、7.28)。然而,农村社区中根深蒂固的对与孕产妇死亡相关因素的误解部分解释了为什么加纳的孕产妇发病率和死亡率仍然很高。
只有通过对农村地区与孕产妇死亡相关因素的误解进行大众教育,才能实现有意义和成功的孕产妇死亡率干预。这应该在很长一段时间内持续进行,以实现持续的行为改变。