University of California San Francisco, Institute for Global Health Sciences, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Miami, Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2021 Feb 15;21(1):135. doi: 10.1186/s12884-021-03586-y.
Between 2006 and 2013, Peru implemented national programs which drastically decreased rates of maternal and neonatal mortality. However, since 2013, maternal and neonatal mortality in Peru have increased. Additionally, discrimination, abuse, and violence against women persists globally and impacts birthing experiences and mental health. This qualitative study sought to better understand the attitudes and beliefs regarding childbirth among women and providers in Southern Peru. This study also explores how these beliefs influence utilization of skilled care, patient-provider dynamics, and childbirth experiences and identifies factors that impact providers' provision of care.
Thirty semi-structured interviews were conducted with 15 participants from rural Colca Canyon and 15 participants from urban Arequipa between April and May 2018. In each region, 10 women who had experienced recent births and five providers were interviewed. Provider participants predominantly identified as female and were mostly midwives. All interviews were conducted, transcribed, and coded in Spanish. A framework analysis was followed, and data were charted into two separate thematic frameworks using contextual and evaluative categories of conceptualization of childbirth.
All recent births discussed were facility-based births. Four domains emerged: women's current birth experiences, provision of childbirth care, beliefs about childbirth among women and providers, and future health-seeking behavior. Findings suggest that women's feelings of helplessness and frustration were exacerbated by their unmet desire for respectful maternity care and patient advocacy or companionship. Providers attributed strain to perceived patient characteristics and insufficient support, including resources and staff.
Our findings suggest current childbirth experiences placed strain on the patient-provider dynamic and influenced women's attitudes and beliefs about future experiences. Currently, the technical quality of safe childbirth is the main driver of skilled birth attendance and facility-based births for women regardless of negative experiences. However, lack of respectful maternity care has been shown to have major long-term implications for women and subsequently, their children. This is one of the first studies to describe the nuances of patient-provider relationships and women's childbirth experiences in rural and urban Peru.
2006 年至 2013 年期间,秘鲁实施了国家项目,使母婴死亡率大幅下降。然而,自 2013 年以来,秘鲁的母婴死亡率有所上升。此外,全球范围内仍存在对妇女的歧视、虐待和暴力行为,这影响了她们的分娩体验和心理健康。本定性研究旨在更好地了解秘鲁南部妇女和提供者对分娩的态度和信念。本研究还探讨了这些信念如何影响熟练护理的利用、医患动态以及分娩体验,并确定了影响提供者提供护理的因素。
2018 年 4 月至 5 月期间,在秘鲁南部科尔卡峡谷的农村地区和阿雷基帕的城市地区分别对 15 名参与者进行了 30 次半结构式访谈。在每个地区,采访了 10 名最近分娩的妇女和 5 名提供者。提供者参与者主要为女性,大多数为助产士。所有访谈均以西班牙语进行、转录和编码。采用框架分析,根据对分娩的概念化的背景和评价类别,将数据分别归入两个独立的主题框架。
所有最近讨论的分娩均为机构分娩。出现了四个领域:妇女当前的分娩经历、分娩护理的提供、妇女和提供者对分娩的信念以及未来的寻医行为。研究结果表明,妇女感到无助和沮丧,这加剧了她们对尊重产妇护理和患者倡导或陪伴的未满足需求。提供者将紧张归因于患者的特征和资源不足,包括资源和人员。
我们的研究结果表明,当前的分娩经历给医患关系带来了压力,并影响了妇女对未来经历的态度和信念。目前,安全分娩的技术质量是妇女选择熟练护理和机构分娩的主要驱动因素,无论她们的经历如何。然而,缺乏尊重产妇护理已被证明对妇女及其子女有重大的长期影响。这是首批描述秘鲁农村和城市地区医患关系和妇女分娩体验细微差别的研究之一。