Family Health International (FHI 360), Anamika Galli Ward-4 Baluwatar, Kathmandu, Nepal.
Independent Researcher, Taichung, Taiwan.
BMC Public Health. 2022 Sep 1;22(1):1660. doi: 10.1186/s12889-022-13859-6.
In Nepal, Health Mother's Groups (HMG) are women's group-based programmes for improving maternal and child health. However, they remain underutilised with only 27% of reproductive-aged women participating in an HMG meeting in 2016. This study aimed to understand the facilitators and barriers to HMG meeting participation.
We conducted a convergent mixed-methods study using cross-sectional quantitative data from the 2016 Nepal Demographic and Health Survey and primary data collected via 35 in-depth interviews and eight focus group discussions with 1000-day women and their family members, female community health volunteers (FCHVs) and health facility staff in two geographies of Nepal, Kaligandaki and Chapakot. Quantitative data were analysed using logistic regression and qualitative data using deductive coding. The results were triangulated and thematically organised according to the socio-ecological model (SEM).
Facilitators and barriers emerged across individual, interpersonal and community levels of the SEM. In the survey, women with more children under five years of age, living in a male-headed household, or in rural areas had increased odds of HMG participation (p < 0.05) while belonging to the Janajati caste was associated with lower odds of participation (p < 0.05). Qualitative data helped to explain the findings. For instance, the quantitative analysis found women's education level associated with HMG participation (p < 0.05) while the qualitative analysis showed different ways women's education level could facilitate or hinder participation. Qualitative interviews further revealed that participation was facilitated by women's interest in acquiring new knowledge, having advanced awareness of the meeting schedule and venue, and engagement with health workers or non-government organisation staff. Participation was hindered by the lack of meeting structure and work obligations during the agricultural season.
To improve women's participation in HMGs in Nepal, it is necessary to address factors at the SEM's individual, interpersonal, and community levels, such as enhancing FCHV literacy, providing advance notice of the meeting schedule, upgrading the meeting venues and reducing women's workload through family support, particularly during agricultural season. These improvements are essential for strengthening effective implementation of HMG meetings and similar women's group-based platforms, and for ultimately improving maternal and child health in Nepal.
在尼泊尔,健康母亲小组(HMG)是一种以妇女群体为基础的项目,旨在改善母婴健康。然而,它们的利用率仍然很低,只有 2016 年 27%的育龄妇女参加了 HMG 会议。本研究旨在了解 HMG 会议参与的促进因素和障碍。
我们采用了横断面定量数据和定性数据相结合的方法,使用了 2016 年尼泊尔人口与健康调查的横断面定量数据,并通过对尼泊尔两个地区卡利甘达基和查帕克托的 1000 天妇女及其家庭成员、女性社区卫生志愿者(FCHV)和卫生机构工作人员的 35 次深入访谈和 8 次焦点小组讨论收集了定性数据。定量数据采用逻辑回归分析,定性数据采用演绎编码。根据社会生态学模型(SEM)对结果进行了三角分析和主题组织。
促进因素和障碍出现在 SEM 的个人、人际和社区各个层面。在调查中,5 岁以下儿童较多、生活在男性主导的家庭或农村地区的妇女、属于 Janajati 种姓的妇女参加 HMG 的几率增加(p<0.05),而属于 Janajati 种姓的妇女参加 HMG 的几率降低(p<0.05)。定性数据有助于解释这些发现。例如,定量分析发现妇女的教育水平与 HMG 的参与有关(p<0.05),而定性分析则显示了妇女的教育水平如何促进或阻碍参与的不同方式。定性访谈还进一步表明,妇女对获取新知识的兴趣、对会议日程和地点的提前了解、以及与卫生工作者或非政府组织工作人员的互动,都促进了参与。参与受到农业季节期间会议结构和工作义务缺乏的阻碍。
为了提高尼泊尔妇女参加 HMG 的比例,有必要在 SEM 的个人、人际和社区各个层面上解决问题,如提高 FCHV 的文化素养、提前通知会议日程、升级会议场所、通过家庭支持减轻妇女的工作量,特别是在农业季节。这些改进对于加强 HMG 会议和类似妇女群体为基础的平台的有效实施,以及最终改善尼泊尔的母婴健康至关重要。