Department of Health Promotion and Community Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, American University of Beirut, Beirut, Lebanon.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2022 Oct 5;22(1):748. doi: 10.1186/s12884-022-05083-2.
Women's childbirth experiences in health facilities is at the core of quality of care. Their perceptions of poor-quality care, including disrespectful care at health facilities during childbirth, is recognized as a significant barrier to seeking care for subsequent births. Research that explores women's perspectives of the dimensions of disrespect and mistreatment during childbirth in Arab countries is scarce, and there is none pertaining to refugee groups who carry the burden of multiple vulnerabilities and who suffer from discontinued care, especially in fragile health systems. This paper aims at presenting Palestinian, Iraqi and Syrian refugee women's experiences, understanding and interpretation of disrespect and mistreatment during childbirth in hospitals in Lebanon.
This study employed phenomenology, a qualitative research design to generate data through in-depth interviews. Women who were 3 to 6 months postpartum were recruited through the non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that are actively engaged in providing welfare and healthcare services to different populations of refugee women in Lebanon. In total, 24 women were interviewed. All interviews were audio recorded, transcribed verbatim and subjected to thematic analysis.
Of the 24 women who participated in this study, 9 were Palestinian, 12 were Syrian and 3 were Iraqi. The participants spoke of restricted choices to hospitals, care providers and to types of birth, while revealing adverse experiences during childbirth in healthcare facilities, including verbal and physical abuse, disrespectful verbal and non-verbal communication by healthcare providers. They also reported sub-standard care, denial of birth companions and breaches to their privacy. Our findings exemplify how the coverage of the cost of facility-based births by UN agencies and NGOs increase refugee women's vulnerability to disrespect and mistreatment during childbirth.
This study shows how disrespect and mistreatment are intertwined in a complex system which is devised to ensure access to facility-based birth for displaced populations. Implications for programs and policies point to the need for strengthening capacity and for providing resources for the adaptation of global guidelines into context-specific strategies for the provision of quality maternity care during humanitarian crises and beyond.
妇女在医疗机构中的分娩经历是护理质量的核心。她们对低质量护理的看法,包括在分娩期间医疗机构中不尊重的护理,被认为是寻求后续分娩护理的一个重大障碍。在阿拉伯国家,探索妇女在分娩期间对不尊重和虐待看法的研究很少,而对于那些背负着多种脆弱性并遭受护理中断的难民群体的研究则更是没有,尤其是在脆弱的卫生系统中。本文旨在介绍巴勒斯坦、伊拉克和叙利亚难民妇女在黎巴嫩医院分娩期间对不尊重和虐待的经历、理解和解释。
本研究采用现象学,一种定性研究设计,通过深入访谈生成数据。通过积极为黎巴嫩不同难民妇女群体提供福利和医疗服务的非政府组织(NGO)招募 3 至 6 个月产后的妇女。共有 24 名妇女接受了采访。所有访谈均进行了录音、逐字记录,并进行了主题分析。
在参与本研究的 24 名妇女中,9 名是巴勒斯坦人,12 名是叙利亚人,3 名是伊拉克人。参与者谈到了对医院、护理提供者和分娩方式的选择受限,同时还透露了在医疗机构分娩期间的不良经历,包括言语和身体虐待、护理提供者不尊重的言语和非言语沟通。她们还报告了标准护理不足、拒绝陪伴分娩和侵犯隐私。我们的研究结果说明了联合国机构和非政府组织为机构分娩支付费用如何增加了难民妇女在分娩期间遭受不尊重和虐待的脆弱性。
本研究表明,不尊重和虐待是如何交织在一个复杂的系统中的,该系统旨在确保流离失所人口获得机构分娩的机会。对方案和政策的影响表明,需要加强能力,并为适应全球准则提供资源,以制定具体情况的战略,为人道主义危机期间及以后提供优质产妇护理。