Centre for Geographic Medicine (Coast), KEMRI-Wellcome Trust research programme, Nairobi, Kenya.
THIS Institute, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2023 May 26;23(1):389. doi: 10.1186/s12884-023-05686-3.
There is growing evidence that parental participation in the care of small and sick newborns benefits both babies and parents. While studies have investigated the roles that mothers play in newborn units in high income contexts (HIC), there is little exploration of how contextual factors interplay to influence the ways in which mothers participate in the care of their small and sick newborn babies in very resource constrained settings such as those found in many countries in sub-Saharan Africa.
Ethnographic methods (observations, informal conversations and formal interviews) were used to collect data during 627 h of fieldwork between March 2017 and August 2018 in the neonatal units of one government and one faith-based hospital in Kenya. Data were analysed using a modified grounded theory approach.
There were marked differences between the hospitals in the participation by mothers in the care of their sick newborn babies. The timing and types of caring task that the mothers undertook were shaped by the structural, economic and social context of the hospitals. In the resource constrained government funded hospital, the immediate informal and unplanned delegation of care to mothers was routine. In the faith-based hospital mothers were initially separated from their babies and introduced to bathing and diaper change tasks slowly under the close supervision of nurses. In both hospitals appropriate breast-feeding support was lacking, and the needs of the mothers were largely ignored.
In highly resource constrained hospitals with low nurse to baby ratios, mothers are required to provide primary and some specialised care to their sick newborns with little information or support on how undertake the necessary tasks. In better resourced hospital settings, most caring tasks are initially performed by nurses leaving mothers feeling powerless and worried about their capacity to care for their babies after discharge. Interventions need to focus on how to better equip hospitals and nurses to support mothers in caring for their sick newborns, promoting family centred care.
越来越多的证据表明,父母参与照顾小而患病的新生儿对婴儿和父母都有益。虽然有研究调查了母亲在高收入环境(HIC)中新生儿病房所扮演的角色,但对于在资源匮乏的环境中(如撒哈拉以南非洲的许多国家),母亲如何参与照顾小而患病的新生儿的方式,以及如何受到各种环境因素的影响,却知之甚少。
在 2017 年 3 月至 2018 年 8 月期间,使用民族志方法(观察、非正式对话和正式访谈)在肯尼亚的一家政府医院和一家信仰医院的新生儿病房进行了 627 小时的实地工作,收集数据。使用改进的扎根理论方法分析数据。
在肯尼亚的这两家医院中,母亲在照顾患病新生儿方面存在明显差异。母亲承担的照顾任务的时间和类型受到医院的结构、经济和社会背景的影响。在资源匮乏的政府资助医院,母亲会立即在非正式且无计划的情况下被委托照顾新生儿。在信仰医院,母亲最初与婴儿分开,并在护士的密切监督下缓慢地接受洗澡和换尿布等任务。在这两家医院,都缺乏适当的母乳喂养支持,母亲的需求在很大程度上被忽视。
在资源极度匮乏、护士与婴儿比例低的医院中,母亲需要为患病的新生儿提供主要和一些专业的护理,而很少有信息或支持来指导他们如何完成必要的任务。在资源更充足的医院环境中,最初大多数护理任务由护士完成,这让母亲感到无能为力,并担心自己在出院后照顾婴儿的能力。干预措施需要侧重于如何更好地为医院和护士配备支持母亲照顾患病新生儿的能力,促进以家庭为中心的护理。