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Pregnant women and health workers’ perspectives on perinatal mental health and intimate partner violence in rural Ethiopia: a qualitative interview study
by
Keynejad, Roxanne C.
, Bitew, Tesera
, Mulushoa, Adiyam
, Howard, Louise M.
, Hanlon, Charlotte
in
Antenatal care
/ Community
/ Domestic violence
/ Ethiopia - epidemiology
/ Female
/ Focus groups
/ Gender-based violence
/ Gynecology
/ Health facilities
/ Humans
/ Infant, Newborn
/ Informed consent
/ Interviews
/ Intimate partner violence
/ Intimate Partner Violence - psychology
/ Maternal and Child Health
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mental depression
/ Mental disorders
/ Mental Health
/ Obstetrics
/ Perinatal depression
/ Perinatal mental health
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnant Women - psychology
/ Qualitative Research
/ Questionnaires
/ Reproductive Medicine
/ Womens health
/ Workers
2023
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Pregnant women and health workers’ perspectives on perinatal mental health and intimate partner violence in rural Ethiopia: a qualitative interview study
by
Keynejad, Roxanne C.
, Bitew, Tesera
, Mulushoa, Adiyam
, Howard, Louise M.
, Hanlon, Charlotte
in
Antenatal care
/ Community
/ Domestic violence
/ Ethiopia - epidemiology
/ Female
/ Focus groups
/ Gender-based violence
/ Gynecology
/ Health facilities
/ Humans
/ Infant, Newborn
/ Informed consent
/ Interviews
/ Intimate partner violence
/ Intimate Partner Violence - psychology
/ Maternal and Child Health
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mental depression
/ Mental disorders
/ Mental Health
/ Obstetrics
/ Perinatal depression
/ Perinatal mental health
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnant Women - psychology
/ Qualitative Research
/ Questionnaires
/ Reproductive Medicine
/ Womens health
/ Workers
2023
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Pregnant women and health workers’ perspectives on perinatal mental health and intimate partner violence in rural Ethiopia: a qualitative interview study
by
Keynejad, Roxanne C.
, Bitew, Tesera
, Mulushoa, Adiyam
, Howard, Louise M.
, Hanlon, Charlotte
in
Antenatal care
/ Community
/ Domestic violence
/ Ethiopia - epidemiology
/ Female
/ Focus groups
/ Gender-based violence
/ Gynecology
/ Health facilities
/ Humans
/ Infant, Newborn
/ Informed consent
/ Interviews
/ Intimate partner violence
/ Intimate Partner Violence - psychology
/ Maternal and Child Health
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mental depression
/ Mental disorders
/ Mental Health
/ Obstetrics
/ Perinatal depression
/ Perinatal mental health
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnant Women - psychology
/ Qualitative Research
/ Questionnaires
/ Reproductive Medicine
/ Womens health
/ Workers
2023
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Pregnant women and health workers’ perspectives on perinatal mental health and intimate partner violence in rural Ethiopia: a qualitative interview study
Journal Article
Pregnant women and health workers’ perspectives on perinatal mental health and intimate partner violence in rural Ethiopia: a qualitative interview study
2023
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Overview
Background
Mental health conditions are common during the perinatal period and associated with maternal, foetal, and neonatal morbidity and mortality. There is an established bidirectional relationship between mental health conditions and intimate partner violence (IPV), including during and after pregnancy. Mean lifetime prevalence of physical, sexual or emotional IPV exposure among women in rural Ethiopia is estimated to be 61% and may be even higher during the perinatal period. We aimed to explore the perspectives of women and antenatal care (ANC) health workers on the relationship between all types of IPV and perinatal mental health, to inform the adaptation of a psychological intervention for pregnant women experiencing IPV in rural Ethiopia.
Methods
We conducted in-depth qualitative interviews with 16 pregnant women and 12 health workers in the Gurage zone of the Southern Nations, Nationalities and People’s Region of Ethiopia, between December 2018 and December 2019. We conducted thematic analysis of English-translated transcripts of audio-recorded Amharic-language interviews.
Results
Participants contextualised IPV as the primary form of abusive treatment women experienced, connected by multiple pathways to emotional and bodily distress. Patriarchal norms explained how the actions of neighbours, family, community leaders, law enforcement, and government agents in response to IPV often reinforced women’s experiences of abuse. This created a sense of powerlessness, exacerbated by the tension between high cultural expectations of reciprocal generosity and severe deprivation. Women and health workers advocated a psychological intervention to address women’s powerlessness over the range of difficulties they faced in their daily lives.
Conclusions
Women and health workers in rural Ethiopia perceive multiple, interconnected pathways between IPV and perinatal emotional difficulties. Contrary to expectations of sensitivity, women and health workers were comfortable discussing the impact of IPV on perinatal mental health, and supported the need for brief mental health interventions integrated into ANC.
Publisher
BioMed Central,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
Subject
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