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Postnatal Care Experiences and Barriers to Care Utilization for Home- and Facility-Delivered Newborns in Uganda and Zambia
by
Macwan’gi, Mubiana
, Masvawure, Tsitsi B.
, Simbaya, Joseph
, Sacks, Emma
, Kruk, Margaret
, Atuyambe, Lynn M.
, Neema, Stella
in
Attended births
/ Childbirth & labor
/ Choice Behavior
/ Community
/ Data collection
/ Delivery, Obstetric - psychology
/ Delivery, Obstetric - utilization
/ Female
/ Focus Groups
/ Gynecology
/ Health promotion
/ Home births
/ Humans
/ Initiatives
/ Low income groups
/ Maternal & child health
/ Maternal and Child Health
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Midwifery
/ Mortality
/ Natural Childbirth - psychology
/ Natural Childbirth - utilization
/ Newborn babies
/ Obstetrics
/ Pediatrics
/ Population Economics
/ Postnatal Care - psychology
/ Postnatal Care - utilization
/ Postpartum period
/ Pregnancy
/ Public Health
/ Qualitative Research
/ Quality of Health Care
/ Rural Population - statistics & numerical data
/ Sociology
/ Uganda
/ Womens health
/ Zambia
2017
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Postnatal Care Experiences and Barriers to Care Utilization for Home- and Facility-Delivered Newborns in Uganda and Zambia
by
Macwan’gi, Mubiana
, Masvawure, Tsitsi B.
, Simbaya, Joseph
, Sacks, Emma
, Kruk, Margaret
, Atuyambe, Lynn M.
, Neema, Stella
in
Attended births
/ Childbirth & labor
/ Choice Behavior
/ Community
/ Data collection
/ Delivery, Obstetric - psychology
/ Delivery, Obstetric - utilization
/ Female
/ Focus Groups
/ Gynecology
/ Health promotion
/ Home births
/ Humans
/ Initiatives
/ Low income groups
/ Maternal & child health
/ Maternal and Child Health
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Midwifery
/ Mortality
/ Natural Childbirth - psychology
/ Natural Childbirth - utilization
/ Newborn babies
/ Obstetrics
/ Pediatrics
/ Population Economics
/ Postnatal Care - psychology
/ Postnatal Care - utilization
/ Postpartum period
/ Pregnancy
/ Public Health
/ Qualitative Research
/ Quality of Health Care
/ Rural Population - statistics & numerical data
/ Sociology
/ Uganda
/ Womens health
/ Zambia
2017
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Postnatal Care Experiences and Barriers to Care Utilization for Home- and Facility-Delivered Newborns in Uganda and Zambia
by
Macwan’gi, Mubiana
, Masvawure, Tsitsi B.
, Simbaya, Joseph
, Sacks, Emma
, Kruk, Margaret
, Atuyambe, Lynn M.
, Neema, Stella
in
Attended births
/ Childbirth & labor
/ Choice Behavior
/ Community
/ Data collection
/ Delivery, Obstetric - psychology
/ Delivery, Obstetric - utilization
/ Female
/ Focus Groups
/ Gynecology
/ Health promotion
/ Home births
/ Humans
/ Initiatives
/ Low income groups
/ Maternal & child health
/ Maternal and Child Health
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Midwifery
/ Mortality
/ Natural Childbirth - psychology
/ Natural Childbirth - utilization
/ Newborn babies
/ Obstetrics
/ Pediatrics
/ Population Economics
/ Postnatal Care - psychology
/ Postnatal Care - utilization
/ Postpartum period
/ Pregnancy
/ Public Health
/ Qualitative Research
/ Quality of Health Care
/ Rural Population - statistics & numerical data
/ Sociology
/ Uganda
/ Womens health
/ Zambia
2017
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Postnatal Care Experiences and Barriers to Care Utilization for Home- and Facility-Delivered Newborns in Uganda and Zambia
Journal Article
Postnatal Care Experiences and Barriers to Care Utilization for Home- and Facility-Delivered Newborns in Uganda and Zambia
2017
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Overview
Objectives
The objective of this study was to examine experiences with, and barriers to, accessing postnatal care services, in the context of a maternal health initiative.
Methods
As part of a larger evaluation of an initiative to promote facility deliveries in 8 rural districts in Uganda and Zambia, 48 focus groups were held with recently-delivered women with previous home and facility deliveries (6 per district). Data on postnatal care experiences were translated, coded and analyzed using thematic content analysis techniques. Results were categorized into: positive postnatal care experiences, barriers to postnatal care utilization, and negative postnatal care experiences.
Results
Women who accessed care largely reported positive experiences, with Zambian women generally reporting more positive interactions than Ugandan women. The main reasons given for low postnatal care utilization were low awareness about the need, fear of mistreatment by clinic staff, cost and distance. In half of the focus groups, women described personal experience or knowledge of denial or threatened denial of postnatal care due to the birth location. Although outright denial of care was not common, women frequently described various types of actual or presumed discrimination because of having a home birth.
Conclusions for Practice
While many women reported positive experiences with postnatal care utilization, cases of delay or denial of postnatal care exist. As programs incentivize facility deliveries, the lack of focus on postnatal support may place home-delivered newborns in “double jeopardy” due to poor quality intra-partum care and reduced access to postnatal care.
Publisher
Springer US,Springer,Springer Nature B.V
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