Providers’ Perceptions of Respectful Maternity Care and Enabling Conditions in a Regional Hospital: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
1. Background
2. Methods
2.1. Study Setting
2.2. Study Population
2.3. Study Sample and Sampling Technique
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Management and Availability
2.6. Data Analysis
2.7. Trustworthiness
2.8. Ethical Considerations
3. Results
3.1. Description of the Sample
3.2. Category 1: Providers’ Perceptions of RMC
3.2.1. Theme 1: Women-Centred Care
Subtheme 1: Holistic Care
It is not just the medical management from an obstetrics perspective but also bringing in the psychological and emotional as well as socio-cultural support that a pregnant woman needs.(41-year-old, Consultant, 16 years of experience in maternity care)
Subtheme 2: Multidisciplinary Approach
RMC is all about being aware and acknowledging that there are role-players involved in our daily duties as maternity service providers. Being a trained professional does not mean I know and can solely accomplish everything. Most importantly my patients also need to give their view on what I do for them or to them.(52-year-old, Operational manager, 30 years of experience in maternity care)
Subtheme 3: Allowing for Companionship/Support During Labour
So, I think most of our negative experiences and outcomes that we get in our unit can be easily corrected by a simple respectful approach, allowing women to be with their preferred companions during labour and always being there with and for labouring women. Besides. “Midwife” simply means being with a woman.(35-year-old, midwife specialist, 12 years of experience in maternity care)
Subtheme 4: Respect, Empathy, and Quality of Care
Me, as an individual, if I was in a patient’s shoes, I would really want to be treated with respect and given proper care regardless of who I am or where I come from, so it makes sense, and it is appropriate that we do the same for our patients.(31-year-old, midwife specialist, 9 years of experience in maternity care)
Respectful maternity care is all about empathy and quality care. It is about treating patients with respect, gentleness, and then communicating with them. I think those are the most compassionate things really. A lot can happen so over and again you need to reassure the moms by communicating with them, how far they are dilated, what is the next thing to do etc.”(26-year-old, midwife, 4 years of experience in maternity care)
3.2.2. Theme 2: Provision of High-Quality Care
Subtheme 1: Individualised Care and Respect for Cultural Beliefs and Practices
I think that it is very important to give respect and treat pregnant women as human beings with specific needs, just like you and me. And they should also be respected in their cultural beliefs and practices.(31-year-old, basic midwife, 5 years of experience in maternity care)
Subtheme 2: Adherence to Professional Practice and Professionalism
Respectful maternity care involves respecting your profession, as we are professional midwives, we are governed by the SANC. We need to respectfully adhere to the stipulated regulations governing us and it also goes to respecting the patients and their rights that are stipulated in the Constitution of our country, as well as just respecting the patient as a human being. So, RMC is considering and in cooperating all those aspects in our daily duties.(35-year-old, midwife specialist, 14 years of experience in maternity care)
Subtheme 3: Practicing Evidence-Based Care: Avoiding Unnecessary Interventions
So, we have a lot of old myths and practices, in both medicine and nursing and this is something we need to stop. Unfortunately, youngsters coming into the healthcare profession copy these and regard them as normal and acceptable. I think continuous teaching of both our older and younger population, within and beyond the maternity field, on what is scientifically proven is the way to go.(38-year-old, consultant, 14 years of experience in maternity care)
3.2.3. Theme 3: Preservation and Promotion of Women’s Rights
Subtheme 1: Ethical and Dignified Care
Respectful maternity care is affording childbearing women the opportunity or a safe measure in which they can seek health care when they need to, and respectfully by abiding by their autonomy, offering them non-maleficence and beneficence in terms of always making sure that whatever you provide to them is in their best interest.(48-year-old, registrar, 12 years of experience in maternity care). (27-year-old, basic midwife, 7 years of experience in maternity care)
Well, I can say though that respectful care is not and should not be only clinical. Doing a vacuum-assisted delivery or doing a caesarean section is all clinical and it’s taken from the protocol book, but the protocol book doesn’t teach you how to incorporate women’s socio-cultural and spiritual dimensions in your care. The healthcare worker, the patients, and other people such as families are 41 supposed to work collaboratively to produce healthy mothers, babies and ultimately a healthy nation.(39-year-old, consultant, 15 years of experience in maternity care)
Subtheme 2: Respecting Women’s Rights
My understanding of respectful maternity care is that it is the dignified approach or treatment that is being given or rendered to pregnant women, which promotes include cooperation between the woman and her caregivers and include cooperation of the whole charter of human rights. A whole in sense that this is not confined to respecting their physical rights only but also their psychosocial, spiritual, and cultural rights.(41-year-old, Consultant, 16 years of experience in maternity care)
3.3. Category 2: Enabling Conditions for the Practice of Respectful Maternity Care
3.3.1. Theme 1: Creation of an Enabling Environment for Healthcare Providers
Subtheme 1: Supervisory Support and Involvement
Managers, play a huge role towards the care we give for example, negative or non-constructive feedback from our managers creates unnecessary pressure on us and sometimes we feel intimidated. Working under such pressure or situation is not good at all for our patients as we end up projecting our frustrations towards them.(30-year-old, basic midwife, 5 years of experience in maternity care)
Subtheme 2: Provision of a Safe Working Environment and Employee Wellness Programmes
It is my recommendation that we get some form of wellness programmes which somehow allow people to express themselves freely when it comes to their professional and social issues—the workplace should be the safe environment for people to express their issues and get them sorted out if there is a way to. They say, “behind a healthy mother and baby is a happy midwife”.(56-year-old, midwife specialist, 33 years of experience in maternity care)
Subtheme 3: Availability and Equitable Distribution of Healthcare Resources
This hospital has an overflow of patients, and we don’t have as much space, staff, and equipment to accommodate large numbers all the time. So, I think we need urgent procurement of staff, stock, and equipment because it is frustrating and tiring for doctors and midwives to be unable to render the expected care with and witness unpleasant patient care outcomes because of close-to-zero resources. How is then a frustrated employee expected to deliver respectful care?(26-year-old, basic midwife, 4 years of experience in maternity care)
3.3.2. Theme 2: In-Service Education
I think in-service training programmes covering burning topics like RMC for both clinical staff and managers should be in place in all maternity care institutions because you would find that most people might know about such, but they don’t actually understand it. The more people know about concepts such as RMC through regular talks and teachings, the greater the chances of practicing it.(53-year-old, operational manager, 20 years of experience in maternity care)
3.3.3. Theme 3: Accountability: Holding Healthcare Workers Responsible for Their Actions
The core of our daily duties as midwives is to provide equal, supportive, and non-humiliating treatment to women presenting at our facilities regardless of their social, cultural, and religious background. Failure for healthcare providers to practice the above should be a disciplinable offense. Incidents of disrespect and disciplinary measures should not be treated as “under the carpet” matters so that all maternity service providers can learn that there is no room for disrespect in our facilities.(35-year-old, registrar, 12 years of experience in maternity care)
3.3.4. Theme 4: Community Education and Involvement
So, communication and education are major keys, I can say that most of our maternity care problems are related to lack of information in the communities. The public needs to be informed of the different levels of care and services available at each level. For example, a woman who has had a previous\caesarean section delivery needs to know that she cannot be assisted in an MOU when in labour.(44-year-old, basic midwife, 18 years of experience in maternity care)
I mean if we look at childbirth at the time of our great grandmothers, delivering babies was a community effort and so the holistic approach was there. You know certain cultures like in my own culture your mom, your mom in law and all other women experienced in childbirth processes and practices would come together to assist—you would deliver, you would have, a special type of bath and rituals to ensure that you and your baby are safe and healthy.”(35-year-old, midwife specialist, 10 years of experience in maternity care)
4. Discussion
5. Strengths and Limitations
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristic (n = 30) | Category | Actual Number | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|
Age | 25–35 years | 14 | 46.7% |
35–45 years | 11 | 36.75% | |
45–55 years | 4 | 13.3% | |
>55 years | 1 | 3.3% | |
Gender | Female | 17 | 56.7% |
Male | 13 | 43.3% | |
Qualification/Position | Basic midwives/accoucheurs | 7 | 23.3% |
Midwife specialists | 8 | 26.8% | |
Operational managers | 4 | 13.3% | |
Registrars | 7 | 23.3% | |
Consultants | 4 | 13.3% | |
Years of Experience | <2 years | 0 | 0% |
2–10 years | 15 | 50.0% | |
10–20 years | 8 | 26.7% | |
20–30 years | 6 | 20.0% | |
>30 years | 1 | 3.3% |
Category | Theme | Subthemes | Number of Instances Each Theme or Subtheme Came up During Interviews (n = 30) |
---|---|---|---|
Providers’ perceptions of RMC | Women-centred care | Holistic care | 30 |
Multidisciplinary approach | 28 | ||
Allowing companionship/support during labour | 18 | ||
Respect, empathy, and quality of care | 22 | ||
Providing high-quality care | Individualised care and respect for cultural beliefs and practices | 28 | |
Adherence to professional practice and professionalism | 15 | ||
Practicing evidence-based care: avoiding unnecessary interventions | 18 | ||
Preservation and promotion of women’s rights | Ethical and dignified care | 29 | |
Respecting women’s cultural rights | 24 | ||
Enabling conditions for the practice of RMC | Creation of an enabling environment for healthcare workers | Supervisory support and involvement | 30 |
Provision of a safe working environment and employee wellness programmes | 30 | ||
Availability and equitable distribution of healthcare resources | 30 | ||
In-service education | 21 | ||
Accountability: holding healthcare workers responsible for their actions | 15 | ||
Community education and involvement | 20 |
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Zwane, S.P.; Chauke, L. Providers’ Perceptions of Respectful Maternity Care and Enabling Conditions in a Regional Hospital: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2025, 22, 1570. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22101570
Zwane SP, Chauke L. Providers’ Perceptions of Respectful Maternity Care and Enabling Conditions in a Regional Hospital: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2025; 22(10):1570. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22101570
Chicago/Turabian StyleZwane, Sthembile P., and Lawrence Chauke. 2025. "Providers’ Perceptions of Respectful Maternity Care and Enabling Conditions in a Regional Hospital: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 22, no. 10: 1570. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22101570
APA StyleZwane, S. P., & Chauke, L. (2025). Providers’ Perceptions of Respectful Maternity Care and Enabling Conditions in a Regional Hospital: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 22(10), 1570. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22101570