We Won’t Go There: Barriers to Accessing Maternal and Newborn Care in District Thatta, Pakistan
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Study Participants
2.2. Interview Guides Development
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Ethical Consideration
2.5. Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Individual Barriers
3.1.1. Mistrust towards Public Health Facilities
“The doctors treat us like we are not humans. Imagine waiting for four hours and then the doctor only gives you 30 seconds of his time.” (Men, 34 years, FGD)
“The staff is so rude and they do not care about patients I went …. for an ultrasound. The staff told me that the machine was not working, and I had to come again. Later, I found out that they are not operating the machine because the operator had decided to leave work early.” (Woman, 29 years, FGD)
“No matter what illness you go to the public hospital for they give you the same medication. Hypertension…diabetes…stomach pain it is the same medicine every time. What is worse is that these medicines don’t work. When we go to the private clinic, we get a different medicine and it always works.” (Woman, 29 years, FGD)
3.1.2. Inadequate Symptom Recognition
“My face and hands were swollen for weeks and I was having headache and abdominal pain, but I thought it was nothing and just a normal part of pregnancy. It was only after my body starting shaking that I went to the hospital.” (Woman, 24 years, FGD)
“Women do not go to the clinic during pregnancy. They only go when something severe happens such as bleeding. They (pregnant women) think of abdominal pain and headaches as a routine part of life.” (LHW, 48 years, FGD)
3.2. Sociocultural Barriers
3.2.1. Aversion to Biomedical Interventions
“The local cure (Desi Ilaj) is always the best approach. If you take these medicines and injections, you will be worse off than you were. They (doctors) fix things in the short term. Using herbs such as Kalonji and Moringa are best.” (Man, 48 years, FGD)
“During our door-to-door visits, we provide free folic acid and iron tablets. Pregnant women usually refuse because they think the micronutrients will cause pregnancy complications.” (LHW, 37 years, IDI)
“Vitamin pills increase the size of the fetus. Since they have started giving us these pills, we have to deliver our babies through cesarean. I cannot afford such a complicated delivery, I have no money.” (Woman, 39 years, IDI)
“We should not be vaccinating pregnant mothers. Their bodies cannot take what is in these injections. I will only get vaccinated in the 7th month of my pregnancy because it will cause an abortion in the first two trimesters.” (Woman, 29 years, FGD)
3.2.2. Gendered Imbalances in Decision Making
“I prefer that my wife deliver our child at home because the Dai charges only 500–1000 rupees. If I were to take her to the hospital, I would have to spend close to 10,000 rupees for a routine delivery and more in case of any complications.” (Man, 48 years, FGD)
“I will try and have the baby delivered at home and if there are any complications then I will rush my wife to the hospital.” (Man, 40 years, FGD)
“I would like to deliver all my children at the hospital. The medicine, injections and trained staff that are available at private health facilities are better than what we get from TBAs at home.” (Woman, 33 years, FGD)
“Many women confide in me that they would like to deliver their children at the private hospital, but they are not permitted. They ask me to speak to their husbands. Sometimes they listen but usually the man refuses.” (LHW, 45 years, IDI)
“I have had a really big argument with my mother-in-law and my husband over the delivery of our second child. I want to go to the private medical clinic, but they will not let me. They say that it is too expensive and ask me why I should get special treatment.” (Woman, 40 years, FGD)
3.2.3. Restricted Women’s Mobility
“I observed severe labor pain and started bleeding. At the time my husband was working in the fields and only came back home in the evening. I was taken to hospital by my husband because I cannot go alone to health facility without a male companion.” (Woman, 21 years, FGD)
“We counsel women to seek timely ANC and PNC services, but women often miss essential ANC visits because they remain dependent on men to move out from the home. Sometimes, they [males] are busy in the field and women do not seek ANC at all.” (LHW, 38 years, IDI)
3.3. Structural Barriers
3.3.1. Ineffective Referral Systems
“When I went to the basic health unit, I was referred to the district hospital for ultrasound scan. We took four days to arrange money for my visit and when we reached the hospital, we were told that did not have a functional ultrasound machine.” (Woman, 32 years, FGD)
“Whenever the basic health unit refers us to a doctor, he is not present. We make arrangements for transportation and accommodation only to find out that these services are unavailable. At the end it is best to just opt for home care.” (Man, 32 years, FGD)
3.3.2. Prohibitively Expensive Transportation Services
“When I go to the field to sell my labor, they pay me Rs.400 for the day. If I have to transport my wife to the district hospital it will cost me Rs. 1500. These are nearly my wages for the whole week.” (Man, 40 years, FGD)
“When we found out that our child was positioned the wrong way, we knew that this would be a complicated delivery and that we would have to make many visits to the hospital. In anticipation my husband sold one of our goats so that we could have some many to make arrangements.” (Woman, 32 years, FGD)
4. Discussion
4.1. Individual Barriers
4.2. Sociocultural Barriers
4.3. Structural Barriers
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
References
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Stakeholders | Total Interviews 1 | Total FGD 2 Participants | Total Participants |
---|---|---|---|
Women | - | 28 (4 sessions) | 28 |
Men | - | 26 (4 sessions) | 26 |
LHW 3 | 6 | - | 6 |
Total | 6 | 54 (8 sessions) | 60 |
Code | Type of Healthcare Providers | Education | Type of Employment | Age in Years | Working Experience in Years |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | LHW | Matric | Public sector | 48 | 19 |
2 | LHW | Middle | Public sector | 45 | 19 |
3 | LHW | Matric | Public sector | 39 | 15 |
4 | LHW | Intermediate | Public sector | 54 | 24 |
5 | LHW | Matric | Public sector | 33 | 12 |
6 | LHW | Matric | Public sector | 37 | 14 |
Sociodemographic Variables | Categories | f (%) |
---|---|---|
Gender | Male | 28 (51.9%) |
Female | 26 (48.1%) | |
Age | 15–24 years | 14 (25.9%) |
25–34 years | 19 (35.2%) | |
35 and above | 21 (38.9%) | |
Education | Illiterate | 32 (59.3%) |
Primary | 13 (24.0%) | |
Middle and above | 9 (16.7%) | |
Number of children | 2–3 | 23 (42.6%) |
4–5 | 19 (35.2%) | |
6 and more | 12 (22.2%) |
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Asim, M.; Saleem, S.; Ahmed, Z.H.; Naeem, I.; Abrejo, F.; Fatmi, Z.; Siddiqi, S. We Won’t Go There: Barriers to Accessing Maternal and Newborn Care in District Thatta, Pakistan. Healthcare 2021, 9, 1314. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9101314
Asim M, Saleem S, Ahmed ZH, Naeem I, Abrejo F, Fatmi Z, Siddiqi S. We Won’t Go There: Barriers to Accessing Maternal and Newborn Care in District Thatta, Pakistan. Healthcare. 2021; 9(10):1314. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9101314
Chicago/Turabian StyleAsim, Muhammad, Sarah Saleem, Zarak Husain Ahmed, Imran Naeem, Farina Abrejo, Zafar Fatmi, and Sameen Siddiqi. 2021. "We Won’t Go There: Barriers to Accessing Maternal and Newborn Care in District Thatta, Pakistan" Healthcare 9, no. 10: 1314. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9101314
APA StyleAsim, M., Saleem, S., Ahmed, Z. H., Naeem, I., Abrejo, F., Fatmi, Z., & Siddiqi, S. (2021). We Won’t Go There: Barriers to Accessing Maternal and Newborn Care in District Thatta, Pakistan. Healthcare, 9(10), 1314. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare9101314