Centre for Social Science and Global Health, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
PLoS One. 2013;8(1):e53747. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0053747. Epub 2013 Jan 15.
Antenatal care (ANC) is a key strategy to improve maternal and infant health. However, survey data from sub-Saharan Africa indicate that women often only initiate ANC after the first trimester and do not achieve the recommended number of ANC visits. Drawing on qualitative data, this article comparatively explores the factors that influence ANC attendance across four sub-Saharan African sites in three countries (Ghana, Kenya and Malawi) with varying levels of ANC attendance.
Data were collected as part of a programme of qualitative research investigating the social and cultural context of malaria in pregnancy. A range of methods was employed interviews, focus groups with diverse respondents and observations in local communities and health facilities.
Across the sites, women attended ANC at least once. However, their descriptions of ANC were often vague. General ideas about pregnancy care - checking the foetus' position or monitoring its progress - motivated women to attend ANC; as did, especially in Kenya, obtaining the ANC card to avoid reprimands from health workers. Women's timing of ANC initiation was influenced by reproductive concerns and pregnancy uncertainties, particularly during the first trimester, and how ANC services responded to this uncertainty; age, parity and the associated implications for pregnancy disclosure; interactions with healthcare workers, particularly messages about timing of ANC; and the cost of ANC, including charges levied for ANC procedures - in spite of policies of free ANC - combined with ideas about the compulsory nature of follow-up appointments.
In these socially and culturally diverse sites, the findings suggest that 'supply' side factors have an important influence on ANC attendance: the design of ANC and particularly how ANC deals with the needs and concerns of women during the first trimester has implications for timing of initiation.
产前护理 (ANC) 是改善母婴健康的关键策略。然而,来自撒哈拉以南非洲的调查数据表明,妇女通常在怀孕 12 周后才开始接受 ANC,并且无法达到推荐的 ANC 就诊次数。本文利用定性数据,在加纳、肯尼亚和马拉维这三个国家的四个撒哈拉以南非洲地区,比较了不同 ANC 就诊率的情况下,影响 ANC 就诊的因素。
数据是作为一项调查妊娠期间疟疾的社会和文化背景的定性研究计划的一部分收集的。使用了多种方法,包括对不同受访者进行访谈、焦点小组讨论以及在当地社区和医疗机构进行观察。
在所有地点,妇女至少接受过一次 ANC。然而,她们对 ANC 的描述往往很模糊。检查胎儿位置或监测其发育等一般的妊娠护理观念促使妇女去接受 ANC;在肯尼亚,特别是为了避免受到卫生工作者的斥责而获得 ANC 卡也是促使她们去接受 ANC 的原因之一。妇女开始 ANC 的时间受到生殖健康问题和怀孕不确定性的影响,特别是在怀孕初期,而 ANC 服务如何应对这种不确定性;年龄、产次以及这对怀孕信息披露的影响;与医疗保健工作者的互动,特别是关于 ANC 时间的信息;以及 ANC 的费用,包括 ANC 程序的收费 - 尽管有免费 ANC 的政策 - 加上对后续预约的强制性的看法。
在这些社会和文化多样化的地点,研究结果表明,“供应”方面的因素对 ANC 的就诊率有重要影响:ANC 的设计,特别是 ANC 如何处理妇女在怀孕初期的需求和关注点,对 ANC 的开始时间有影响。