Back to Search
Start Over
Barriers and facilitators to antenatal and delivery care in western Kenya: a qualitative study
- Source :
- BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- BioMed Central, 2015.
-
Abstract
- Background\ud In western Kenya, maternal mortality is a major public health problem estimated at 730/100,000 live births, higher than the Kenyan national average of 488/ 100,000 women. Many women do not attend antenatal care (ANC) in the first trimester, half do not receive 4 ANC visits. A high proportion use traditional birth attendants (TBA) for delivery and 1 in five deliver unassisted. The present study was carried out to ascertain why women do not fully utilise health facility ANC and delivery services.\ud \ud Methods\ud A qualitative study using 8 focus group discussions each consisting of 8–10 women, aged 15–49 years. Thematic analysis identified the main barriers and facilitators to health facility based ANC and delivery.\ud \ud Results\ud Attending health facility for ANC was viewed positively. Three elements of care were important; testing for disease including HIV, checking the position of the foetus, and\ud receiving injections and / or medications. Receiving a bed net and obtaining a registration card were also valuable. Four barriers to attending a health facility for ANC were evident; attitudes of clinic staff, long clinic waiting times, HIV testing and cost, although not all women felt the cost was prohibitive being worth it for the health of the child. Most women preferred to deliver in a health facility due to better management of complications. However cost was a barrier, and a reason to visit a TBA because of flexible payment. Other barriers were unpredictable labour and transport, staff attitudes and husbands’ preference.\ud \ud Conclusions\ud Our findings suggest that women in western Kenya are amenable to ANC and would be willing and even prefer to deliver in a healthcare facility, if it were affordable and accessible to them. However for this to happen there needs to be investment in health promotion, and transport, as well as reducing or removing all fees associated with antenatal and delivery care. Yet creating demand for service will need to go alongside investment in antenatal services at organisational, staffing and facility level in order to meet both current and future increase in demand.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Program evaluation
medicine.medical_specialty
Facilitators
Adolescent
Attitude of Health Personnel
Maternal Health
Population
Staffing
Antenatal care
Midwifery
wa_310
Ambulatory Care Facilities
wa_550
Health facility
Nursing
Pregnancy
Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Health care
medicine
Humans
Western Kenya
education
f0e481db
Qualitative Research
education.field_of_study
wa_30
business.industry
Delivery care
Public health
Pregnancy Outcome
Obstetrics and Gynecology
Prenatal Care
Focus Groups
Middle Aged
Patient Acceptance of Health Care
Kenya
Focus group
Health promotion
Socioeconomic Factors
Female
Reproductive Health Services
Qualitative
business
Barriers
Research Article
wq_175
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 14712393
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....0eefeeda3e98a5c6a0ac88f364a193e4