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Respectful maternal and newborn care: measurement in one EN-BIRTH study hospital in Nepal

Authors :
Rejina Gurung
Harriet Ruysen
Avinash K. Sunny
Louise T. Day
Loveday Penn-Kekana
Mats Målqvist
Binda Ghimire
Dela Singh
Omkar Basnet
Srijana Sharma
Theresa Shaver
Allisyn C. Moran
Joy E. Lawn
Ashish KC
EN-BIRTH Study Group
Source :
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, Vol 21, Iss S1, Pp 1-13 (2021), BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMC, 2021.

Abstract

Background Respectful maternal and newborn care (RMNC) is an important component of high-quality care but progress is impeded by critical measurement gaps for women and newborns. The Every Newborn Birth Indicators Research Tracking in Hospitals (EN-BIRTH) study was an observational study with mixed methods assessing measurement validity for coverage and quality of maternal and newborn indicators. This paper reports results regarding the measurement of respectful care for women and newborns. Methods At one EN-BIRTH study site in Pokhara, Nepal, we included additional questions during exit-survey interviews with women about their experiences (July 2017–July 2018). The questionnaire was based on seven mistreatment typologies: Physical; Sexual; or Verbal abuse; Stigma/discrimination; Failure to meet professional standards of care; Poor rapport between women and providers; and Health care denied due to inability to pay. We calculated associations between these typologies and potential determinants of health – ethnicity, age, sex, mode of birth – as possible predictors for reporting poor care. Results Among 4296 women interviewed, none reported physical, sexual, or verbal abuse. 15.7% of women were dissatisfied with privacy, and 13.0% of women reported their birth experience did not meet their religious and cultural needs. In descriptive analysis, adjusted odds ratios and multivariate analysis showed primiparous women were less likely to report respectful care (β = 0.23, p-value p-value 0.037) than women identifying as Chettri/Brahmin. Women who had caesarean section were less likely to report poor care during childbirth (β = − 0.42; p-value Conclusions Measurement of respectful care at exit interview after hospital birth is challenging, and women generally reported 100% respectful care for themselves and their baby. Specific questions, with stratification by mode of birth, women’s age and ethnicity, are important to identify those mistreated during care and to prioritise action. More research is needed to develop evidence-based measures to track experience of care, including zero separation for the mother-newborn pair, and to improve monitoring.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
14712393
Volume :
21
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8a30a517a86b7807beb619a2bdf23f5d