Barriers to formal health care seeking during pregnancy, childbirth and postnatal period: a qualitative study in Siaya County in rural Kenya

Abstract Background There is broad agreement that antenatal care (ANC) interventions, skilled attendance at birth and management of complications arising after delivery are key strategies that can tackle the high burden of maternal mortality in sub-Saharan Africa. In Kenya, utilisation rate of these...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Caroline A. Ochieng, Aloyce S. Odhiambo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-09-01
Series:BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12884-019-2485-2
id doaj-ac8d0409d73648a6b2002c4fb3f3ae3c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-ac8d0409d73648a6b2002c4fb3f3ae3c2020-11-25T03:21:32ZengBMCBMC Pregnancy and Childbirth1471-23932019-09-0119111410.1186/s12884-019-2485-2Barriers to formal health care seeking during pregnancy, childbirth and postnatal period: a qualitative study in Siaya County in rural KenyaCaroline A. Ochieng0Aloyce S. Odhiambo1Stockholm Environment InstituteSafe Water and AIDS Project (SWAP)Abstract Background There is broad agreement that antenatal care (ANC) interventions, skilled attendance at birth and management of complications arising after delivery are key strategies that can tackle the high burden of maternal mortality in sub-Saharan Africa. In Kenya, utilisation rate of these services has remained low despite a government policy on free maternal care. The present study sought to understand what factors are leading to the low healthcare seeking during pregnancy, child birth and postnatal period in Siaya County in Kenya. Methods Six Focus Group Discussions were conducted with 50 women attending ANC in 6 public primary healthcare facilities. Participants were drawn from a sample of 200 women who were eligible participants in a Conditional Cash Transfer project aimed at increasing utilization of healthcare services during pregnancy and postnatal period. Interviews were conducted at the health facilities, recorded, transcribed and analysed using thematic analysis. Results Multiple factors beyond the commonly reported distance to health facility and lack of transportation and finances explained the low utilization of services. Emergent themes included a lack of understanding of the role of ANC beyond the treatment of regular ailments. Women with no complicated pregnancies therefore missed or went in late for the visits. A missed health visit contributed to future missed visits, not just for ANC but also for facility delivery and postnatal care. The underlying cause of this relationship was a fear of reprimand from the health staff and denial of care. The negative attitude of the health workers explained the pervasive fear expressed by the participants, as well as being on its own a reason for not making the visits. The effect was not just on the woman with the negative experience, but spiraled and affected the decision of other women and their social networks. Conclusions The complexity of the barriers to healthcare visits implies that narrow focused solutions are unlikely to succeed. Instead, there should broad-based solutions that focus on the entire continuum of maternal care with a special focus on ANC. There is an urgent need to shift the negative attitude of healthcare workers towards their clients.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12884-019-2485-2Antenatal careFacility deliveryHome birthPostnatal careQualitative studyMaternal mortality
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Caroline A. Ochieng
Aloyce S. Odhiambo
spellingShingle Caroline A. Ochieng
Aloyce S. Odhiambo
Barriers to formal health care seeking during pregnancy, childbirth and postnatal period: a qualitative study in Siaya County in rural Kenya
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Antenatal care
Facility delivery
Home birth
Postnatal care
Qualitative study
Maternal mortality
author_facet Caroline A. Ochieng
Aloyce S. Odhiambo
author_sort Caroline A. Ochieng
title Barriers to formal health care seeking during pregnancy, childbirth and postnatal period: a qualitative study in Siaya County in rural Kenya
title_short Barriers to formal health care seeking during pregnancy, childbirth and postnatal period: a qualitative study in Siaya County in rural Kenya
title_full Barriers to formal health care seeking during pregnancy, childbirth and postnatal period: a qualitative study in Siaya County in rural Kenya
title_fullStr Barriers to formal health care seeking during pregnancy, childbirth and postnatal period: a qualitative study in Siaya County in rural Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Barriers to formal health care seeking during pregnancy, childbirth and postnatal period: a qualitative study in Siaya County in rural Kenya
title_sort barriers to formal health care seeking during pregnancy, childbirth and postnatal period: a qualitative study in siaya county in rural kenya
publisher BMC
series BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
issn 1471-2393
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Abstract Background There is broad agreement that antenatal care (ANC) interventions, skilled attendance at birth and management of complications arising after delivery are key strategies that can tackle the high burden of maternal mortality in sub-Saharan Africa. In Kenya, utilisation rate of these services has remained low despite a government policy on free maternal care. The present study sought to understand what factors are leading to the low healthcare seeking during pregnancy, child birth and postnatal period in Siaya County in Kenya. Methods Six Focus Group Discussions were conducted with 50 women attending ANC in 6 public primary healthcare facilities. Participants were drawn from a sample of 200 women who were eligible participants in a Conditional Cash Transfer project aimed at increasing utilization of healthcare services during pregnancy and postnatal period. Interviews were conducted at the health facilities, recorded, transcribed and analysed using thematic analysis. Results Multiple factors beyond the commonly reported distance to health facility and lack of transportation and finances explained the low utilization of services. Emergent themes included a lack of understanding of the role of ANC beyond the treatment of regular ailments. Women with no complicated pregnancies therefore missed or went in late for the visits. A missed health visit contributed to future missed visits, not just for ANC but also for facility delivery and postnatal care. The underlying cause of this relationship was a fear of reprimand from the health staff and denial of care. The negative attitude of the health workers explained the pervasive fear expressed by the participants, as well as being on its own a reason for not making the visits. The effect was not just on the woman with the negative experience, but spiraled and affected the decision of other women and their social networks. Conclusions The complexity of the barriers to healthcare visits implies that narrow focused solutions are unlikely to succeed. Instead, there should broad-based solutions that focus on the entire continuum of maternal care with a special focus on ANC. There is an urgent need to shift the negative attitude of healthcare workers towards their clients.
topic Antenatal care
Facility delivery
Home birth
Postnatal care
Qualitative study
Maternal mortality
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12884-019-2485-2
work_keys_str_mv AT carolineaochieng barrierstoformalhealthcareseekingduringpregnancychildbirthandpostnatalperiodaqualitativestudyinsiayacountyinruralkenya
AT aloycesodhiambo barrierstoformalhealthcareseekingduringpregnancychildbirthandpostnatalperiodaqualitativestudyinsiayacountyinruralkenya
_version_ 1724614004670726144