“I Am Ready and Willing to Provide the Service … Though My Religion Frowns on Abortion”—Ghanaian Midwives’ Mixed Attitudes to Abortion Services: A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Material and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Study Setting
2.3. Study Participants
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
2.6. Ethical Reflection
3. Results
3.1. Motivation to Be a Midwife
3.1.1. Passion for Maternal Health
My main motivation is to help improve the health of pregnant women and to help save their lives.(MW2)
I wanted to provide care for pregnant women. I have a passion for the health of pregnant women.(MW3)
I want to help reduce maternal mortalities.(MW4)
I studied nursing before midwifery, so during my training as a nurse, I made up my mind that I needed to study midwifery so that I could help to reduce maternal mortalities.(MW1)
Women in rural areas who are usually poor do not have access to quality maternal health services during pregnancy. I did midwifery so that I could add to the few numbers of midwives so that maternal health will be accessible to pregnant women irrespective of where they live.(MW5)
3.1.2. Previous Experiences
When I was growing up I used to hear about women going into labor and dying, especially in the community I was living. My mother also told me about these issues. I also saw some myself that a woman … died. All [these] stories and what I heard encouraged me to study nursing and for that matter went ahead to study midwifery.(MW1)
3.1.3. Lack of Professional Opportunities
For me, nothing motivated me, I was interested in becoming a disease control officer. I opted for midwifery when I did not get the opportunity to study disease control. I needed to develop my career and midwifery was the only available opportunity.(MW7)
3.2. Unsafe Abortions Are Common and Hidden
3.2.1. Stigmatization
It is something that goes on in the communities and because of the stigma attached to abortion, women who do abortions always do it under the cover of darkness.(MW7)
… relating to unsafe abortions, it is unknown because of the way society perceives abortion. People hide to do it.(MW3)
People do in the blindside of society, so it is something that goes on, but because of how society perceives it, it only comes to us when the victim suffers complications. When unsafe abortion is done and the victim does not suffer any complication, we do not hear about it.(MW5)
3.2.2. Unsafe Abortion Practices
Some prepare herbal concoction and get it into the body through enema. The herbal concoction then forces the fetus to fall out. Some also use grinded bottles mixed with Guinness for enema. This is very dangerous!(MW5)
Some use enema or drink all kinds of herbal concoctions, some insert Cytotec into the vagina; yes, they know about Cytotec! Some also drink un-prescribed drugs which they buy from the local drug stores.(MW7)
Some insert herbs in the vagina. Some also use sticks; cassava stick, they insert it into the vagina.(MW6)
3.3. The Law and Abortion
3.3.1. Knowledge and Ignorance of Existing Law
I know that abortion is legal under the law, so if someone walks in and you are trained, you can do it for the woman. Also, if a pregnant woman attempts an unsafe abortion, you can complete it for her.(MW5)
Abortion is legal in Ghana. If you get pregnant and you feel you do not want it, the law allows you to terminate the pregnancy.(MW1)
3.3.2. Views on the Current Abortion Law
I do not support the termination of any pregnancy outside what the law allows. I feel that the law is good.(MW7)
Providing safe abortion services should be done within the remit of the law. It should not like abortions to be allowed for every unwanted pregnancy. But if it affects the health of the pregnant women, then why not! Such a pregnancy can be terminated and that is what the law allows.(MW4)
3.3.3. Willingness to Provide Safe Abortion Care
I am not ready and I am not willing to provide comprehensive abortion services where a woman can just walk to me and ask for an unwanted pregnancy to be terminated. The best I may offer is when the woman comes with an incomplete abortion, in that case, I will help complete the abortion for her … I would rather refer a woman who needs comprehensive abortion care to the nearest health facility where the service is provided.(MW1)
Seriously for me, it is against my religious belief and that does not allow me to provide abortion services. I can provide clients with pre-abortion counselling, but not to do the actual abortion.(MW4)
Providing safe abortion services and making it readily available and accessible is one way of preventing maternal deaths. For me, I am ready and willing to provide the service … though my religion frowns on abortion, but I see this profession as a duty call, devoid of religious and moral judgement. It’s more important that our women do not die from these kinds of avoidable deaths.(MW2)
4. Discussion
4.1. Trustworthiness
4.2. Strengths and Limitations of the Study
5. Conclusions
Acknowledgments
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Categories | Subcategories |
---|---|
Motivation to be a midwife | Passion for maternal health |
Previous experiences | |
Lack of professional opportunities | |
Unsafe abortions common and hidden | Stigmatization |
Unsafe abortion practices | |
The law and abortion | Knowledge and ignorance of existing law |
Views on abortion law | |
Willingness to provide safe abortion care |
© 2017 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Oppong-Darko, P.; Amponsa-Achiano, K.; Darj, E. “I Am Ready and Willing to Provide the Service … Though My Religion Frowns on Abortion”—Ghanaian Midwives’ Mixed Attitudes to Abortion Services: A Qualitative Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2017, 14, 1501. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph14121501
Oppong-Darko P, Amponsa-Achiano K, Darj E. “I Am Ready and Willing to Provide the Service … Though My Religion Frowns on Abortion”—Ghanaian Midwives’ Mixed Attitudes to Abortion Services: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2017; 14(12):1501. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph14121501
Chicago/Turabian StyleOppong-Darko, Prince, Kwame Amponsa-Achiano, and Elisabeth Darj. 2017. "“I Am Ready and Willing to Provide the Service … Though My Religion Frowns on Abortion”—Ghanaian Midwives’ Mixed Attitudes to Abortion Services: A Qualitative Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 14, no. 12: 1501. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph14121501
APA StyleOppong-Darko, P., Amponsa-Achiano, K., & Darj, E. (2017). “I Am Ready and Willing to Provide the Service … Though My Religion Frowns on Abortion”—Ghanaian Midwives’ Mixed Attitudes to Abortion Services: A Qualitative Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 14(12), 1501. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph14121501