“If I Was Educated, I Would Call the Ambulance and Give Birth at the Health Facility”—A Qualitative Exploratory Study of Inequities in the Utilization of Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health Services in Northern Ethiopia
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Study Setting
2.1. Study Design, Sampling, and Recruitment
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Characteristics of the In-Depth Interviewees and Focus Group Participants
3.2. Perceptions about Inequity in the Use of Maternal and Child Health Services
After birth, I was healthy. I did not see any reason to visit the health center for a checkup. We (mothers) go there if we or our babies feel unhealthy.(In-depth interview, woman, age 30 years)
There is no single woman remains at home during the vaccination day. Vaccination is the most acceptable service for all mothers in our village. They (health extension workers) come to our village every month on the day of St. Mary, our rest day, and immunize our children.(In-depth interview, woman, age 35 years)
3.3. Perceived Causes of Inequity in the Use of Maternal and Child Health Services
3.3.1. Socioeconomic Factors
We (the poor) do not have money to pay for transportation and we are giving birth at home, [though we know that the services are free]. We want to give birth at the health facility but it is the lack of money that is deterring us from going there.(In-depth interview, woman, age 22 years)
Women from wealthier households hire minibuses with 300 Ethiopian Birr (USD 8.1) and are delivering at the health facility. However, poor women don’t have such opportunities.(In-depth interview, health extension worker, age 28 years)
The poor woman does not seek care at the health facilities when her child gets sick. This is because she does not have money to buy medicines. [So, what can a poor woman do if she doesn’t have money at hand? She can do nothing at all]. She cannot even get a loan.(In-depth interview, woman, age 35 years)
The health extension workers provided me with the phone number of the ambulance drivers. However, I did not make a phone call because I am not educated. If I was educated, I would call the ambulance and give birth at the health facility.(In-depth interview, woman, age 30)
Most young mothers today are educated. There are even some mothers who completed grade 10. They have better understanding of the benefits of health services. As a result, they (young mothers) attend antenatal care better and deliver at health facilities more often than the older ones.(In-depth interview, Women’s development group leader, age 58 years)
3.3.2. Lack of Access
The health center is too far away from our home. In our village, let alone a pregnant woman, it is even more difficult for a non-pregnant woman to visit the health facility and seek medication. For example, it took me about three hours to the health center for antenatal care follow-up, six hours, including the back trip. It would be impossible to consider and fully attend antenatal care visits.(Focus group discussion, woman, age 40 years)
I gave birth at home because I was alone. My husband was away. He moved to Ketama (an urban area) to bring food to our family.(In-depth interview, woman, age 35 years)
Our husbands encourage us to visit the health center. I showed my appointment card to my husband and he said: you need to go to the health center; I will take care of my children and animals.(Focus group discussion, woman, age 27 years)
We (pregnant women) do not have spare time during pregnancy. We work until the end of our pregnancy- cooking, caring for our children, and cleaning the house. We are very busy with our housework. We do not have time to visit the health center.(In-depth interview, women’s development group leader, age 30 years)
It is uncommon to attend the services after delivery. In our village, we (mothers) do not attend postnatal care at the nearby health center. It is not customary. A mother is not allowed us to go out after delivery before baptizing her babies.(In-depth interview, woman, age 35 years)
Mothers have multifaceted problems that distance them from the health facilities. First, household-related problems such as lack of money; second, lack of awareness and understanding of the benefits of utilizing the health facilities; third, limited access to transportation. The co-existence of these problems widens the distance between home and health facilities. If you are far away from the health facility, you are also away from information. If you do not have money, you are unable to get transportation. Thus, limited economic resources, lack of access to information, and no transportation inflate the distance to the health facilities.(Health worker, age 26 years)
3.3.3. Perceived Poor Quality of Care
I have seen a health care provider snapping at a laboring woman. They had to refer her to Mekelle, the regional referral hospital, and then she cried. They (health workers) then said you did not feel shame when you got pregnant, but you lost the shame and cried while giving birth. They were just joking. Also, another female hakim (health worker) came and snapped at the crying woman. It has never happened to me, but what I observed discourages women to utilize the health facilities.(Focus group discussion, woman, age 30 years)
The health workers who assisted me during delivery were respectful and caring. Even your mother can’t do what the health workers did for me. Today, they (health workers) take the role of our parents in caring for us. They are much worried and highly concerned about your health. For example, I had experienced bleeding while giving birth, but they immediately injected me with a drug and stopped the bleeding. I thank them all for saving my life.(In-depth interview, woman, age 26 years)
The health workers are caring, especially for poor mothers like me. I am poor and was referred to Mekelle regional referral hospital. I found the health workers there very caring. Some patients dressed neatly and had their bedsheets and blankets. But I was served equally with those patients. I slept at the hospital for about three weeks, and I was satisfied with the services they provided me.(In-depth interview, women’s development group leader, age 39 years)
I brought my child to the health center. The healthcare workers examined him and wrote a prescription and told me to buy drugs from private pharmacies. I feel distrust when medicines are lacking at government health facilities. I went back home without having the drugs. How can a private pharmacy have a better supply of drugs than government facilities?(Focus group discussion, woman, age 40 years)
3.3.4. Inappropriate Implementation of Equity-Oriented Policy Initiatives
I had a seven-month-old sick infant, and I took him to the health facility. They (health workers) examined him and prescribed drugs. I showed them my insurance ID card and told them that the cost should be covered by the scheme. They wrote a prescription and told me to buy the drugs from a private pharmacy. I went back home without having any drugs because I didn’t have money. To me, health insurance is worthless.(In-depth interview, woman, age 25 years)
We (women’s development group leaders) are not performing our duties today to the level of women’s satisfaction. We had monthly meetings to monitor the activities of the women’s development groups. In these meetings, we used to report those who were delivering at home and not attending antenatal care. However, today our role is becoming passive due to the weak monitoring from the health extension workers. We have reduced the role we used to play in educating and mobilizing mothers to use the maternal and child health services.(In-depth interview, women’s development group leader, age 39 years)
3.3.5. Suggestions to Improve Equity in the Utilization of Health Services
I would suggest contributing cereals, especially during the harvesting season, and store in one place. It is during this season that the farmers easily get grains. If we contributed at least two shember (equivalent to 3 kg) a year, we may solve the financial problem of the poor. By selling the banked cereals, we can cover the poor mothers’ medical and non-medical expenses.(In-depth interview, women’s development group leader, age 22 years)
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
References
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Major Themes | Sub-Themes | Major Codes |
---|---|---|
Perceptions about inequity in the use of maternal, neonatal and child health services | ||
Perceived causes of inequity | Socioeconomic factors | Economic status Education |
Lack of access | Distance and transportation Social and cultural causes Lack of husband support Mother’s heavy housework Mothers cultural taboos | |
Poor quality of care | Healthcare providers bad behavior Poor availability of drugs | |
Inappropriate implementation of equity-oriented policy initiatives |
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Wuneh, A.D.; Bezabih, A.M.; Persson, L.Å.; Okwaraji, Y.B.; Medhanyie, A.A. “If I Was Educated, I Would Call the Ambulance and Give Birth at the Health Facility”—A Qualitative Exploratory Study of Inequities in the Utilization of Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health Services in Northern Ethiopia. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 11633. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811633
Wuneh AD, Bezabih AM, Persson LÅ, Okwaraji YB, Medhanyie AA. “If I Was Educated, I Would Call the Ambulance and Give Birth at the Health Facility”—A Qualitative Exploratory Study of Inequities in the Utilization of Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health Services in Northern Ethiopia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(18):11633. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811633
Chicago/Turabian StyleWuneh, Alem Desta, Afework Mulugeta Bezabih, Lars Åke Persson, Yemisrach Behailu Okwaraji, and Araya Abrha Medhanyie. 2022. "“If I Was Educated, I Would Call the Ambulance and Give Birth at the Health Facility”—A Qualitative Exploratory Study of Inequities in the Utilization of Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health Services in Northern Ethiopia" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 18: 11633. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811633
APA StyleWuneh, A. D., Bezabih, A. M., Persson, L. Å., Okwaraji, Y. B., & Medhanyie, A. A. (2022). “If I Was Educated, I Would Call the Ambulance and Give Birth at the Health Facility”—A Qualitative Exploratory Study of Inequities in the Utilization of Maternal, Newborn, and Child Health Services in Northern Ethiopia. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(18), 11633. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph191811633