Use of Supervised Delivery Services in a Rural District in Ghana: Access to and use of professional services for childbirth - Couverture souple

Narh, Samuel Asare; Owusu, Adobea Yaa

 
9783846552797: Use of Supervised Delivery Services in a Rural District in Ghana: Access to and use of professional services for childbirth

Synopsis

We investigated the factors that influence mothers’ use of medically trained services for childbirth in a rural district in the Eastern Region of Ghana using a cross-sectional study. Structured questionnaires were administered to 350 women with children under one year. Key informants who were community opinion leaders and Senior Midwives at health care facilities in the study district were also interviewed qualitatively. Cross tabulation and Chi-square test were the main statistical processes used in analysing the relationships between the study variables. The result showed that the use of antenatal services by the mothers was important for the choice of where to deliver their babies. Mothers who attended antenatal services three times or more were more likely to deliver at the health facilities than those who used lesser antenatal care. Delivery at a health facility was highest among the women who had the autonomy to decide where to deliver. Access factors in terms of economic cost and distance to a health facility also played significant roles in influencing mothers’ delivery behavior. We recommend additional social policies to address maternal health issues in the study district

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Présentation de l'éditeur

We investigated the factors that influence mothers’ use of medically trained services for childbirth in a rural district in the Eastern Region of Ghana using a cross-sectional study. Structured questionnaires were administered to 350 women with children under one year. Key informants who were community opinion leaders and Senior Midwives at health care facilities in the study district were also interviewed qualitatively. Cross tabulation and Chi-square test were the main statistical processes used in analysing the relationships between the study variables. The result showed that the use of antenatal services by the mothers was important for the choice of where to deliver their babies. Mothers who attended antenatal services three times or more were more likely to deliver at the health facilities than those who used lesser antenatal care. Delivery at a health facility was highest among the women who had the autonomy to decide where to deliver. Access factors in terms of economic cost and distance to a health facility also played significant roles in influencing mothers’ delivery behavior. We recommend additional social policies to address maternal health issues in the study district

Biographie de l'auteur

Samuel Asare Narh holds MSc. Applied Health Social Sciences from the University of Ghana, Legon, and BEd. from the University of Education, Winneba, Ghana. He holds Teachers’ Certificate ‘A’ from the Seventh Day Adventist College of Education, Koforidua. He currently serves as a Senior Examiner with the West African Examinations Council, Ghana.

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