'Once the delivery is done, they have finished' : A Qualitative Study of Perspectives on Postnatal Care Referrals by Traditional Birth Attendants in Ebonyi State, Nigeria

While 79% of Nigerian mothers who deliver in facilities receive postnatal care within 48 h of delivery, this is only true for 16% of mothers who deliver outside facilities. Most maternal deaths can be prevented with access to timely and competent health care. Thus, the World Health Organization, International Confederation of Midwives, and International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics recommend that unskilled birth attendants be involved in advocacy for skilled care use among mothers. This study explores postnatal care referral behavior by TBAs in Nigeria, including the perceived factors that may deter or promote referrals to skilled health workers. Differences in TBA referral before, during, and after delivery appear to reflect the TBAs understanding of the added value of skilled care for the client and the TBA, as well as the TBA’s perception of the implications of referral for her credibility as a maternal care provider among her clients. We also found that there are opportunities to engage TBAs in routine postnatal care referrals to facilities in Nigeria by using incentives and promoting a cordial relationship between TBAs and skilled health workers. Thus, despite the potential negative consequences TBAs may face with postnatal care referrals, there are opportunities to promote these referrals using incentives and promoting a cordial relationship between TBAs and skilled health workers. Further research is needed on the interactions between postnatal maternal complications, TBA referral behavior, and maternal perception of TBA competence.

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Main Authors: Chukwuma, Adanna, Mbachu, Chinyere, Cohen, Jessica, Bossert, Thomas, McConnell, Margaret
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Published: Springer Nature 2017-12-19
Subjects:POSTNATAL CARE, TRADITIONAL BIRTH ATTENDANT, CHILD HEALTH, MATERNAL HEALTH,
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35578
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spelling dig-okr-10986355782021-07-19T16:34:34Z 'Once the delivery is done, they have finished' : A Qualitative Study of Perspectives on Postnatal Care Referrals by Traditional Birth Attendants in Ebonyi State, Nigeria Chukwuma, Adanna Mbachu, Chinyere Cohen, Jessica Bossert, Thomas McConnell, Margaret POSTNATAL CARE TRADITIONAL BIRTH ATTENDANT CHILD HEALTH MATERNAL HEALTH While 79% of Nigerian mothers who deliver in facilities receive postnatal care within 48 h of delivery, this is only true for 16% of mothers who deliver outside facilities. Most maternal deaths can be prevented with access to timely and competent health care. Thus, the World Health Organization, International Confederation of Midwives, and International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics recommend that unskilled birth attendants be involved in advocacy for skilled care use among mothers. This study explores postnatal care referral behavior by TBAs in Nigeria, including the perceived factors that may deter or promote referrals to skilled health workers. Differences in TBA referral before, during, and after delivery appear to reflect the TBAs understanding of the added value of skilled care for the client and the TBA, as well as the TBA’s perception of the implications of referral for her credibility as a maternal care provider among her clients. We also found that there are opportunities to engage TBAs in routine postnatal care referrals to facilities in Nigeria by using incentives and promoting a cordial relationship between TBAs and skilled health workers. Thus, despite the potential negative consequences TBAs may face with postnatal care referrals, there are opportunities to promote these referrals using incentives and promoting a cordial relationship between TBAs and skilled health workers. Further research is needed on the interactions between postnatal maternal complications, TBA referral behavior, and maternal perception of TBA competence. 2021-05-14T15:59:50Z 2021-05-14T15:59:50Z 2017-12-19 Journal Article BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth 1471-2393 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35578 CC BY 4.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0 World Bank Springer Nature Publications & Research :: Journal Article Publications & Research Africa Africa Western and Central (AFW) Nigeria
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
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databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
topic POSTNATAL CARE
TRADITIONAL BIRTH ATTENDANT
CHILD HEALTH
MATERNAL HEALTH
POSTNATAL CARE
TRADITIONAL BIRTH ATTENDANT
CHILD HEALTH
MATERNAL HEALTH
spellingShingle POSTNATAL CARE
TRADITIONAL BIRTH ATTENDANT
CHILD HEALTH
MATERNAL HEALTH
POSTNATAL CARE
TRADITIONAL BIRTH ATTENDANT
CHILD HEALTH
MATERNAL HEALTH
Chukwuma, Adanna
Mbachu, Chinyere
Cohen, Jessica
Bossert, Thomas
McConnell, Margaret
'Once the delivery is done, they have finished' : A Qualitative Study of Perspectives on Postnatal Care Referrals by Traditional Birth Attendants in Ebonyi State, Nigeria
description While 79% of Nigerian mothers who deliver in facilities receive postnatal care within 48 h of delivery, this is only true for 16% of mothers who deliver outside facilities. Most maternal deaths can be prevented with access to timely and competent health care. Thus, the World Health Organization, International Confederation of Midwives, and International Federation of Gynecology and Obstetrics recommend that unskilled birth attendants be involved in advocacy for skilled care use among mothers. This study explores postnatal care referral behavior by TBAs in Nigeria, including the perceived factors that may deter or promote referrals to skilled health workers. Differences in TBA referral before, during, and after delivery appear to reflect the TBAs understanding of the added value of skilled care for the client and the TBA, as well as the TBA’s perception of the implications of referral for her credibility as a maternal care provider among her clients. We also found that there are opportunities to engage TBAs in routine postnatal care referrals to facilities in Nigeria by using incentives and promoting a cordial relationship between TBAs and skilled health workers. Thus, despite the potential negative consequences TBAs may face with postnatal care referrals, there are opportunities to promote these referrals using incentives and promoting a cordial relationship between TBAs and skilled health workers. Further research is needed on the interactions between postnatal maternal complications, TBA referral behavior, and maternal perception of TBA competence.
format Journal Article
topic_facet POSTNATAL CARE
TRADITIONAL BIRTH ATTENDANT
CHILD HEALTH
MATERNAL HEALTH
author Chukwuma, Adanna
Mbachu, Chinyere
Cohen, Jessica
Bossert, Thomas
McConnell, Margaret
author_facet Chukwuma, Adanna
Mbachu, Chinyere
Cohen, Jessica
Bossert, Thomas
McConnell, Margaret
author_sort Chukwuma, Adanna
title 'Once the delivery is done, they have finished' : A Qualitative Study of Perspectives on Postnatal Care Referrals by Traditional Birth Attendants in Ebonyi State, Nigeria
title_short 'Once the delivery is done, they have finished' : A Qualitative Study of Perspectives on Postnatal Care Referrals by Traditional Birth Attendants in Ebonyi State, Nigeria
title_full 'Once the delivery is done, they have finished' : A Qualitative Study of Perspectives on Postnatal Care Referrals by Traditional Birth Attendants in Ebonyi State, Nigeria
title_fullStr 'Once the delivery is done, they have finished' : A Qualitative Study of Perspectives on Postnatal Care Referrals by Traditional Birth Attendants in Ebonyi State, Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed 'Once the delivery is done, they have finished' : A Qualitative Study of Perspectives on Postnatal Care Referrals by Traditional Birth Attendants in Ebonyi State, Nigeria
title_sort 'once the delivery is done, they have finished' : a qualitative study of perspectives on postnatal care referrals by traditional birth attendants in ebonyi state, nigeria
publisher Springer Nature
publishDate 2017-12-19
url http://hdl.handle.net/10986/35578
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