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1.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ; 21(1): 407, 2021 May 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34049509

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Ethiopia's high neonatal mortality rate led to the government's 2013 introduction of Community-Based Newborn Care (CBNC) to bring critical prevention and treatment interventions closer to communities in need. However, complex behaviors that are deeply embedded in social and cultural norms continue to prevent women and newborns from getting the care they need. A demand creation strategy was designed to create an enabling environment to support appropriate maternal, newborn, and child health (MNCH) behaviors and CBNC. We explored the extent to which attitudes and behaviors during the prenatal and perinatal periods varied by the implementation strength of the Demand Creation Strategy for MNCH-CBNC. METHODS: Using an embedded, multiple case study design, we purposively selected four kebeles (villages) from two districts with different levels of implementation strength of demand creation activities. We collected information from a total of 150 key stakeholders across kebeles using multiple qualitative methods including in-depth interviews, focus group discussions, and illness narratives; sessions were transcribed into English and coded using NVivo 10.0. We developed case reports for each kebele and a final cross-case report to compare results from high and low implementation strength kebeles. RESULTS: We found that five MNCH attitudes and behaviors varied by implementation strength. In high implementation strength kebeles women felt more comfortable disclosing their pregnancy early, women sought antenatal care (ANC) in the first trimester, families did not have fatalistic ideas about newborn survival, mothers sought care for sick newborns in a timely manner, and newborns received care at the health facility in less than an hour. We also found changes across all kebeles that did not vary by implementation strength, including male engagement during pregnancy and a preference for giving birth at a health facility. CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest that a demand creation approach-combining participatory approaches with community empowering strategies-can promote shifts in behaviors and attitudes to support the health of mothers and newborns, including use of MNCH services. Future studies need to consider the most efficient level of intervention intensity to make the greatest impact on MNCH attitudes and behaviors.


Subject(s)
Attitude to Health , Infant Mortality , Maternal-Child Health Services/organization & administration , Patient Participation , Adult , Ethiopia , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant, Newborn , Pregnancy
2.
Glob Health Sci Pract ; 8(3): 383-395, 2020 09 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32709596

ABSTRACT

Changing behaviors is usually a core component of the role of community health workers (CHWs), but little is known about the mechanisms through which they change behavior. We collected qualitative data from 8 sites in Ethiopia and northern Nigeria where CHWs were active to understand how they change newborn care behaviors. In each country, we conducted 12 narrative interviews and 12-13 in-depth interviews with recent mothers and 4 focus group discussions each with mothers, fathers, grandmothers, and CHWs. We identified 2 key mechanisms of behavior change. The first was linked to the frequency and consistency of hearing messages that led to a perception that change had occurred in community-wide behaviors, collective beliefs, and social expectations. The second was linked to trust in the CHW, obligation, and hierarchy. We found little evidence that constructs that often inform the design of counseling approaches, such as knowledge of causality and perceived risks and benefits, were mechanisms of change.


Subject(s)
Community Health Workers/organization & administration , Infant Care/methods , Parents/education , Community Health Workers/economics , Community Health Workers/education , Ethiopia , Family , Humans , Infant Care/standards , Infant, Newborn , Interviews as Topic , Nigeria , Qualitative Research , Socioeconomic Factors , Trust
3.
BMJ Open ; 9(6): e025516, 2019 06 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31196898

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To understand the recent rise in facility deliveries in Ethiopia. DESIGN: A qualitative study. SETTING: Four rural communities in two regions of Ethiopia. PARTICIPANTS: 12 narrative, 12 in-depth interviews and four focus group discussions with recently delivered women; and four focus group discussions with each of grandmothers, fathers and community health workers. RESULTS: We found that several interwoven factors led to the increase in facility deliveries, and that respondents reported that the importance of these factors varied over time. The initial catalysts were a saturation of messages around facility delivery, improved accessibility of facilities, the prohibition of traditional birth attendants, and elders having less influence on deciding the place of delivery. Once women started to deliver in facilities, the drivers of the behaviour changed as women had positive experiences. As more women began delivering in facilities, families shared positive experiences of the facilities, leading to others deciding to deliver in a facility. CONCLUSION: Our findings highlight the need to employ strategies that act at multiple levels, and that both push and pull families to health facilities.


Subject(s)
Delivery, Obstetric , Maternal Health Services/organization & administration , Adolescent , Adult , Attitude of Health Personnel , Attitude to Health , Ethiopia , Family Relations , Female , Focus Groups , Health Services Accessibility , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Pregnancy , Qualitative Research , Rural Population , Social Change
4.
BMC Public Health ; 18(1): 1074, 2018 Aug 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30157816

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Timely interventions in the postnatal period are important for reducing newborn mortality, and early home visits to provide postnatal care are recommended. There has been limited success in achieving timely visits, and a better understanding of the realities of programmes is needed if improvements are to be made. METHODS: We explored barriers and facilitators to timely postnatal visits through 20 qualitative interviews and 16 focus group discussions with families and Health Extension Workers in four Ethiopian sites. RESULTS: All sites reported some inaccessible areas that did not receive visits, but, Health Extension Workers in the sites with more difficult terrain were reported to make more visits that those in the more accessible areas. This suggests that information and work issues can be more important than moderate physical issues. The sites where visits were common had functioning mechanisms for alerting workers to a birth; these were not related to postnatal visits but to families informing Health Extension Workers of labour so they could call an ambulance. In the other sites, families did not know they should alert workers about a delivery, and other alert mechanisms were not functioning well. Competing activities reducing Health Extension Worker availability for visits, but in some areas workers were more organized in their division of their work and this facilitated visits. The main difference between the areas where visits were reported as common or uncommon was the general activity level of the Health Extension Worker. In the sites where workers were active and connected to the community visits occurred more often. CONCLUSIONS: If timely postnatal home visits are to occur, CHWs need realistic catchment areas that reflect their workload. Inaccessible areas may need their own CHW. Good notification systems are essential, families will notify CHWs if they have a clear reasons to do so, and more work is needed on how to ensure notification systems function. Work ethic was a clear influencer on whether home visits occur, studies to date have focused on understanding the motivation of CHWs as a group, more studies on understanding motivation at an individual level are needed.


Subject(s)
Health Services Accessibility , House Calls/statistics & numerical data , Postnatal Care/organization & administration , Community Health Workers/psychology , Community Health Workers/statistics & numerical data , Ethiopia , Female , Focus Groups , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Motivation , Pregnancy , Qualitative Research , Time Factors
5.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ; 17(1): 384, 2017 Nov 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29145815

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Ethiopia has made steady progress in improving maternal health over the decade, yet mortality remains high. The Maternal and Newborn Health in Ethiopia Partnership (MaNHEP) was a 3.5-year project aimed at developing a community-oriented model to improve maternal and newborn survival in rural Ethiopia. Two years after the project ended, we carried out a case study to explore illness recognition and care seeking for complications of pregnancy and childbirth in the project area. This paper describes the results of one component: illness narratives. METHODS: Sampling involved random selection of 12 health facilities from 6 MaNHEP project districts in Amhara and >Oromia regions, and purposive selection of cases from the facility catchment areas. The purposive sample included 17 cases of perceived excessive bleeding, 5 cases of maternal death from any cause, and witnesses to the illness events. Two-person teams facilitated the narrative interviews. Analysis included thematic content analysis of symptoms, causes, decision makers and decision-making, factors facilitating and impeding care seeking, and delineation of care-seeking steps. RESULTS: Most surviving mothers (and witnesses) perceived the symptoms and seriousness of excessive bleeding; a majority (53%) sought timely biomedical care. Three of five families of mothers who died from causes unrelated to bleeding failed to initially perceive symptoms as serious, yet all sought timely appropriate care once they did so. Many of these families took multiple steps to obtain care, leading to delays.. Health worker counseling and proximity to health services facilitated, while certain cultural norms, economic, geographic, and environmental constraints impeded care seeking. Surprisingly, poor quality of care at health facilities was not a barrier. CONCLUSION: Mothers and family caregivers are able to recognize and seek timely biomedical care for abnormal bleeding, and for less obvious symptoms of illness. These achievements can be reinforced through continued and focused health education and counseling, reduction of known barriers to care seeking, and improvements in the capacity of the health system to respond to maternal complications with high quality basic and comprehensive emergency obstetric care.


Subject(s)
Maternal Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Patient Acceptance of Health Care/psychology , Pregnancy Complications/psychology , Rural Health Services/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Caregivers/psychology , Ethiopia , Female , Humans , Mothers/psychology , Pregnancy , Rural Population/statistics & numerical data , Young Adult
6.
J Health Popul Nutr ; 36(Suppl 1): 50, 2017 12 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29297394

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In 2014, USAID and University Research Co., LLC, initiated a new project under the broader Translating Research into Action portfolio of projects. This new project was entitled Systematic Documentation of Illness Recognition and Appropriate Care Seeking for Maternal and Newborn Complications. This project used a common protocol involving descriptive mixed-methods case studies of community projects in six low- and middle-income countries, including Ethiopia. In this paper, we present the Maternal and Newborn Health in Ethiopia Partnership (MaNHEP) case study. METHODS: Methods included secondary analysis of data from MaNHEP's 2010 baseline and 2012 end line surveys, health program inventory and facility mapping to contextualize care-seeking, and illness narratives to identify factors influencing illness recognition and care-seeking. Analyses used descriptive statistics, bivariate tests, multivariate logistic regression, and thematic content analysis. RESULTS: Maternal illness awareness increased between 2010 and 2012 for major obstetric complications. In 2012, 45% of women who experienced a major complication sought biomedical care. Factors associated with care-seeking were MaNHEP CMNH Family Meetings, health facility birth, birth with a skilled provider, or health extension worker. Between 2012 and 2014, the Ministry of Health introduced nationwide initiatives including performance review, ambulance service, increased posting of midwives, pregnant women's conferences, user-friendly services, and maternal death surveillance. By 2014, most facilities were able to provide emergency obstetric and newborn care. Yet in 2014, biomedical care-seeking for perceived maternal illness occurred more often compared with care-seeking for newborn illness-a difference notable in cases in which the mother or newborn died. Most families sought care within 1 day of illness recognition. Facilitating factors were health extension worker advice and ability to refer upward, and health facility proximity; impeding factors were time of day, weather, road conditions, distance, poor cell phone connectivity (to call for an ambulance), lack of transportation or money for transport, perceived spiritual or physical vulnerability of the mother and newborn and associated culturally determined postnatal restrictions on the mother or newborn's movement outside of the home, and preference for traditional care. Some families sought care despite disrespectful, poor quality care. CONCLUSIONS: Improvements in illness recognition and care-seeking observed during MaNHEP have been reinforced since that time and appear to be successful. There is still need for a concerted effort focusing on reducing identified barriers, improve quality of care and provider counseling, and contextualize messaging behavior change communications and provider counseling.


Subject(s)
Decision Making , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Mothers/psychology , Patient Acceptance of Health Care/psychology , Pregnancy Complications/psychology , Adolescent , Adult , Community Health Services , Ethiopia/epidemiology , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant Health , Infant Mortality , Infant, Newborn , Middle Aged , Mothers/statistics & numerical data , Narration , Organizational Case Studies , Parturition , Patient Acceptance of Health Care/statistics & numerical data , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications/epidemiology , Regression Analysis , Rural Population , Surveys and Questionnaires , United States , United States Agency for International Development , Young Adult
7.
BMC Pediatr ; 15: 156, 2015 Oct 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26466994

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Recommendations for care in the first week of a newborn's life include thermal care practices such as drying and wrapping, skin to skin contact, immediate breastfeeding and delayed bathing. This paper examines beliefs and practices related to neonatal thermal care in three African countries. METHODS: Data were collected in the same way in each site and included 16-20 narrative interviews with recent mothers, eight observations of neonatal bathing, and in-depth interviews with 12-16 mothers, 9-12 grandmothers, eight health workers and 0-12 birth attendants in each site. RESULTS: We found similarities across sites in relation to understanding the importance of warmth, a lack of opportunities for skin to skin care, beliefs about the importance of several baths per day and beliefs that the Vernix caseosa was related to poor maternal behaviours. There was variation between sites in beliefs and practices around wrapping and drying after delivery, and the timing of the first bath with recent behavior change in some sites. There was near universal early bathing of babies in both Nigerian sites. This was linked to a deep-rooted belief about body odour. When asked about keeping the baby warm, respondents across the sites rarely mentioned recommended thermal care practices, suggesting that these are not perceived as salient. CONCLUSION: More effort is needed to promote appropriate thermal care practices both in facilities and at home. Programmers should be aware that changing deep rooted practices, such as early bathing in Nigeria, may take time and should utilize the current beliefs in the importance of neonatal warmth to facilitate behaviour change.


Subject(s)
Baths/statistics & numerical data , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Home Childbirth/trends , Midwifery/methods , Mothers/psychology , Perinatal Care/methods , Qualitative Research , Rural Population , Adult , Ethiopia , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Male , Maternal Behavior , Nigeria , Pregnancy , Tanzania , Young Adult
8.
J Trop Pediatr ; 61(6): 428-34, 2015 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26314307

ABSTRACT

Data for this study on skin care practices and emollient use in four African sites were collected using in-depth interviews, focus-group discussions and observations. Respondents were mothers, grandmothers, fathers, health workers, birth attendants and people selling skin-care products. Analysis included content and framework analyses.Emollient use was a normative practice in all sites, with frequent application from an early age in most sites. There were variations in the type of emollients used, but reasons for use were similar and included improving the skin, keeping the baby warm, softening/strengthening the joints/bones, shaping the baby, ensuring flexibility and encouraging growth and weight gain. Factors that influenced emollient choice varied and included social pressure, cost, availability and deep-rooted traditional norms. Massage associated with application was strong and potentially damaging to the skin in some sites.Given the widespread use of emollients, the repeated exposure of newborns in the first month of life and the potential impact of emollients on mortality, trials such as those that have been conducted in Asia are needed in a range of African settings.


Subject(s)
Emollients/therapeutic use , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Massage , Skin Care/methods , Cultural Characteristics , Ethiopia , Female , Focus Groups , Humans , Infant , Infant Care , Infant, Newborn , Interviews as Topic , Male , Mothers , Nigeria , Qualitative Research , Tanzania
9.
BMC Int Health Hum Rights ; 14: 17, 2014 May 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24885760

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Despite a substantial decrease in child mortality in Ethiopia over the past decade, neonatal mortality remains unchanged (37/1000 live-births). This paper describes a qualitative study on beliefs and practices on immediate newborn and postnatal care in four rural communities of Ethiopia conducted to inform development of a package of community-based interventions targeting newborns. METHODS: The study team conducted eight key informant interviews (KII) with grandmothers, 27 in-depth interviews (IDI) with mothers; seven IDI with traditional birth attendants (TBA) and 15IDI with fathers, from four purposively selected communities located in Sidama Zone of Southern Nationalities, Nations, and Peoples (SNNP) Region and in East Shewa and West Arsi Zones of Oromia Region. RESULTS: In the study communities deliveries occurred at home. After cutting the umbilical cord, the baby is put to the side of the mother, not uncommonly with no cloth covering. This is largely due to attendants focusing on delivery of the placenta which is reinforced by the belief that the placenta is the 'house' or 'blanket' of the baby and that any "harm" caused to the placenta will transfer to the newborn. Applying butter or ointment to the cord "to speed drying" is common practice. Initiation of breastfeeding is often delayed and women commonly report discarding colostrum before initiating breastfeeding. Sub-optimal breastfeeding practices continue, due to perceived inadequate maternal nutrition and breast milk often leading to the provision of herbal drinks. Poor thermal care is also demonstrated through lack of continued skin-to-skin contact, exposure of newborns to smoke, frequent bathing-often with cold water baths for low-birth weight or small babies; and, poor hygienic practices are reported, particularly hand washing prior to contact with the newborn. CONCLUSION: Cultural beliefs and newborn care practices do not conform to recommended standards. Local perspectives related to newborn care practices should inform behaviour change messages. Such messages should target mothers, grandmothers, TBAs, other female family members and fathers.


Subject(s)
Culture , Delivery, Obstetric , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Home Childbirth , Perinatal Care , Perinatal Death/prevention & control , Rural Population , Adolescent , Adult , Comprehension , Ethiopia/epidemiology , Fathers , Female , Humans , Infant , Infant Care , Infant Mortality , Infant, Newborn , Male , Malnutrition/complications , Midwifery , Mothers , Perinatal Death/etiology , Pregnancy , Qualitative Research , Young Adult
10.
BMC Int Health Hum Rights ; 14: 12, 2014 Apr 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24742223

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Infections account for up to a half of neonatal deaths in low income countries. The umbilicus is a common source of infection in such settings. This qualitative study investigates practices and perspectives related to umbilical cord care in Ethiopia. METHODS: In-depth interviews (IDI) were conducted in a district in each of the four most populous regions in the country: Oromia, Amhara, Tigray and Southern Nations, Nationalities and Peoples Region (SNNPR). In each district, one community was purposively selected; and in each study community, IDIs were conducted with 6 mothers, 4 grandmothers, 2 Traditional Birth Attendants and 2 Health Extension Workers (HEWs). The two main questions in the interview guide related to cord care were: How was the umbilical cord cut and tied? Was anything applied to the cord stump immediately after cutting/in the first 7 days? Why was it applied/not applied? RESULTS: The study elucidates local cord care practices and the rational for these practices. Concepts underlying cord tying practices were how to stem blood flow and facilitate delivery of the placenta. Substances were applied on the cord to moisturize it, facilitate its separation and promote healing. Locally recognized cord problems were delayed healing, bleeding or swelling. Few respondents reported familiarity with redness of the cord - a sign of infection. Grandmothers, TBAs and HEWs were influential regarding cord care. CONCLUSIONS: This study highlights local rationale for cord practices, concerns about cord related problems and recognition of signs of infection. Behavioral change messages aimed at improving cord care including cleansing with CHX should address these local perspectives. It is suggested that HEWs and health facility staff target mothers, grandmothers, TBAs and other community women with messages and counseling.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Infections/prevention & control , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice/ethnology , Infant, Newborn, Diseases/prevention & control , Inflammation/prevention & control , Umbilical Cord , Administration, Topical , Adult , Anti-Infective Agents, Local/administration & dosage , Caregivers , Chlorhexidine/administration & dosage , Ethiopia , Female , Hand Disinfection , Humans , Infant Mortality , Infant, Newborn , Middle Aged , Midwifery/methods , Mothers/psychology , Qualitative Research , Young Adult
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