“We know it is not good, but we are constrained”: A study on quality of emergency obstetric and newborn care in Northern Ghana
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Heliyon
Abstract
Objective: To explore the quality of emergency obstetric and newborn care provided to newly
delivered women in rural Ghana.
Methods: A multiple case study design, involving in-depth face to face interviews, was deployed to
draw evidence from essential health providers, clients and caretakers. Data were further derived
from non-participant observation by means of an observation guide and analysis of physical ar tifacts using the room-by-room walk-through tool. Data analysis followed Yin’s five phase process
to case study analysis.
Results: Quality of care was compromised by non-adherence to standard practices, inadequate
monitoring, crude treatment procedures, lack of basic care needs and poor health providers’
relational behaviours. Limited supplies of drugs, equipment and essential care providers further
weakened the provision of quality emergency obstetric and newborn care.
Conclusion: Inadequate supply of essential logistics and skill gaps on the part of health providers
in some maternal and newborn care components adversely produced poor maternal and neonatal
outcomes in rural Ghana. Elements of disrespectful care for women suggest violations of their
rights in the maternal and newborn care encounter.
Description
Research Article