Abstract

BackgroundThe maternal health outcomes in Georgia are linked to shortcomings in healthcare such as inequities in access to adequate maternal care. Due to the macro-level, quantitative approach applied in most previous studies, little is known about the underlying reasons that influence maternal care and care-seeking behaviour of pregnant women.MethodsThis qualitative study explores the stakeholders’ perspectives on access to adequate maternal care in Georgia. Focus-group discussions are conducted with mothers who gave birth within in the past four years and in-depth interviews are conducted with decision-makers and health professionals in the field. Five access-related aspects are studied: availability, appropriateness, affordability, approachability and acceptability of maternal care. The method of direct content analysis is applied.ResultsResults indicate problems with maternal care standards, inequalities across population groups and drawbacks in maternal care financing. This includes gaps in clinical quality and staff skills, as well as poor communication between women and health professionals. Geographical barriers to adequate maternal care exist in rural and mountainous areas due to the weak infrastructure (poor roads and weak transportation), in addition to financial hardships. Despite improvements in the coverage of maternal care, affordability remains an access barrier. Poorer population groups are financially unprotected from the high out-of-pocket payments for maternal care services.ConclusionThese findings imply that micro-level indicators, such as disrespectful behaviour of health professionals and affordability of care, should be taken into account when assessing maternal care provision in Georgia. It should complement the existing macro-level indicators for a comprehensive evaluation of maternal care.

Highlights

  • The maternal health outcomes in Georgia are linked to shortcomings in healthcare such as inequities in access to adequate maternal care

  • Focus group discussions (FGDs) were carried out with women who gave birth in the preceding years, to elicit what barriers to accessing maternal care they had experienced. This was complemented by semi-structured in-depth interviews (IDIs) with decision-makers and health care professionals to gain an understanding of their opinions about access to maternal care

  • The stakeholder views on access to adequate maternal care in Georgia reported above indicate several important problems that need to be addressed in future reforms

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Summary

Introduction

The maternal health outcomes in Georgia are linked to shortcomings in healthcare such as inequities in access to adequate maternal care. The MMR in Georgia is higher than in neighbouring former Soviet Republics such as Armenia (19 per 100,000 in 2014) or Azerbaijan (15 per 100,000 in 2014) [1]. Achieving the desired MMR target by 2030 requires an annual reduction in MMR of at least 7.5%, which is double the progress of MDG5 [5]. Interventions to achieve this include staff retraining, Miteniece et al BMC Health Services Research (2018) 18:631 infrastructure development, screening programs, and free-of-charge access to basic maternal care services [3]

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