Abstract

In Ivory Coast, the objectives of the sustainable development in health field seem to be upset by the frequency of dystocic deliveries. They contribute to the increase in the rate of maternity and mortality. In response to this concern, the community environment is developing resilience through various remedies. Like the different ethnic communities, each with its own options, the Abbey community is developing its own endogenous mechanisms. Also, how perceptions related to Caesarean section delivery determine the organization of resilience for women participants in this community. Through this questioning, the essential objective is to know the social perceptions related to the cesarean section, the limits of obstetric care offerings; and to present the attitudes of resilience with regard to the prognoses of dystocic births. The investigation has mobilized the qualitative approach in its case study tradition. It took place in the hospital and community settings of Oforidje in Agboville and Azaguie Ahoua in Azaguie. On the basis of the network technique and the criterion of interruption of the collection at saturation of information, 67 people (qualitatively representative) were interviewed. The results reveal a social perception characterized by a view of the caesarean section as a factor of disillusionment for the participant or mother who has undergone it; a situation of offers of obstetrical care devoid of empathy for the pregnant and characterized by a change of scenery of the latter in the delivery room. Resilience in this community is characterized by perinatal care in the form of ritual and treatment with plants, bark and roots.

Highlights

  • In the field of health, faced with the problem of sustainable development dystocic deliveries remain an obstetrical concern

  • The first idea relates to perceptions, the second concerns the social valorization of the problems of poverty following caesarean sections

  • At the end of this work, it is clear that the perceptions of caesarean section within the Abbey community of Côte d'Ivoire reveal women who are physically and morally diminished

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Summary

Introduction

In the field of health, faced with the problem of sustainable development dystocic deliveries remain an obstetrical concern This type of delivery is characterized by complications such as hemorrhage, anemia, eclampsia, overweight fetus, narrowed mother’s pelvis, and hypertension for which the recommended route of delivery is caesarean section. Of all maternal deaths occur in low and lower middle-income countries [1]. This justifies Objective 3 of the Sustainable development goals (SDG) stipulating that By 2030, ensure universal access to sexual and reproductive health-care services, including for family planning, information and education, and the integration of reproductive health into national strategies and programs [2]

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