Abstract
Background:Maternal and newborn child health are priority concerns in Bauchi State, northern Nigeria. Increased male involvement in reproductive health is recommended by the World Health Organization. A trial of a program of universal home visits to pregnant women and their spouses, with an intention to increase male involvement in pregnancy and childbirth, showed improvements in actionable risk factors and in maternal morbidity. We used a narrative technique to explore experiences of the visits and their effect on gender roles and dynamics within the households.Methods:Trained fieldworkers collected narratives of change from 23 visited women and 21 visited men. After translation of the stories into English, we conducted an inductive thematic analysis to examine the impact of the visits on gender norms and dynamics.Results:The analysis indicated that the visits improved men’s support for antenatal care, immunization, and seeking help for danger signs, increased spousal communication, and led to changes in perceptions about gender violence and promoted non-violent gender relationships. However, although some stories described increased spousal communication, they did not mention that this translated into shared decision-making or increased autonomy for women. Many of the men’s stories described a continuing paternalistic, male-dominant position in decision-making.Conclusions:Few studies have examined the gender-transformative potential of interventions to promote male involvement in reproductive health; our analysis provides some initial insights into this.
Highlights
Women in Nigeria face high risks of illness and death related to childbearing, and young children in the country have high rates of morbidity and mortality [1,2]
We describe here an analysis of the stories to explore the impact of the home visits on gender roles and decision-making and to evaluate to what extent the intervention was gender-transformative
We focused on changes in gender roles and decision-making attributed to the home visits
Summary
Women in Nigeria face high risks of illness and death related to childbearing, and young children in the country have high rates of morbidity and mortality [1,2]. Female and male home visitors visited pregnant women and their spouses during pregnancy and after delivery, sharing and discussing with them the same local evidence about risk factors for maternal health, actionable at the household level: heavy work during pregnancy, domestic violence, lack of spousal communication about pregnancy and childbirth, and lack of knowledge of danger signs in pregnancy and childbirth [9]. The home visitors shared evidence about the harmful effects of the identified risk factors and separately discussed with pregnant women and their spouses what they could do, and were doing, about these risks They shared information about danger signs in pregnancy and the need to seek care from health facilities, and about the benefits of breastfeeding and childhood immunization. We describe here an analysis of the stories to explore the impact of the home visits on gender roles and decision-making and to evaluate to what extent the intervention was gender-transformative
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