Abstract

BackgroundEvery day approximately 1500 women worldwide die due to pregnancy or childbirth related complications. Maternal health care use is critical in reducing maternal mortality worldwide. Cameroon has one of the highest maternal mortality rates worldwide, but there is little knowledge about maternal health care use in Cameroon, particularly in more remote areas. The purpose of this study was to examine the importance of social networks and social capital in maternal health care use in the Far-North province of Cameroon.MethodsA sample of 110 Cameroonian women was recruited door-to-door in the urban town of Maroua and rural village of Moutourwa in the Far-North province in 2009. A maternal health questionnaire was administered to women between the ages of 18-45. The questionnaire assessed maternal health care history, social network, and social demographic characteristics. Social capital was measured in terms of the average educational level of women’s networks. Bivariate and multivariable poisson regression analysis was used to assess the number of maternal health care visits as a function of social network characteristics, education, ethnicity, age, and urban and rural residence.ResultsAmong the 110 participants, 13 percent reported not having visited a health care provider during the last pregnancy – 19 percent of the women sampled in Moutourwa and 6 percent in Maroua. Findings showed that women with higher social capital had a greater tendency to use maternal health care services (IRR: 1.13; 95 % CI: 1.02-1.26). Social network size and social participation were not significant in full models. Ethnic characteristics were also shown associated with MHCU in the Far-North province.ConclusionAlthough the size of women’s health-related networks were not shown significant, the resources to which women might have access through their social networks were associated with women’s maternal health care use in remote areas of Cameroon. Although pregnancy may not be widely discussed in public, women’s social networks may provide key social resources, e.g., information or financial capital, that facilitate MHCU. Leveraging women’s social capital may provide a means to improve maternal health care use among women in low-income countries.On est ensembleSocial capital and participation in the use of maternal health care services in remote areas of Cameroon

Highlights

  • There was an estimated 287,000 maternal deaths in 2010 with 99 % of those occurring in developing countries [1]

  • Understanding the role that social and interpersonal factors play in maternal health care use (MHCU) can aid in the design of maternal health promotion programs that target the clustering of non-MHCU among women

  • Numerous challenges and barriers exist in collecting social network data in rural, developing country settings, and little research has examined the importance of social networks and social capital for MHCU among rural women

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Summary

Introduction

There was an estimated 287,000 maternal deaths in 2010 with 99 % of those occurring in developing countries [1]. McTavish and Moore Globalization and Health (2015) 11:33 about the importance of women’s social networks and the role that social capital may play in women’s access to maternal health care (MHC). Social capital refers to the resources that individuals or groups are able to access through their social networks [8]. Maternal health care use is critical in reducing maternal mortality worldwide. Cameroon has one of the highest maternal mortality rates worldwide, but there is little knowledge about maternal health care use in Cameroon, in more remote areas.

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