Abstract

BackgroundGlobally, amidst increased utilization of facility-based maternal care services, there is continued need to better understand women’s experience of care in places of birth. Quantitative surveys may not sufficiently characterize satisfaction with maternal healthcare (MHC) in local context, limiting their interpretation and applicability. The purpose of this study is to untangle how contextual and cultural expectations shape women’s care experience and what women mean by satisfaction in two Ethiopian regions.MethodsHealth center and hospital childbirth care registries were used to identify and interview 41 women who had delivered a live newborn within a six-month period. We used a semi-structured interview guide informed by the Donabedian framework to elicit women’s experiences with MHC and delivery, any prior delivery experiences, and recommendations to improve MHC. We used an inductive analytical approach to compare and contrast MHC processes, experiences, and satisfaction.ResultsMaternal and newborn survival and safety were central to women’s descriptions of their MHC experiences. Women nearly exclusively described healthy and safe deliveries with healthy outcomes as ‘satisfactory’. The texture behind this ‘satisfaction’, however, was shaped by what mothers bring to their delivery experiences, creating expectations from events including past births, experiences with antenatal care, and social and community influences. Secondary to the absence of adverse outcomes, health provider’s interpersonal behaviors (e.g., supportive communication and behavioral demonstrations of commitment to their births) and the facility’s amenities (e.g., bathing, cleaning, water, coffee, etc) enhanced women’s experiences. Finally, at the social and community levels, we found that family support and material resources may significantly buffer against negative experiences and facilitate women’s overall satisfaction, even in the context of poor-quality facilities and limited resources.ConclusionOur findings highlight the importance of understanding contextual factors including past experiences, expectations, and social support that influence perceived quality of MHC and the agency a woman has to negotiate her care experience. Our finding that newborn and maternal survival primarily drove women’s satisfaction suggests that quantitative assessments conducted shortly following delivery may be overly influenced by these outcomes and not fully capture the complexity of women’s care experience.

Highlights

  • The past decade has evidenced effective approaches to reducing maternal and neonatal mortality in settings with resource strained healthcare infrastructure by increasing access to facilities, services, and life-saving interventions [1, 2]

  • Our findings highlight the importance of understanding contextual factors including past experiences, expectations, and social support that influence perceived quality of maternal healthcare (MHC) and the agency a woman has to negotiate her care experience

  • To contextualize expectations for healthcare services and subsequently, healthcare satisfaction, we explored women’s past delivery experiences, her recommendations for service quality improvement, and influences in her social and community network that shaped her use of government health facilities

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Summary

Introduction

The past decade has evidenced effective approaches to reducing maternal and neonatal mortality in settings with resource strained healthcare infrastructure by increasing access to facilities, services, and life-saving interventions [1, 2]. As maternal and child healthcare access has improved in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC), attention has turned to improving services with the provision of high quality, respectful care [3, 5,6,7]. This is important given that increasing access and demand for quality facility-based maternal health services is a core determinant of positive maternal outcomes. One multi-country investigation found that health service users in 12 LMIC countries had low expectations of care quality, likely resulting in lower demand for higher quality services and inflating satisfaction ratings [14]. The purpose of this study is to untangle how contextual and cultural expectations shape women’s care experience and what women mean by satisfaction in two Ethiopian regions

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