Abstract

Accessibility and utilization of healthcare plays a significant role in preventing complications during pregnancy, labor, and the early postnatal period. However, multiple barriers can prevent women from accessing services. The aim of this study was to explore the multifaceted barriers that inhibit women from seeking maternal and newborn health care in Thatta, Sindh, Pakistan. This study employed an interpretive research design using a purposive sampling approach. Pre-tested, semi-structured interview guides were used for data collection. The data were collected through eight focus group discussions with men and women, and six in-depth interviews with lady health workers and analyzed through thematic analysis. The study identified individual, sociocultural, and structural-level barriers that inhibit women from seeking maternal and newborn care. Individual barriers included mistrust towards public health facilities and inadequate symptom recognition. The three identified sociocultural barriers were aversion to biomedical interventions, gendered imbalances in decision making, and women’s restricted mobility. The structural barriers included ineffective referral systems and prohibitively expensive transportation services. Increasing the coverage of healthcare service without addressing the multifaceted barriers that influence service utilization will not reduce the burden of maternal and neonatal mortality. As this study reveals, care seeking is influenced by a diverse array of barriers that are individual, sociocultural, and structural in nature. A combination of capacity development, health awareness, and structural interventions can address many if not all of these barriers.

Highlights

  • About 85% of obstetric complications occur during labor and the early postnatal period [1]

  • The World Health Organization points out that nearly 75% of maternal deaths caused by pre-eclampsia, sepsis, severe bleeding, unsafe abortion, and complications in childbirth can be prevented by providing high quality antenatal care, skilled attendance at birth, and timely referrals [2]

  • We utilized in-depth interviews and focus group discussions (FGDs) to explore barriers that inhibit care seeking during pregnancy

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Summary

Introduction

About 85% of obstetric complications occur during labor and the early postnatal period [1]. The World Health Organization points out that nearly 75% of maternal deaths caused by pre-eclampsia, sepsis, severe bleeding, unsafe abortion, and complications in childbirth can be prevented by providing high quality antenatal care, skilled attendance at birth, and timely referrals [2]. Together, these interventions make part of the World Health Organization’s (WHO) birth preparedness and complication readiness strategy for low and middle income countries (LMIC) [3]. According to a national survey, only 45%, 47%, and 64% women reported receiving counseling on the early initiation of breastfeeding, exclusive breastfeeding, and nutritional needs during pregnancy, respectively [5]. The same survey reported that only 62% women in Pakistan delivered their baby in the presence of a skilled provider [5]

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