Eye of the beholder? Observation versus self-report in the measurement of disrespect and abuse during facility-based childbirth.

Reproductive Health Matters Pub Date : 2018-01-01 Epub Date: 2018-09-10 DOI:10.1080/09688080.2018.1502024
Lynn P Freedman, Stephanie A Kujawski, Selemani Mbuyita, August Kuwawenaruwa, Margaret E Kruk, Kate Ramsey, Godfrey Mbaruku
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引用次数: 47

Abstract

Human rights has been a vital tool in the global movement to reduce maternal mortality and to expose the disrespect and abuse that women experience during childbirth in facilities around the world. Yet to truly transform the relationship between women and providers, human rights-based approaches (HRBAs) will need to go beyond articulation, dissemination and even legal enforcement of formal norms of respectful maternity care. HRBAs must also develop a deeper, more nuanced understanding of how power operates in health systems under particular social, cultural and political conditions, if they are to effectively challenge settled patterns of behaviour and health systems structures that marginalise and abuse. In this paper, we report results from a mixed methods study in two hospitals in the Tanga region of Tanzania, comparing the prevalence of disrespect and abuse during childbirth as measured through observation by trained nurses stationed in maternity wards to prevalence as measured by the self-report upon discharge of the same women who had been observed. The huge disparity between these two measures (baseline: 69.83% observation vs. 9.91% self-report; endline: 32.91% observation vs. 7.59% self-report) suggests that disrespect and abuse is both internalised and normalised by users and providers alike. Building on qualitative research conducted in the study sites, we explore the mechanisms by which hidden and invisible power enforces internalisation and normalisation, and describe the implications for the development of HRBAs in maternal health.

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旁观者之眼?观察与自我报告在设施分娩中不尊重和虐待的测量。
人权一直是降低孕产妇死亡率和揭露妇女在世界各地的设施中分娩时所遭受的不尊重和虐待的全球运动的重要工具。然而,要真正改变妇女与提供者之间的关系,基于人权的方法(HRBAs)将需要超越对尊重产妇护理的正式规范的表述、传播甚至法律执行。如果卫生机构要有效地挑战边缘化和滥用权力的既定行为模式和卫生系统结构,它们还必须对权力在特定社会、文化和政治条件下如何在卫生系统中运作有更深入、更细致的理解。在本文中,我们报告了坦桑尼亚Tanga地区两家医院混合方法研究的结果,比较了驻扎在产科病房的训练有素的护士通过观察测量的分娩期间不尊重和虐待的流行程度,以及观察到的同一名妇女出院时自我报告测量的流行程度。这两种测量之间的巨大差异(基线:69.83%观察vs. 9.91%自我报告;Endline: 32.91%观察vs. 7.59%自我报告)表明,不尊重和虐待在用户和提供者之间都是内化和正常化的。在研究地点进行定性研究的基础上,我们探索了隐藏的和看不见的力量强制内部化和正常化的机制,并描述了HRBAs在孕产妇健康中发展的影响。
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期刊介绍: Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters ( SRHM) promotes sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) globally through its journal and ''more than a journal'' activities. The Sexual and Reproductive Health Matters (SRHM) journal, formerly Reproductive Health Matters (RHM), is a peer-reviewed, international journal that explores emerging, neglected and marginalised topics and themes across the field of sexual and reproductive health and rights. It aims to publish original, relevant, and contemporary research, particularly from a feminist perspective, that can help inform the development of policies, laws and services to fulfil the rights and meet the sexual and reproductive health needs of people of all ages, gender identities and sexual orientations. SRHM publishes work that engages with fundamental dilemmas and debates in SRHR, highlighting multiple perspectives, acknowledging differences, and searching for new forms of consensus. SRHM strongly encourages research that explores experiences, values, information and issues from the point of view of those whose lives are affected. Key topics addressed in SRHM include (but are not limited to) abortion, family planning, contraception, female genital mutilation, HIV and other STIs, human papillomavirus (HPV), maternal health, SRHR in humanitarian settings, gender-based violence, young people, gender, sexuality and sexual rights.
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