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Factors that influence pregnant women's choice of delivery site in Mukono district, UgandaKkonde, Anthony 03 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to analyse and describe the factors that influence the choice of site of delivery by pregnant women in Mukono district. By employing quantitative, non experimental research methods, 431 women were interviewed by using structured questionnaires. These women had either delivered at; home, TBA, private or public clinic and 72% had been delivered by skilled attendants. Choice of delivery site was influenced by the attitudes of health workers which were rather poor in public sites, proximity of site, attendance of antenatal clinic at a site, availability of supplies and drugs, plus level of care including emergency obstetric care. / Health Studies / M. A. (Public Health)
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Shattered lives : understanding obstetric fistula in UgandaRuder, Bonnie J. 28 November 2012 (has links)
In Uganda, there are an estimated 200,000 women suffering from obstetric fistula, with
1,900 new cases expected annually. These figures, combined with a persistently high
maternal mortality rate, have led to an international discourse that claims the solution to
improving maternal health outcomes is facility-based delivery with a skilled birth
attendant. In accord with this discourse, the Ugandan government criminalized traditional
birth attendants in 2010. In this study, I examine the lived experience of traditional birth
attendants and women who have suffered from an obstetric fistula in eastern Uganda.
Using data collected from open-ended, semi-structured interviews, focus groups, and
participant-observation, I describe the biocultural determinants of obstetric fistula. Based
on findings, I argue that although emergency obstetric care is critical to prevent obstetric
fistula in cases of obstructed labor, the criminalization of the locally constructed system
of care, TBAs, serves as yet another layer of structural violence in the lives of rural, poor
women. Results demonstrate how political-economic and cultural determinants of
obstetric fistula are minimized in favor of a Western prescribed, bio-medical solution,
which is heavily resource dependent. This solution is promoted through a political
economy of hope fueled by the obstetric imaginary, or the enthusiastic belief in Western-style
biomedical obstetric care’s ability to deliver positive health outcomes for women
and infants regardless of local context and constraints. Recommendations include
increased obstetric fistula treatment facilities with improved communication from
medical staff, decriminalization of traditional birth attendants and renewed training
programs, and engaging local populations in maternal health discourse to ensure
culturally competent programs. / Graduation date: 2013
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Factors that influence pregnant women's choice of delivery site in Mukono district, UgandaKkonde, Anthony 03 1900 (has links)
The purpose of this study was to analyse and describe the factors that influence the choice of site of delivery by pregnant women in Mukono district. By employing quantitative, non experimental research methods, 431 women were interviewed by using structured questionnaires. These women had either delivered at; home, TBA, private or public clinic and 72% had been delivered by skilled attendants. Choice of delivery site was influenced by the attitudes of health workers which were rather poor in public sites, proximity of site, attendance of antenatal clinic at a site, availability of supplies and drugs, plus level of care including emergency obstetric care. / Health Studies / M. A. (Public Health)
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