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An investigation into the factors affecting underutilisation of the Phelandaba clinic labour ward by low risk pregnant women in Maputaland Northern KwaZulu-NatalMathenjwa, Nozipho Celia Herietta January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (M.Tech.: Nursing)-Durban Institute of Technology, 2005 1 v. : ill. ; 30 cm / An exploratory descriptive research design was used for this study which investigated the underutilisation of a rural clinic’s labour ward by low risk pregnant women (LRPW). The study took place in Maputaland, Northern KwaZulu-Natal. Rosenstock’s health belief model (HBM) modified by Becker et al, in 1977 was adapted as a framework for this study.
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The integration of STI/HIV services into existing FP and MCH programmes : the perspective of clients.Munthree, Chantal. January 2003 (has links)
Since the 1994 International Conference on Population and Development there has been a shift away from meeting demographic targets towards meeting the reproductive goals of individual men and women. Partially as a response to the increase in the level of HIV infection, and the associated high levels of STIs, there has been an increasing focus on integrating HIV/STI services within mainstream Maternal Child Health and Family Planning programmes. Thus clients attending clinics that provide integrated services have the opportunity to receive multiple services during a single visit to a facility. The aim of this research was to evaluate the process of integrating FPIMCH and STI/HIV services in urban and rural areas within KwaZulu-Natal, using data gathered form semi structured interviews with clients leaving the health facilities. The research also examined the overall quality of care received within the integrated clinics. The results show that clients rarely receive a range of services on a single visit, despite the integration of services. In most cases, clients do receive the services for which they attended the health facility. However the study found that providers are missing important opportunities to inform, educate and counsel clients on a variety of reproductive health matters. This is important if we are to avoid the negative consequences of an unwanted pregnancy and STIs (including HIV/AIDS). It was also found that the overall quality of care within integrated clinics was low amongst all clients attending the facility. / Thesis (M.Dev.Studies)-University of Natal, Durban, 2003.
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Preventing maternal mortality : - Nurses’ and midwives’ experiences from Tanzanian maternal health care services. / Att arbeta mot mödradödlighet : - Sjuksköterskors och barnmorskors upplevelser från tanzanisk mödrahälsovård.Nyberg White, Maria January 2013 (has links)
Background: Half a million women died during pregnancy or childbirth in 2005. Bleeding, infections, high blood pressure, obstructed labor, unsafe abortions, malaria and HIV/Aids were the main causes. Tanzania is a highly affected country with 460 maternal deaths per 100 000 live births. Nurses and midwives play an important role in preventing maternal mortality. Purpose: The aim of this study was to explore and analyze nurses’ and midwives’ experiences of maternal mortality prevention on the Tanzanian island of Unguja. Method: Interviews with nine nurses and midwifes from four different hospitals and health care facilities were conducted with the assistance of an interpreter. A structural analysis designed by Ricoeur was undertaken. Results: The findings suggest that family planning, a more accessible health care, referral of severe cases, medical interventions, health education, community resource persons and involving fathers in maternal health care are preventive strategies that can reduce maternal mortality. Conclusion: To further improve the quality of maternal mortality prevention further knowledge aboutindividual differences in learning from health education is needed. Involvement of all fathers in maternal health care should also be considered. Training of unskilled personnel is believed to improve early identification of life-threatening complications and thereby reduce maternal mortality. / Bakgrund: En halv miljon kvinnor i världen dog under graviditet eller förlossning under 2005. Huvudorsaker var blödningar, infektioner, högt blodtryck, långdragna förlossningar, osäkra aborter, malaria samt HIV/Aids. Tanzania är ett drabbat land med 460 fall av mödradödlighet per 100 000 levande födda barn. Sjuksköterskor och barnmorskor spelar en viktig roll i det preventiva arbetet mot mödradödlighet. Syfte: Syftet med studien var att utforska och analysera sjuksköterskors och barnmorskors upplevelser och erfarenhet av arbetet mot mödradödlighet på ön Unguja, Tanzania. Metod: Intervjuer med nio sjuksköterskor och barnmorskor från fyra olika sjukhus/hälsocentraler genomfördes med hjälp av en tolk. En strukturanalys utformad av Ricoeur genomfördes. Resultat: Resultatet visar att familjeplanering, en mer tillgänglig hälso- och sjukvård, remitterande av patienter med allvarliga komplikationer, medicinska interventioner, hälsoutbildning, resurspersoner i samhället och att involvera pappor i mödrahälsovården var preventiva strategier som kan minska mödradödlighet. Slutsats: För att ytterligare förbättra arbetet mot mödradödlighet tycks mer kunskap om individers förmåga att ta till sig hälsoutbildning behövas. Att i ännu större utsträckning även välkomna alla blivande pappor till mödrahälsovården föreslås också kunna fungera preventivt. Utbildning för outbildade kvinnor som hjälper till vid förlossningar (Traditional Birth Attendants) tros kunna förbättra tidig identifikation av livshotande komplikationer och därmed kunna minska mödradödligheten.
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Development and validation of a scale to measure patient satisfaction with antenatal careSteyn, Petrus Schonken 03 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--Stellenbosch University, 1999. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: There is no standardised instrument available in South Africa to measure patient satisfaction
with antenatal care. The measurement of patient satisfaction is especially important after the
implementation of a free antenatal care service in the South African health system.
The purpose of this study was to develop and validate an appropriate scale to measure patient
satisfaction. Several methods to measure patient satisfaction are described in the literature. A
questionnaire was developed for the Tygerberg Hospital patients. This questionnaire was tested
in 200 antenatal patients through a structured interview.
The importance of cross-cultural research is emphasised in the validation of the measuring
instrument. Factor analysis was used to validate the instrument. This showed that a single factor
accounted for most of the total variance. All the items had to do with the process of antenatal
care.
The findings of this survey showed the following:
• One cannot use overseas measuring instruments without adjusting for cross-cultural
differences.
• The patient satisfaction score is negatively skewed with a high mean.
• Social desirability response sets may play an important role in these questionnaires.
• There is a statistically significant difference in patient satisfaction with antenatal care
between the different antenatal clinics, even after controlling for socio-demographic
differences.
• That the satisfaction score is a reflection of the service rendered to the patient and not of the
socio-demographic differences.
This research identified the difficulties of developing a standardised instrument to measure
patient satisfaction with antenatal care and opens the way for future research into patient
satisfaction with medical services. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Daar is geen gestandaardiseerde meetinstrument om pasiente se tevredenheid met
voorgeboortesorg in Suid Afrika te bepaal nie. Die noodsaaklikheid van die bepaling van
tevredenheid met voorgeboortesorg het nou belangriker geword nadat 'n stelsel van gratis
voorgeboortesorg in Suid-Afrika gei"mplementeer is.
Die doel van hierdie navorsing was om 'n skaal te ontwikkel om pasiente se tevredenheid met
voorgeboortesorg te bepaal en om die geldigheid van hierdie meetinstrument plaaslik te toets. In
die literatuur is daar verskeie metodes om pasiente se tevredenheid te bepaal. 'n Vraelys is
ontwikkel vir Tygerberg Hospitaal se voorgeboorte pasiente. Hierdie vraelys is getoets by 200
pasiente in die voorgeboorte klinieke in Tygerberg Hospitaal deur middel van 'n gestruktureerde
onderhoud.
In die geldigheidsbepaling van die meetinstrument 1s die belangrikheid van kruiskulturele
navorsing beklemtoon. Faktoranalise is gebruik vir die bepaling van geldigheid. Met
faktoranalise is aangetoon dat een onderliggende faktor, naamlik die voorgeboortesorgsisteem,
pasiente se tevredenheid verklaar.
Die bevindings in hierdie ondersoek het die volgende getoon:
• Dat aile meetinstrumente nie summier transkultureel toegepas kan word nie .
• Dat die tevredenheidsmeting van voorgeboortesorg 'n negatiewe skewe verspreiding het, met
'n hoe gemiddelde telling.
• Sosiaal-aanvaarbare antwoorde speel waarskynlik 'n groat rol in hierdie vraelyste.
• Dat daar 'n statistiese betekenisvolle verskil is in die tevredenheidsgraad van pasiente met
voorgeboortesorg tussen sommige klinieke; selfs nadat gekontroleer is vir sosiodemografiese
verskille tussen pasiente.
• Dat die tevredenheidsmeting 'n weerspieeling is van die diens gelewer aan die pasient, en nie
net 'n weerspieeling is van die pasient se sosio-demografiese verskille nie.
Hierdie navorsmg identifiseer die probleme met die opstel van 'n gestandaardiseerde
meetinstrument vir die bepaling van pasente se tevredenheid met voorgeboortesorg en baan die
weg vir verdere navorsing oor pasiente se tevredenheid met mediese dienste.
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Perceived quality and utilisation of maternal health services in peri-urban, commercial farming, and rural areas in South Africa.Matizirofa, Lyness January 2006 (has links)
This investigation aimed to determine factors that influence women's utilisation of maternal health services, with specific focus on the quality of care and services available to disadvantaged communities in South Africa. It used the women's perspectives to assess the quality of maternal healthcare services in peri-urban commercial farming and rural areas with the purpose of understanding why women utilise maternal services the way they do.
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The H-bug epidemic: the impact of antibiotic-resistant staphylococcal infection on New Zealand society and health 1955-1963Jowitt, Deborah Mary Unknown Date (has links)
An epidemic of staphylococcal infections occurred in New Zealand hospitals and communities from 1955-1963. The 'H', or 'Hospital Bug', a strain of Staphylococcus aureus characteristic of the epidemic, was resistant to the most commonly used antibiotics. Post-operative patients, the frail elderly and mothers and babies were particularly vulnerable to staphylococcal colonization and infection. This thesis places the H-Bug epidemic in its historical context, discussing the ways in which the government and health professionals responded to the rising incidence of staphylococcal infection, and the major effects of the epidemic on medical and hospital practice. It also examines the impact of persistent staphylococcal infection on women and families in the community. Primary sources provided the basis for this thesis. The H-Bug epidemic has gone largely unrecorded except in contemporary documents. Health Department files and Auckland Hospital Board records as well as newspaper clippings were important sources. The New Zealand epidemic was clearly linked to the global pandemic of antibiotic resistant staphylococcal infection, 1946-1966, through medical literature and archival documents. International medical journals, including the New Zealand Medical Journal, published numerous articles on the epidemiology of antibiotic-resistant staphylococcal infection, providing an excellent record of research, case studies, current opinion, and recommended practice. The most valuable contribution to an understanding of the impact and experience of the H-Bug epidemic was, however, provided by the nineteen people who agreed to be interviewed for the study. Interviewees included a wide variety of health professionals and women and their children, all of whom had personal experience or association with the epidemic. In this thesis it is argued that the main focus of the medical response was the prevention and control of hospital cross-infection, both to protect patients and to preserve the public perception of the hospital as a safe venue for care. Although the emergence of resistant strains of staphylococci was widely attributed to the misuse of antibiotics, this thesis contends that the Health Department was reluctant to impose restrictions on medical prescribing and that Health Department official and senior clinicians chose instead to modify hospital environments and clinical practice. Rooming-in was widely introduced to counter the epidemic despite the fact that a trial in 1959, at National Women's Hospital, did not demonstrate a reduction in infection rates among neonates. The concept endured, however, as it held strong appeal for hospital administrators hard pressed to keep wards adequately staffed with trained personnel. It was also supported by women and health professionals who were convinced of the benefits of a close mother-baby relationship from birth. The H-Bug epidemic was eventually resolved by the introduction of the methicillin antibiotics in the early 1960s. As a consequence, confidence in a pharmaceutical solution to infectious disease remained intact until the emergence of multiple antibiotic resistant organisms in the 1980s. The lessons of the H-Bug epidemic had been largely forgotten in the intervening years, ignored until New Zealand clinicians were reminded once again that antimicrobial resistance would inevitably accompany the indiscriminate use of antibiotics and inadequate attention to infection prevention and control.
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A qualitative study of women who use midwives for childbirth /Osterkamp, Staci Ruth, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--Texas State University-San Marcos, 2007. / Vita. Appendix: leaves 34-35. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 36-38).
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Adolescent pregnancy and parenthood in Swaziland : quality of care, community support and health care service needs /Mngadi, Patricia Thuli, January 2007 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karolinska institutet, 2007. / Härtill 5 uppsatser.
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Maternity care in Zambia : with special reference to social support /Maimbolwa, Margaret C., January 2004 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karol. inst., 2004. / Härtill 6 uppsatser.
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Birth centre care : reproduction and infant health /Gottvall, Karin, January 2004 (has links)
Diss. (sammanfattning) Stockholm : Karol. inst., 2004. / Härtill 4 uppsatser.
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