Levels and Determinants of Person-Centered Maternity Care Among Women Living in Urban Informal Settlements: Evidence from Client Exit Surveys in Nairobi, Lusaka and Ouagadougou
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Background
Sub-Saharan Africa’s rapid urbanization has led to the sprawling of urban informal settlements. The urban poorest women are more likely to experience worse health outcomes and poor treatment during childbirth. This study measures levels of person-centered maternity care (PCMC) and identifies determinants of PCMC among women living in urban informal settlements in Nairobi, Lusaka and Ouagadougou.
Methods
We conducted phone, home-based or facility-based exit surveys of women discharged from childbirth care in facilities serving urban informal settlements. We estimated overall and domain-specific PCMC scores covering dignity and respect, communication and autonomy, and supportive care. We ran multilevel linear regression models to identify structural, intermediary and health systems factors associated with PCMC.
Results
We included 1,249 women discharged from childbirth care: the majority were aged 20-34 years and were unemployed. In Lusaka and Nairobi, over 65% of women had secondary education, and over half gave birth in a hospital, whereas in Ouagadougou a third had secondary education and 30.4% gave birth in a hospital. The mean PCMC score ranged from 57.1% in Lusaka to 73.8% in Ouagadougou. Across cities, women reported high dignity and respect mean scores (73.5% -84.3%), whereas communication and autonomy mean scores were consistently poor (47.6% - 63.2%). In Ouagadougou, women with formal employment, those who delivered in a private for-profit facility, and whose newborn received postnatal care before discharge reported significantly higher PCMC. In Nairobi and Lusaka, women who were attended by a physician during childbirth, and those whose newborn was checked before discharge reported significantly higher PCMC.
Conclusion
Women living in urban informal settlements experience inadequate PCMC and report poor communication with health providers. Select health systems and provision of care factors are associated with PCMC in this context. Quality improvement efforts are needed to enhance PCMC and ensure women’s continuity in care seeking.
Key Messages
What is already known on this topic
Despite high use of maternal and newborn health services in urban areas, health outcomes still remain worse among lower-income populations, and we know little about the quality of services and experience of care among the urban poorest women. Studies suggest that women who experience disrespect and abuse during childbirth are more likely to discontinue using health services. Person-centered maternity care (PCMC) refers to care that is respectful of and responsive to women’s needs, preferences and values. Previous studies have reported sub-optimal levels of person-centered maternity care in low-and middle-income settings. We conducted this study to evaluate the levels of PCMC and identify structural, intermediary and health systems factors associated with PCMC among low-income urban women living in informal settlements in sub-Saharan African capital cities.
What this study adds
Women living in urban informal settlements in Nairobi, Lusaka and Ouagadougou experience inadequate PCMC, with overall mean scores ranging from 57.1% (51.4 points out of 90) to 73.8% (66.4 points out of 90). Most women reported experiencing dignity and respect during childbirth, but communication with providers was consistently poor, with mean scores ranging from 47.6% (12.8 points out of 27) in Lusaka to 63.2% (17.1 points out of 27) in Nairobi. In Ouagadougou, women with formal employment, those who delivered in a private for-profit facility, and whose newborn received postnatal care prior to discharge reported significantly higher PCMC. In Nairobi and Lusaka, women who were attended by a physician during childbirth, and those whose newborn received postnatal care before discharge reported significantly higher PCMC.
How this study affects research, practice or policy
Further research is needed to understand health providers’ barriers in offering PCMC and the structures enabling PCMC. Quality improvement efforts aiming to improve interpersonal communication and provider attitudes, such as health provider trainings and mentorship, as well as leadership engagement may be promising avenues to enhance women’s experience of childbirth care in resource-constrained settings such as urban informal settlements in sub-Saharan Africa.