AI Article Synopsis

  • The study looks at how various factors make it hard for families in poor areas to get needed healthcare for mothers and young children.* -
  • Researchers talked to mothers who lost newborns and held discussions with parents to understand problems they face when seeking health care in rural Uganda.* -
  • They found that issues like family influence, bad roads, and unhelpful health workers all make it tough for people to get the health services they need.*

Article Abstract

Background: Access to appropriate obstetric and under-5 healthcare services in low-resource settings is a challenge in countries with high mortality rates. However, the interplay of multiple factors within an ecological system affects the effectiveness of the health system in reaching those in need.

Objective: This study examined how multiple factors concurrently affect access to obstetric and child healthcare services in resource-poor settings.

Methods: The research used social autopsies [in-depth interview] with mothers who experienced newborn death [ = 29], focus group discussions [ = 8] with mothers [ = 32], and fathers [ = 28] of children aged 6-59 months, and the author's field observations in Eastern Uganda's rural settings. The research employed narrative and inductive thematic analysis, guided by concepts of social interactions, behaviour, and health institutional systems drawn from system theory.

Results: The study unmasked multiple concurrent barriers to healthcare access at distinct levels. Within families, the influence of mothers-in-law and gender dynamics constrains women's healthcare-seeking autonomy and agency. At the community level, poor transport system, characterised by long distances and challenging road conditions, consistently impede healthcare access. At the facility level, attitudes, responsiveness, and service delivery of health workers critically affect healthcare access. Negative experiences at health facilities profoundly discourage the community from seeking future health services.

Conclusion: The findings emphasise the persistent influence of structural and social factors that, although well documented, are often overlooked and continue to limit women's agency and autonomy in healthcare access. Enhancing universal access to appropriate healthcare services requires comprehensive health systems interventions that concurrently address the healthcare access barriers.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11391869PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2024.2397163DOI Listing

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