AI Article Synopsis

  • There's increasing awareness of obstetric violence in healthcare settings globally, particularly affecting women living with HIV in South Africa, where incidences of such violence may be influenced by their HIV status.* -
  • Data was gathered from 26 interviews with HIV-positive women shortly after childbirth, focusing on their labor experiences, adherence to treatment, and broader social contexts, analyzed through thematic methods.* -
  • Women reported various factors impacting their birthing experiences, including resource shortages and negative healthcare interactions, with many feeling empowered despite experiencing obstetric violence, leading to shifts in family planning and attitudes towards healthcare facilities.*

Article Abstract

Background: There is growing recognition of obstetric violence in health facilities across the globe. With nearly one in three pregnant women living with HIV in South Africa, it is important to consider the influence of HIV status on birth experiences, including potential experience of obstetric violence as defined by the Respectful Maternity Care Charter. This qualitative analysis aims to understand the factors that shape birth experiences of women living with HIV, including experiences at the nexus of HIV status and obstetric violence, and how women react to these factors.

Methods: Data were collected in a Midwife Obstetric Unit in Gugulethu, Cape Town, South Africa, through 26 in-depth interviews with women living with HIV at 6-8 weeks postpartum. Interviews included questions about labor and early motherhood, ART adherence, and social contexts. We combined template style thematic analysis and matrix analysis to refine themes and subthemes.

Results: Participants described a range of social and structural factors they felt influenced their birth experiences, including lack of resources and institutional policies. While some participants described positive interactions with healthcare providers, several described instances of obstetric violence, including being ignored and denied care. Nearly all participants, even those who described instances of obstetric violence, described themselves as strong and independent during their birth experiences. Participants reacted to birth experiences by shifting their family planning intentions, forming attitudes toward the health facility, and taking responsibility for their own and their babies' safety during birth.

Conclusions: Narratives of negative birth experiences among some women living with HIV reveal a constellation of factors that produce obstetric violence, reflective of social hierarchies and networks of power relations. Participant accounts indicate the need for future research explicitly examining how structural vulnerability shapes birth experiences for women living with HIV in South Africa. These birth stories should also guide future intervention and advocacy work, sparking initiatives to advance compassionate maternity care across health facilities in South Africa, with relevance for other comparable settings.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11462691PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12978-024-01881-3DOI Listing

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