Stakeholder's experiences, expectations and decision making on reproductive care: An ethnographic study of three districts in northern Ghana.

BACKGROUND:In Ghana, priority-setting for reproductive health service interventions is known to be rudimentary with little wider stakeholder involvement. In recognizing the need for broad stakeholder engagement to advance reproductive care provision and utilization, it is necessary to jointly study...

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Main Authors: Martin Amogre Ayanore, Milena Pavlova, Regien Biesma, Wim Groot
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2017-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5665529?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-b0ee9b6ad2b741b590ebdf957f552bdc2020-11-25T01:36:40ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032017-01-011211e018690810.1371/journal.pone.0186908Stakeholder's experiences, expectations and decision making on reproductive care: An ethnographic study of three districts in northern Ghana.Martin Amogre AyanoreMilena PavlovaRegien BiesmaWim GrootBACKGROUND:In Ghana, priority-setting for reproductive health service interventions is known to be rudimentary with little wider stakeholder involvement. In recognizing the need for broad stakeholder engagement to advance reproductive care provision and utilization, it is necessary to jointly study the varied stakeholder views on reproductive care services. METHODS:We applied an ethnographic study approach where field data was collected between March-May 2015 in three rural districts of northern Ghana. Data was collected among women with recent births experiences (n = 90), health care providers (n = 16) and policy actors (n = 6). In-depth interviews and focus group discussions was applied to collect all data. Each stakeholder participant's audio file was transcribed, and repeatedly read through to identify similar and divergent views in data. A coding scheme guided coding processes. All transcripts were then imported into QSR NVivo 11 for further analysis. RESULTS:Four themes emerged. Women participants accentuated that sex and sexuality values of men have changed over time, and drives gender roles, parity levels and decision making on reproductive care needs at community levels. Sexual stigma on reproductive care reduces the willingness of women to voice poor experiences related to their previous reproductive experiences. All stakeholders' highlighted clinical treatments for post-abortion care are minimally covered under the fee exemption policy for antenatal and postnatal care. Policy processes on service delivery protocols still is top-down in Ghana. CONCLUSIONS:Health teams working to improve sexual and reproductive health care must find suitable context strategies that effectively work to improve women reproductive care needs at their operational levels. Private sector participation and informal community support clutches are encouraged to advance the delivery of reproductive care services.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5665529?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Martin Amogre Ayanore
Milena Pavlova
Regien Biesma
Wim Groot
spellingShingle Martin Amogre Ayanore
Milena Pavlova
Regien Biesma
Wim Groot
Stakeholder's experiences, expectations and decision making on reproductive care: An ethnographic study of three districts in northern Ghana.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Martin Amogre Ayanore
Milena Pavlova
Regien Biesma
Wim Groot
author_sort Martin Amogre Ayanore
title Stakeholder's experiences, expectations and decision making on reproductive care: An ethnographic study of three districts in northern Ghana.
title_short Stakeholder's experiences, expectations and decision making on reproductive care: An ethnographic study of three districts in northern Ghana.
title_full Stakeholder's experiences, expectations and decision making on reproductive care: An ethnographic study of three districts in northern Ghana.
title_fullStr Stakeholder's experiences, expectations and decision making on reproductive care: An ethnographic study of three districts in northern Ghana.
title_full_unstemmed Stakeholder's experiences, expectations and decision making on reproductive care: An ethnographic study of three districts in northern Ghana.
title_sort stakeholder's experiences, expectations and decision making on reproductive care: an ethnographic study of three districts in northern ghana.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2017-01-01
description BACKGROUND:In Ghana, priority-setting for reproductive health service interventions is known to be rudimentary with little wider stakeholder involvement. In recognizing the need for broad stakeholder engagement to advance reproductive care provision and utilization, it is necessary to jointly study the varied stakeholder views on reproductive care services. METHODS:We applied an ethnographic study approach where field data was collected between March-May 2015 in three rural districts of northern Ghana. Data was collected among women with recent births experiences (n = 90), health care providers (n = 16) and policy actors (n = 6). In-depth interviews and focus group discussions was applied to collect all data. Each stakeholder participant's audio file was transcribed, and repeatedly read through to identify similar and divergent views in data. A coding scheme guided coding processes. All transcripts were then imported into QSR NVivo 11 for further analysis. RESULTS:Four themes emerged. Women participants accentuated that sex and sexuality values of men have changed over time, and drives gender roles, parity levels and decision making on reproductive care needs at community levels. Sexual stigma on reproductive care reduces the willingness of women to voice poor experiences related to their previous reproductive experiences. All stakeholders' highlighted clinical treatments for post-abortion care are minimally covered under the fee exemption policy for antenatal and postnatal care. Policy processes on service delivery protocols still is top-down in Ghana. CONCLUSIONS:Health teams working to improve sexual and reproductive health care must find suitable context strategies that effectively work to improve women reproductive care needs at their operational levels. Private sector participation and informal community support clutches are encouraged to advance the delivery of reproductive care services.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC5665529?pdf=render
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