Litcius/Paper detail

Assessing respectful maternity care in a fragile, conflict-affected context: Observations from a 2016 national assessment in Afghanistan

Sheena Currie, Laila Natiq, Zelaikha Anwari, Hannah Tappis

2021Health Care For Women International22 citationsDOI

Abstract

Evidence on experiences and perceptions of care in pregnancy and childbirth in conflict-affected settings is limited. We interviewed 561 maternity care providers and observed 413 antenatal care consultations, 671 births, and 393 postnatal care consultations at public health facilities across Afghanistan. We found that healthcare providers work under stressed conditions with insufficient support, and most women receive mixed quality care. Understanding socio-cultural and contextual factors underpinning acceptance of mistreatment in childbirth, related to conflict, insecurity, gender and power dynamics, is critical for improving the quality of maternity care in Afghanistan and similar fragile and conflict affected settings.

Topics & Concepts

ChildbirthContext (archaeology)NursingHealth careMaternity carePublic healthPsychologyMedicinePregnancyPolitical scienceGeographyGeneticsBiologyLawArchaeologyGlobal Maternal and Child HealthMigration, Health and TraumaMaternal and Perinatal Health Interventions