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      Low Use of Rural Maternity Services in Uganda: Impact of Women's Status, Traditional Beliefs and Limited Resources

      Reproductive Health Matters
      Elsevier BV

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          Abstract

          In Uganda, lack of resources and skilled staff to improve quality and delivery of maternity services, despite good policies and concerted efforts, have not yielded an increase in utilisation of these services by women or a reduction in the high ratio of maternal deaths. This paper reports a study conducted from November 2000 to October 2001 in Hoima, a rural district in western Uganda, whose aim was to enhance understanding of why, when faced with complications of pregnancy or delivery, women continue to choose high risk options leading to severe morbidity and even their own deaths. The findings demonstrate that adherence to traditional birthing practices and beliefs that pregnancy is a test of endurance and maternal death a sad but normal event, are important factors. The use of primary health units and the referral hospital, including when complications occur, was considered only as a last resort. Lack of skilled staff at primary health care level, complaints of abuse, neglect and poor treatment in hospital and poorly understood reasons for procedures, plus health workers' views that women were ignorant, also explain the unwillingness of women to deliver in health facilities and seek care for complications. Appropriate interventions are needed to address the barriers between rural mothers and the formal health care system, including community education on all aspects of essential obstetric care and sensitisation of service providers to the situation of rural mothers.

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          Anthropological Studies of Women's Status Revisited: 1977-1987

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            Giving birth in maternity hospitals in Benin: Testimonies of women

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              Gender-related differences in the impact of tropical diseases on women: what do we know?

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Reproductive Health Matters
                Reproductive Health Matters
                Elsevier BV
                0968-8080
                1460-9576
                May 27 2003
                January 2003
                May 27 2003
                January 2003
                : 11
                : 21
                : 16-26
                Article
                10.1016/S0968-8080(03)02176-1
                12800700
                815a7872-fb02-4ca8-a64d-03327ca1a901
                © 2003
                History

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