18 research outputs found

    Social differentiation and embodied dispositions: a qualitative study of maternal care-seeking behaviour for near-miss morbidity in Bolivia

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Use of maternal health care in low-income countries has been associated with several socioeconomic and demographic factors, although contextual analyses of the latter have been few. A previous study showed that 75% of women with severe obstetric morbidity (near-miss) identified at hospitals in La Paz, Bolivia were in critical conditions upon arrival, underscoring the significance of pre-hospital barriers also in this setting with free and accessible maternal health care. The present study explores how health care-seeking behaviour for near-miss morbidity is conditioned in La Paz, Bolivia.</p> <p>Methods</p> <p>Thematic interviews with 30 women with a near-miss event upon arrival at hospital. Near-miss was defined based on clinical and management criteria. Modified analytic induction was applied in the analysis that was further influenced by theoretical views that care-seeking behaviour is formed by predisposing characteristics, enabling factors, and perceived need, as well as by socially shaped habitual behaviours.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>The self-perception of being fundamentally separated from "others", meaning those who utilise health care, was typical for women who customarily delivered at home and who delayed seeking medical assistance for obstetric emergencies. Other explanations given by these women were distrust of authority, mistreatment by staff, such as not being kept informed about their condition or the course of their treatment, all of which reinforced their dissociation from the health-care system.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>The findings illustrate health care-seeking behaviour as a practise that is substantially conditioned by social differentiation. Social marginalization and the role health institutions play in shaping care-seeking behaviour have been de-emphasised by focusing solely on endogenous cultural factors in Bolivia.</p

    Contributions of the nursing intervention in primary healthcare for the promotion of breastfeeding

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    This study aimed to analyze the contributions of the Primary Healthcare nursing interventions, with primiparae in the promotion of breastfeeding. This is a quasi-experimental, longitudinal study, with a sample consisting of 151 primiparae, who had less than 28 weeks of pregnancy, with the child living for at least six months after the birth, performed between 15 October 2007 and 29 February 2008. Almost all the women initiated breastfeeding, with a sharp decline verified in the prevalence at six months. The mean duration of breastfeeding was 123.8±68.9 days. The intervention that began in the prepartum and continued into the postpartum period, using various strategies (individual consultation, preparation courses for parenting/childbirth, and domicile visits) and intervention contexts (health services and domicile) had significant effects on the duration of breastfeeding, which was not verified in the prevalence.El presente estudio tuvo como objetivo analizar las contribuciones de las intervenciones de enfermeras de Cuidados de Salud Primarios, con primíparas, en la promoción del amamantamiento materno. Se trata de un estudio casi experimental, longitudinal, con una muestra de 151 primíparas, con menos de 28 semanas de embarazo entre 15 de Octubre de 2.007 y 29 de Febrero de 2.008, con hijos vivos después de seis meses del parto. La casi totalidad de las mujeres inició el amamantamiento materno, verificándose una quiebra acentuada de la prevalencia a los seis meses. La duración promedio del amamantamiento materno fue 123,8±68,9 días. La intervención se inició en el preparto y se prolongó para el posparto, con diversidad de estrategias (consulta individual, curso de preparación para la paternidad/parto, y visita domiciliaria) y contextos de intervención (servicios de salud y domicilio) tuvo efectos significativos en la duración del amamantamiento materno, lo que no fue verificando en la prevalencia.O presente estudo teve como objetivo analisar os contributos das intervenções de enfermeiras de Cuidados de Saúde Primários, com primíparas, na promoção do aleitamento materno. Trata-se de um desenho quase-experimental, longitudinal, com amostra de 151 primíparas, com menos de 28 semanas de gravidez, entre 15 de outubro de 2007 e 29 de fevereiro de 2008, com filhos vivos aos seis meses após o parto. A quase totalidade das mulheres iniciou o aleitamento materno, verificando-se quebra acentuada da prevalência até os seis meses. A duração média do aleitamento materno foi 123,8±68,9 dias. A intervenção que se iniciou no pré-parto e se prolongou para o pós-parto, com diversidade de estratégias (consulta individual; curso de preparação para a parentalidade/parto e visita domiciliária) e contextos de intervenção (serviços de saúde e domicílio), teve efeitos significativos na duração do aleitamento materno, não se verificando na prevalência

    Timing of Return to Work and Breastfeeding in Australia

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    Professionals, carers or 'strangers'? Liminality and the typification of postnatal home care workers

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    The proliferation of home health care workers is an increasingly important trend in many contemporary societies, and its impact on the division of labour and the social meaning of care work is complex. In this article, these issues are analysed in relation to a new programme of domiciliary postnatal care in Australia. Coupled with early discharge from hospital, the programme is part of a reconfiguration that disrupts existing logics of care.The insertion of paid carers into the division of labour between `functionally diffuse', informal care and the `functional specificity' of professionals' work renders their status liminal, and their spatial location within the home transgresses symbolically important boundaries. Birthing women's responses include unease and a rejection of the workers based on the construction of them as `strangers'. It is argued that these responses demonstrate the lack of a `typification' based on contextual and spatialized knowledge of home health care worker

    A qualitative study of pharmacy nurse providers of community based post-birth care in Queensland, Australia

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    Background: Reduced length of hospital stay following childbirth has placed increasing demands on community-based post-birth care services in Australia. Queensland is one of several states in Australia in which nurses are employed privately by pharmacies to provide maternal and child health care, yet little is known about their prevalence, attributes or role. The aims of this paper are to (1) explore the experiences and perspectives of a sample of pharmacy nurses and GPs who provide maternal and child health services in Queensland, Australia (2) describe the professional qualifications of the sample of pharmacy nurses, and (3) describe and analyze the location of pharmacy nurse clinics in relation to publicly provided services.Methods: As part of a state-wide evaluation of post-birth care in Queensland, Australia, case studies were conducted in six regional and metropolitan areas which included interviews with 47 key informants involved in postnatal care provision. We report on the prevalence of pharmacy nurses in the case study sites, and on the key informant interviews with 19 pharmacy nurses and six General Practitioners (GPs). The interviews were transcribed and analysed thematically.Results: The prevalence of pharmacy nurses appears to be highest where public services are least well integrated, coordinated and/or accessible. Pharmacy nurses report high levels of demand for their services, which they argue fill a number of gaps in the public provision of maternal and child health care including accessibility, continuity of carer, flexibility and convenient location. The concerns of pharmacy nurses include lack of privacy for consultations, limited capacity for client record keeping and follow up, and little opportunity for professional development, while GPs expressed concerns about inadequate public care and about the lack of regulation of pharmacy based care.Conclusions: Pharmacy based clinics are a market-driven response to gaps in the public provision of care. Currently there are no minimum standards or qualifications required of pharmacy nurses, no oversight or regulation of their practice, and no formal mechanisms for communicating with other providers of postnatal care. We discuss the implications and possible mechanisms to enhance best-practice care
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