Applying a behavioral science lens to maternity care in Liberia: How scarcity, salience, and structural factors impact likelihood of facility delivery

IF 1.8 Q3 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Sara V. Flanagan , Allison Schachter , Sophie T. Parwon , Mbalu W. Jusu , Thon Okanlawon , Jana Smith
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Abstract

Delivery in well-equipped facilities is important to prevent the major causes of maternal mortality. Social and structural barriers are well established across low-resource contexts; less understood is the interaction between the psychological dimensions of behavior and a pregnant woman's environment to either facilitate or hinder facility delivery. We conducted formative research applying the behavioral design approach to explore this context shaping decision-making and behavior of pregnant women, and others with influence, in Grand Cape Mount, Liberia. In-depth interviews (n = 58) were conducted in 2021 with pregnant and postpartum women, family members, facility-based providers, trained traditional midwives, community health assistants, and community leaders. Our findings highlight that while most women intend to deliver in a facility, poverty compounds difficulties at each step of the continuum of care, with the cumulative impact making facility-based delivery more difficult for lower-income, rural women to achieve. Delivering in a facility requires extensive planning and saving to overcome these difficulties and we present insights into the context contributing to a series of delays across the course of a woman's pregnancy – from initial care seeking through preparing and seeking care for childbirth, to arriving and receiving care at the facility. Our findings reveal the importance of delays earlier in pregnancy, as poor families have to weigh trade-offs of various aspects of planning and saving more carefully while also faced with chronic scarcity and competing demands for attention. Behavioral solutions that support women to make these difficult decisions and empower communities to address local challenges are still sorely needed.

将行为科学视角应用于利比里亚的产妇护理:稀缺性、突出性和结构性因素如何影响设施分娩的可能性
在设备齐全的设施中分娩对于预防孕产妇死亡的主要原因非常重要。在资源匮乏的情况下,社会和结构性障碍已得到公认;但人们对行为的心理层面与孕妇所处环境之间的相互作用,从而促进或阻碍设施接生的了解则较少。我们在利比里亚大角山开展了一项形成性研究,运用行为设计方法来探索影响孕妇及其他有影响力的人的决策和行为的环境。2021 年,我们对孕妇和产后妇女、家庭成员、医疗机构提供者、训练有素的传统助产士、社区卫生助理和社区领袖进行了深入访谈(n = 58)。我们的调查结果表明,虽然大多数妇女都希望在医疗机构分娩,但贫困加剧了连续护理过程中每一步的困难,累积的影响使低收入农村妇女更难在医疗机构分娩。在医疗机构分娩需要大量的计划和储蓄来克服这些困难,我们将深入分析导致妇女在整个怀孕过程中出现一系列延误的原因--从最初寻求医疗服务,到准备和寻求分娩护理,再到到达医疗机构并接受护理。我们的研究结果揭示了在怀孕早期出现延误的重要性,因为贫困家庭不得不在计划和储蓄的各个方面更仔细地权衡利弊,同时还要面对长期的资源匮乏和相互竞争的关注需求。目前仍亟需行为解决方案来支持妇女做出这些艰难的决定,并增强社区应对当地挑战的能力。
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CiteScore
1.60
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审稿时长
163 days
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