Although maternal mortality is a significant global health issue, achievements in mortality decline to date have been inadequate. A review of the interventions targeted at maternal mortality reduction demonstrates that most developing countries face tremendous challenges in the implementation of these interventions, including the availability of unreliable data and the shortage in human and financial resources, as well as limited political commitment. Examples from developing countries, such as Sri Lanka, Malaysia and Honduras, demonstrate that maternal mortality will decline when appropriate strategies are in place. Such achievable strategies need to include redoubled commitments on the part of local, national and global political bodies, concrete investments in high-yield and cost-effective interventions and the delegation of some clinical tasks from higher-level healthcare providers to mid- or lower-level healthcare providers, as well as improved health-management information systems.
In Karnataka, India only one-third of HIV-infected pregnant women received antiretroviral prophylaxis at delivery in 2007 through the state government's prevention of parent-to-child HIV transmission (PPTCT) program. The current qualitative study explored the role of HIV-associated stigma as a barrier to accessing PPTCT services in the rural northern Karnataka district of Bagalkot using in depth interviews and focus group discussions with HIV-infected women who had participated in the PPTCT program, male and female family members, and HIV service providers. Participants discussed personal experiences, community perceptions of HIV, and decision-making related to accessing PPTCT services. They described stigma towards HIVinfected individuals from multiple sources: healthcare workers, community members, family and self. Stigma-related behaviors were based on fears of HIV transmission through personal contact and moral judgment. Experience and/or fears of discrimination led pregnant women to avoid using PPTCT interventions. Government, cultural and historical factors are described as the roots of much the stigma-related behavior in this setting. Based on these formative data, PPTCT program planners should consider further research and interventions aimed at diminishing institutional and interpersonal HIV-associated stigma experienced by pregnant women.
This article reviews the implications of disrespect and abuse in maternal health services, the growing movement to humanize childbirth and promote cultural humility, and one strategy to build an online course to address this issue among maternal health workers in Mexico. Reports of disrespect and abuse have been widely reported by women seeking health services, including maternity care, across the globe. Evidence indicates offenders are often health care professionals who do not consider their behavior inappropriate and believe they are acting in the interests of both mother and baby. These same providers are often overworked, underpaid, and have few role models who humanize childbirth and demonstrate cultural humility. Strategies which aim to foster competencies in humanized childbirth and cultural humility among health providers are lacking in current health professional training programs. Using the case of Mexico, the authors describe the template and justification for an online course for novice to expert health professionals to build competencies in humanized childbirth and cultural humility. Recommendations for future work are discussed.
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