2015
DOI: 10.1186/s12992-015-0117-9
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Attitudes and behaviours of maternal health care providers in interactions with clients: a systematic review

Abstract: BackgroundHigh maternal mortality and morbidity persist, in large part due to inadequate access to timely and quality health care. Attitudes and behaviours of maternal health care providers (MHCPs) influence health care seeking and quality of care.MethodsFive electronic databases were searched for studies from January 1990 to December 2014. Included studies report on types or impacts of MHCP attitudes and behaviours towards their clients, or the factors influencing these attitudes and behaviours. Attitudes and… Show more

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Cited by 366 publications
(351 citation statements)
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“…Very good staff attitude increased the likelihood of child survival. A recent systematic review of literature documented a broad range of negative maternal health care providers' attitudes and behaviours affecting patient well-being, satisfaction with care, and care seeking [29]. Negative attitudes and behaviours of maternal health care providers lead to inadequate care seeking and reduce the quality of care, leading to rise in maternal and child mortality and morbidity.…”
Section: Health System Related Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Very good staff attitude increased the likelihood of child survival. A recent systematic review of literature documented a broad range of negative maternal health care providers' attitudes and behaviours affecting patient well-being, satisfaction with care, and care seeking [29]. Negative attitudes and behaviours of maternal health care providers lead to inadequate care seeking and reduce the quality of care, leading to rise in maternal and child mortality and morbidity.…”
Section: Health System Related Factorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the high scores observed in the other dimensions suggest an enabling environment for the provision of maternal and neonatal health care, which is surprising. Several studies in Mozambique and others LMICs have suggested that the working health context is still characterized by maternal and child healthcare providers’ negative attitudes and behavior (such as absenteeism, corruption, poor communication and authoritarian or frightening attitudes) [43,44]. Despite the growing evidence of the practice of informal payments in LMICs [45,46], more than 90% of respondents rated disagreement with all the items in the relevant sub-dimension suggesting they perceived their facility to have low levels of informal payment.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Women seeking abortions and fistula complications experience abusive behavior from hospital staff and often stigmatized. (Mannava et al, 2015) The studies have validated that delay in treatment and high risk fatality episodes are attributed to cultural stigmatization of women by hospital staff. …”
Section: The Unexpected Fear and Apprehension For Attending Biomedicamentioning
confidence: 98%