• J. Korean Med. Sci. · Feb 2019

    What are the Barriers to Antenatal Care Utilization in Rufisque District, Senegal?: a Bottleneck Analysis.

    • Kyung Hee Kim, Jae Wook Choi, Jiyoung Oh, Juyoung Moon, Seonghae You, and YongKyoung Woo.
    • Institute for Environmental Health, Korea University, Seoul, Korea.
    • J. Korean Med. Sci. 2019 Feb 25; 34 (7): e62.

    BackgroundThis study aimed to analyze the barriers affecting the utilization of antenatal care (ANC) among Senegalese mothers.MethodsHealth facility staffs were surveyed to examine the availability coverage of ANC (infrastructural capacity of health posts to handle maternal and newborn healthcare). A total of 113 women of childbearing age were surveyed to identify factors associated with the accessibility coverage (physical, economic, and information accessibility factors), acceptability coverage (socio-cultural features, social acceptance, and language), and effectiveness coverage (ratio of mothers having completed 4 visits) of ANC. Further, to identify the socio-cultural factors and the specific characteristics of the barriers, 5 focus group discussions were conducted with women of childbearing age, their husbands and mothers-in-law, community health workers, and health facility staff. The effectiveness coverage of ANC was analyzed by reviewing materials from the District Health Information System 2 of Senegal.ResultsKey barriers of ANC utilization were associated with acceptability coverage. ANC during early pregnancy was avoided owing to the negative social stigma surrounding miscarriage. The survey results indicated an extremely high miscarriage rate of 30.9% among the participants. The social stigma towards unmarried mothers caused them to hide their pregnancy, which deterred ANC utilization. The husband was the final decision maker and social supporter on ANC utilization.ConclusionTo promote the utilization of ANC services among pregnant women in Senegal, it is important to alleviate the social stigma towards miscarriages and unmarried mothers, and to provide greater social support for pregnancies and newborn deliveries within family.

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