Health Worker's ''Attitude '' Keeps Pregnant Women away from Health Facilities
Research conducted by Send-Ghana, a civil society
organisation, has established that the disrespectful attitude of some nurses
and midwives is deterring pregnant women from accessing healthcare facilities. It, therefore, recommended that the Ghana Health Service (
GHS) should take pragmatic measures to orient health workers on the importance
of being polite when providing maternal health services, to help improve
client health provider relationship.
The study further recommended that sanctions should be
instituted against nurses and midwives who disrespected patients and be
implemented without compromise, in a bid to ensure improvement in maternal
healthcare delivery.
It indicated that improving client health provider
relationship could help decrease maternal mortality resulting from the many
deliberate deliveries outside of the health facilities.
Presenting the highlights of the survey to the Ministry of
Health and other stakeholders in Accra yesterday, the project leader, Mr
Bashiru Jumah, said the objective of the study was to assess clients’
satisfaction relating to the delivery of maternal health services at district
facilities.
He said over the last two decades, Ghana had made some
appreciable progress in healthcare delivery and maternal health in particular.
“ Access to healthcare facilities by pregnant women increased
from 1990 to 2015, which saw the reduction of maternal mortality from 780 out
of every 100,000 births to 320 of every 100,000 births,” he said.
More interventions required
Mr Jumah said those achievements were as a result of
government interventions which included
the introduction of the community-based health planning services and the free
maternal health policy adopted between 2000 and 2008.
However, he was quick to add that although those
interventions were helpful, it could not help the country to achieve its
Millennium Development Goal five, which required all member countries to reduce
by three quarters, between 1990 and 2015, the maternal mortality ratio.
“It is obviously not accepted for any woman to die giving
birth because they refused to go for antenatal and be delivered in a health
facility due to the fear of being manhandled by some health worker,” he said.
Mr Jumah said, however, that 88 per cent of the 5,311
respondents sampled from 30 districts in the Northern, Upper East and Upper
West regions expressed satisfaction with general services at the district
health facilities.
He said it was also proven that clients’ satisfaction on
their first antenatal visit to health facilities determined their future
visits.
“To increase clients’ satisfaction and confidence in health
services, measures should be put in place by the GHS to monitor health
professionals to ensure adherence to the code of conduct or ethics of the
health profession,” he said.
Ministry’s remarks
The Head of Monitoring and Evaluation of the health ministry,
Mr Daniel Degbotse, said the findings enumerated by the research were not new,
and added that the ministry and its stakeholders were already in discussions on
how to resolve those issues.
He, however, expressed appreciation to Send-Ghana for the
initiative and expressed the ministry’s commitment to resolve all those issues
in a bid to ensure the provision of optimum healthcare delivery so that no
expectant mother’s life was lost through avoidable causes.
He said although the ministry was up and doing, it would
require frequent collaborations and inputs from CSOs including Send-Ghana to
ensure the ministry did not relent on its efforts.
On behalf of one of the implementing partners, Christian Aid,
Mrs Abena Yirenkyiwaa Afari expressed gratitude to the Ministry of Health for
acknowledging the findings of the research and
committing to intensify efforts to resolve them.
Source; GraphicOnline
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