Promoting access: the use of maternity waiting homes to achieve safe motherhood
Lori, J.R.; Wadsworth, A.C.; Munro, M.L.; Rominski, S.
Midwifery 29(10): 1095-1102
2013
ISSN/ISBN: 1532-3099 PMID: 24012018 DOI: 10.1016/j.midw.2013.07.020Document Number: 626870
to examine the structural and sociocultural factors influencing maternity waiting home (MWH) use through the lens of women, families, and communities in one rural county in postconflict Liberia. an exploratory, qualitative descriptive design using focus groups and in-depth, individual interviews was employed. Content analysis of data was performed using Penchansky and Thomas's (1981) five A's of access as a guiding framework. rural communities in north-central Liberia. a convenience sampling was used to recruit participants. Eight focus groups were held with 75 participants from congruent groups of (1) MWH users, (2) MWH non-users, (3) family members of MWH users, and (4) family members of MWH non-users. Eleven individual interviews were conducted with clinic staff or community leaders. the availability of MWHs decreased the barrier of distance for women to access skilled care around the time of childbirth. Food insecurity while staying at a MWH was identified as a potential barrier by participants. examining access as a general concept within the specific dimensions of availability, accessibility, accommodation, affordability, and acceptability provides a way to describe the structural and sociocultural factors that influence access to a MWH and skilled attendance for birth. MWHs can address the barrier of distance in accessing skilled care for childbirth in a rural setting with long distances to a facility.