4.5 Article

Why don't illiterate women in rural, Northern Tanzania, access maternal healthcare?

Journal

BMC PREGNANCY AND CHILDBIRTH
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12884-021-03906-2

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Innovating for Maternal and Child Health in Africa initiative
  2. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR)
  3. Canada's International Development Research Centre (IDRC)

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This study found that illiterate women in rural Tanzania do not seek maternal healthcare services primarily because they cannot read public health information or understand the Swahili language used by healthcare providers, relying instead on family and neighbors to navigate these barriers. Despite understanding the potential benefits of maternal healthcare, they face challenges related to language communication and illiteracy.
Background: In 2017, roughly 540 women in Sub-Saharan Africa died every day from preventable causes related to pregnancy and childbirth. To stem this public-health crisis, the WHO recommends a standard continuity of maternal healthcare, yet most women do not receive this care. Surveys suggest that illiteracy limits the uptake of the recommended care, yet little is understood about why this is so. This gap in understanding why healthcare is not sought by illiterate women compromises the ability of public health experts and healthcare providers to provide culturally relevant policy and practice. This study consequently explores the lived experiences related to care-seeking by illiterate women of reproductive age in rural Tanzania to determine why they may not access maternal healthcare services. Methods: An exploratory, qualitative study was conducted in four communities encompassing eight focus group discussions with 81 illiterate women, 13 in-depth interviews with illiterate women and seven key-informant interviews with members of these communities who have first-hand experience with the decisions made by women concerning maternal care. Interviews were conducted in the informant's native language. The interviews were coded, then triangulated. Results: Two themes emerged from the analysis: 1) a communication gap arising from a) the women's inability to read public-health documents provided by health facilities, and b) healthcare providers speaking a language, Swahili, that these women do not understand, and 2) a dependency by these women on family and neighbors to negotiate these barriers. Notably, these women understood of the potential benefits of maternal healthcare. Conclusions: These women knew they should receive maternal healthcare but could neither read the public-health messaging provided by the clinics nor understand the language of the healthcare providers. More health needs of this group could be met by developing a protocol for healthcare providers to determine who is illiterate, providing translation services for those unable to speak Swahili, and graphic public health messaging that does not require literacy. A failure to address the needs of this at-risk group will likely mean that they will continue to experience barriers to obtaining maternal care with detrimental health outcomes for both mothers and newborns.

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