4.6 Article

Utilisation of antenatal care and skilled delivery services among mothers in Nanton District of Northern Ghana: a mixed-method study protocol

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-066118

Keywords

antenatal; community child health; maternal medicine; public health

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This study aims to investigate the utilization of ANC and SD services among mothers in the Nanton District of Northern Ghana. The study will use a mixed-method approach with a planned sample size of 411 participants. Descriptive and inferential data analysis will be conducted, and the results will be presented in frequency tables, bar charts, and line graphs.
Introduction Maternal morbidity and mortality are a global phenomenon with devastating effects on low-income and middle-income countries among which sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) is the hardest hit. Low utilisation of maternal health services has been recorded in recent times in the Nanton District of Ghana. This has raised concerns about the utilisation of antenatal care (ANC) and skilled delivery (SD) services in the district. However, we found no specific existing literature which has addressed these questions on ANC and SD utilisation in the study setting. Thus, this study seeks to explore the utilisation of ANC and SD services among mothers in the Nanton District of Northern Ghana. Methods and analysis This will be an observational study. It will use a mixed-method approach, particularly, convergent parallel design to implement the study. This will include quantitative and qualitative aspects using a questionnaire and focus group discussion guide. The planned sample size is 411 participants. The data will be collected at the communities. Before participation in the study, the research team will receive individual written consent from the participants. Descriptive and inferential data analysis will be performed after the data collection. The results will be presented as frequency tables, bar charts and line graphs to indicate the proportions of the outcome indicators. The strength of association among variables will be determined at 95% CI and a significance level of alpha (0.05) will be used. Ethics and dissemination Ethical clearance has been sought from the Ghana Health Service Ethics Review Board (GHS-ERC 027/03/22). The outcomes from this study may serve as a reference document for the District Health Directorate to use when developing strategies for ANC and SD services. The results will be published in open access and peer-reviewed journals.

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