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"They told me to come back": women's antenatal care booking experience in inner-city Johannesburg.

TLDR
In a country where a third of pregnant women are HIV infected, early ANC is vital in order to optimise ART initiation and thereby reduce maternal mortality and paediatric HIV infection and that women are empowered to demand better services.
Abstract
To assess women’s experience of public antenatal care (ANC) services and reasons for late antenatal care attendance in inner-city Johannesburg, South Africa. This cross-sectional study was conducted at three public labour wards in Johannesburg. Interviews were conducted with 208 women who had a live-birth in October 2009. Women were interviewed in the labour wards post-delivery about their ANC experience. Gestational age at first clinic visit was compared to gestational age at booking (ANC service provided). ANC attendance was high (97.0 %) with 46.0 % seeking care before 20 weeks gestation (early). Among the 198 women who sought care, 19.2 % were asked to return more than a month later, resulting in a 3-month delay in being booked into the clinic for these women. Additionally 49.0 % of women reported no antenatal screening being conducted when they first sought care at the clinic. Delay in recognizing pregnancy (21.7 %) and lack of time (20.8 %) were among the reasons women gave for late attendance. Clinic booking procedures and delays in diagnosing pregnancy are important factors causing women to access antenatal care late. In a country where a third of pregnant women are HIV infected, early ANC is vital in order to optimise ART initiation and thereby reduce maternal mortality and paediatric HIV infection. It is therefore imperative that existing antenatal care policies are implemented and reinforced and that women are empowered to demand better services.

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Why do nurses abuse patients? Reflections from South African obstetric services - Social Science & Medicine - Vol. 47, 11 - ISBN: 02779536 - p.1781-1795

TL;DR: The findings suggest that the nurses were engaged in a continuous struggle to assert their professional and middle class identity and in the process deployed violence against patients as a means of creating social distance and maintaining fantasies of identity and power.
Journal ArticleDOI

What matters to women: a systematic scoping review to identify the processes and outcomes of antenatal care provision that are important to healthy pregnant women.

TL;DR: Identifying outcomes that matter to pregnant women could inform service design and improve uptake and effectiveness of antenatal care around the world.
Journal ArticleDOI

Loss to follow-up before and after delivery among women testing HIV positive during pregnancy in Johannesburg, South Africa

TL;DR: HIV‐positive pregnant women are at heightened risk of becoming lost to follow‐up (LTFU) from HIV care and this work examined LTFU before and after delivery among pregnant women newly diagnosed with HIV.
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding the psychosocial and environmental factors and barriers affecting utilization of maternal healthcare services in Kalomo, Zambia: a qualitative study

TL;DR: The main reasons for the low utilization were the low perceived quality of maternal healthcare services in clinics, negative attitude, negative opinion of important referents, physical and economic barriers such as long distances, high transport and indirect costs including money for baby clothes and other requirements.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mobility and Clinic Switching Among Postpartum Women Considered Lost to HIV Care in South Africa

TL;DR: Evidence of continued care after LTFU is found and local and national clinic mobility among postpartum women is identified and a national health database linked to a unique identifier is necessary to improve reporting and patient care among highly mobile populations.
References
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Antenatal care in developing countries: promises achievements and missed opportunities. An analysis of trends levels and differentials 1990-2001.

TL;DR: Greater efforts are needed to improve the content and quality of services offered and to ensure that particular groups of women specifically those living in rural areas the poor and the less educated obtain better access to antenatal services.
Journal ArticleDOI

Low rates of mother-to-child transmission of HIV following effective pregnancy interventions in the United Kingdom and Ireland, 2000-2006

TL;DR: Current options for treatment and delivery offered to pregnant women according to British guidelines appear to be effective, and sustained low HIV transmission rates following different combinations of interventions in this large unselected population are encouraging.
Dataset

Why do nurses abuse patients? Reflections from South African obstetric services - Social Science & Medicine - Vol. 47, 11 - ISBN: 02779536 - p.1781-1795

TL;DR: The findings suggest that the nurses were engaged in a continuous struggle to assert their professional and middle class identity and in the process deployed violence against patients as a means of creating social distance and maintaining fantasies of identity and power.
Journal ArticleDOI

Why do nurses abuse patients? reflections from south african obstetric services

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the question: why nurses abuse patients, through presentation and discussion of findings of research on health seeking practices in one part of the South African maternity services, and concluded that nurses were engaged in a continuous struggle to assert their professional and middle class identity and in the process deployed violence against patients as a means of creating social distance and maintaining fantasies of identity and power.
Journal ArticleDOI

National Department of Health.

William P. Whery
- 26 Jan 1907 - 
TL;DR: The supervision of foodstuffs and the control of the entire medical services of the Army and Navy would make the proposed department really important, and another service to be included—the census bureau.
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