BMC Medical Research Methodology (Nov 2018)

Methodological development of tools to measure how women are treated during facility-based childbirth in four countries: labor observation and community survey

  • Meghan A. Bohren,
  • Joshua P. Vogel,
  • Bukola Fawole,
  • Ernest T. Maya,
  • Thae Maung Maung,
  • Mamadou Diouldé Baldé,
  • Agnes A. Oyeniran,
  • Modupe Ogunlade,
  • Kwame Adu-Bonsaffoh,
  • Nwe Oo Mon,
  • Boubacar Alpha Diallo,
  • Abou Bangoura,
  • Richard Adanu,
  • Sihem Landoulsi,
  • A. Metin Gülmezoglu,
  • Özge Tunçalp

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12874-018-0603-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 1
pp. 1 – 15

Abstract

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Abstract Background Efforts to improve maternal health are increasingly focused on improving the quality of care provided to women at health facilities, including the promotion of respectful care and eliminating mistreatment of women during childbirth. A WHO-led multi-country research project aims to develop and validate two tools (labor observation and community survey) to measure how women are treated during facility-based childbirth. This paper describes the development process for these measurement tools, and how they were implemented in a multi-country study (Ghana, Guinea, Myanmar and Nigeria). Methods An iterative mixed-methods approach was used to develop two measurement tools. Methodological development was conducted in four steps: (1) initial tool development; (2) validity testing, item adjustment and piloting of paper-based tools; (3) conversion to digital, tablet-based tools; and (4) data collection and analysis. These steps included systematic reviews, primary qualitative research, mapping of existing tools, item consolidation, peer review by key stakeholders and piloting. Results The development, structure, administration format, and implementation of the labor observation and community survey tools are described. For the labor observations, a total of 2016 women participated: 408 in Nigeria, 682 in Guinea, and 926 in Ghana. For the community survey, a total of 2672 women participated: 561 in Nigeria, 644 in Guinea, 836 in Ghana, and 631 in Myanmar. Of the 2016 women who participated in the labor observations, 1536 women (76.2%) also participated in the community survey and have linked data: 779 in Ghana, 425 in Guinea, and 332 in Nigeria. Conclusions An important step to improve the quality of maternity care is to understand the magnitude and burden of mistreatment across contexts. Researchers and healthcare providers in maternal health are encouraged to use and implement these tools, to inform the development of more women-centered, respectful maternity healthcare services. By measuring the prevalence of mistreatment of women during childbirth, we will be able to design and implement programs and policies to transform maternity services.

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