The Pan African Medical Journal (Mar 2021)

Antenatal care and determinants of obstetric danger signs awareness of immediate postpartum women at Buea Regional Hospital, Cameroon

  • Agbor Nathan Emeh,
  • Atem Njabnjem Atem,
  • Atongno Ashu Humphrey,
  • Tambetakaw Njang Gilbert,
  • Fongang Che Landis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.11604/pamj.2021.38.247.20977
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 38, no. 247

Abstract

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INTRODUCTION: A significant proportion of pregnancy related deaths result from delay in decision to seek care and this often stems from failure to identify obstetric danger signs earlier. Early identification of these danger signs will therefore reduce maternal mortality. However, studies on obstetric danger signs awareness are lacking in Cameroon. The objective of this study was to assess the determinants of obstetric danger signs awareness of women at immediate postpartum period. This will inform ANC providers' practice. METHODS: between June and September 2019, women who delivered at the Buea Regional Hospital were interviewed within 24 hours following their delivery using a researcher-administered questionnaire that covered socio-demographic and obstetric variables. Data were entered into EPIData and analysis done using SPSS 16 and OpenEpi. Statistical significance was set at p-value = 0.05. RESULTS: of the 532 participants, majority (230/532: 43.2%) were those aged 26-35; danger signs awareness rate was 73.3%. There was a statistically significant relation between age and awareness of obstetric danger signs which showed that older women were more aware than their younger counterparts (p=0.00). Other statistically significant determinants of danger sign awareness included occupation, level of education, parity, trimester of onset of antenatal visits and the number of visits before delivery (p =0.05). Multiparity (370/490: 75.5%) and Grand multiparity (14/22: 63.6%) was more likely to be aware of obstetric danger signs than primiparous women (6/20:30%). Similarly, those who started antenatal visits earlier (first or second trimester) and those who attended more visits were more likely to be aware of obstetric danger signs than their counterparts who started later or had lesser antenatal visits before delivery. The most reported danger signs were severe vaginal bleed (71.4%), fever (62.0%) and reduced fetal movement. CONCLUSION: conclusively, more focus should be placed on the sensitisation about obstetric danger signs when in contact with primiparous and younger parturient during ANC visits.

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