PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Gender norms and women's empowerment as barriers to facility birth: A population-based cross-sectional study in 26 Nigerian states using the World Values Survey.

  • Helena Litorp,
  • Anna Kågesten,
  • Karin Båge,
  • Olalekan Uthman,
  • Helena Nordenstedt,
  • Mariam Fagbemi,
  • Bi Puranen,
  • Anna-Mia Ekström

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0272708
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 8
p. e0272708

Abstract

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BackgroundCentral and western Africa struggle with the world's lowest regional proportion of facility birth at 57%. The aim of the current study was to compare beliefs related to maternal health care services, science/technology, gender norms, and empowerment in states with high vs. low proportions of facility birth in Nigeria.MethodsFace-to-face interviews were performed as part of a nationally representative survey in Nigeria using a new module to measure values and beliefs related to gender and sexual and reproductive health and rights collected as part the 2018 World Values Survey. We compared beliefs related to maternal health care services, science/technology, gender norms, and empowerment between Nigerian states with facility birth proportions > 50% vs. ResultsAmong the 1,273 participants interviewed, 653 resided in states with high and 360 resided in states with low proportions of facility birth. There were no significant differences between the groups in perceived safety of facility birth (96% vs. 94%) and confidence in antenatal care (91% vs 94%). However, in states with low proportions of facility birth, participants had higher confidence in traditional birth attendants (61% vs. 39%, adjusted odds ratio [aOR] 2.1, [1.5-2.8]), men were more often perceived as the ones deciding whether a woman should give birth at a clinic (56% vs. 29%, aOR 2.4 [1.8-3.3]), and participants experienced less freedom over their own lives (56% vs. 72%, aOR 0.56 [0.41-0.76]). Most differences in responses between men and women were not statistically significant.ConclusionsIn order to increase facility births in Nigeria and other similar contexts, transforming gender norms and increasing women's empowerment is key.