Why Muslim women in Northern Ghana do not use skilled maternal healthcare services at health facilities:a qualitative study

Dublin Core

Title

Why Muslim women in Northern Ghana do not use skilled maternal healthcare services at health facilities:a qualitative study

Author

Ganle, John Kuumuori

Publisher

4/28/15

Language

English

Publication Date

20150428

Abstract

Background: Muslim women are one sub-population in Ghana among whom the rate of skilled maternal health services accessibility and utilisation is very low. However, there are no studies in Ghana that explore the maternity needs and care experiences of Muslim women, and why they do not utilise maternal healthcare services at health facilities. The purpose of this paper is to explore the maternity healthcare needs and care experiences of Muslim women and the barriers to accessing and using maternal health services. Methods: Qualitative research was conducted with 94 Muslim women in three communities in northern Ghana between November 2011 and May 2012. Data were analysed using the Attride-Stirling's thematic network analysis framework. Results: Findings suggest that although Muslim women do want to receive skilled care in a health facility, they often experience difficulties with accessing and using such services. These difficulties were often conditioned by a religious obligation to maintain bodily sanctity through modest dressing and the avoidance of unlawful bodily exposure or contact with certain people including male or alien caregivers. Other related access barriers include lack of privacy, healthcare providers' insensitivity and lack of knowledge about Muslim women's religious and cultural practices, and health information that lacked the cultural and religious specificity to meet Muslim women's maternity care needs. Conclusion: Maternal healthcare services designed to meet the needs of mainstream non-Muslim Ghanaian women might lack the flexibility and responsiveness to meet the unique maternity care needs of Muslim women. Recommendations for change include cultural competence training for healthcare providers and cultural/religious matching to meet Muslim women's care needs and to enhance their care experience.

Primary Classification

9.5.5

Secondary Classification

9.5.5;21.7;1.2

Primary keywords

health care delivery--[pri];health facilities--[pri];maternal health--[pri];Muslims--[pri];women--[pri]

Secondary keywords

cultural competency;focus groups;Islamic ethics;modesty;patient satisfaction;qualitative research;social discrimination

Subject

Ghana--[pri]

Journal Article

BMC International Health and Human Rights2015 April 28; 15:10:16 p.

Note

Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0. Copyright © Ganle; licensee BioMed Central. 2015

Call Number

citation

Bibliography

34 refs

ISSN

1472698X (online)

Collection

Citation

“Why Muslim women in Northern Ghana do not use skilled maternal healthcare services at health facilities:a qualitative study,” Islamic Medical & Scientific Ethics, accessed January 19, 2025, https://imse.ibp.georgetown.domains/items/show/37858.