Women's experiences and views about costs of seeking malaria chemoprevention and other antenatal services: a qualitative study from two districts in rural Tanzania

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Women's experiences and views about costs of seeking malaria chemoprevention and other antenatal services : a qualitative study from two districts in rural Tanzania. / Mubyazi, Godfrey M.; Bloch, Paul; Magnussen, Pascal; Olsen, Øystein Evjen; Byskov, Jens; Hansen, Kristian Schultz; Bygbjerg, Ib Christian.

In: Malaria Journal, Vol. 9, No. 54, 2010.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Mubyazi, GM, Bloch, P, Magnussen, P, Olsen, ØE, Byskov, J, Hansen, KS & Bygbjerg, IC 2010, 'Women's experiences and views about costs of seeking malaria chemoprevention and other antenatal services: a qualitative study from two districts in rural Tanzania', Malaria Journal, vol. 9, no. 54. https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-9-54

APA

Mubyazi, G. M., Bloch, P., Magnussen, P., Olsen, Ø. E., Byskov, J., Hansen, K. S., & Bygbjerg, I. C. (2010). Women's experiences and views about costs of seeking malaria chemoprevention and other antenatal services: a qualitative study from two districts in rural Tanzania. Malaria Journal, 9(54). https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-9-54

Vancouver

Mubyazi GM, Bloch P, Magnussen P, Olsen ØE, Byskov J, Hansen KS et al. Women's experiences and views about costs of seeking malaria chemoprevention and other antenatal services: a qualitative study from two districts in rural Tanzania. Malaria Journal. 2010;9(54). https://doi.org/10.1186/1475-2875-9-54

Author

Mubyazi, Godfrey M. ; Bloch, Paul ; Magnussen, Pascal ; Olsen, Øystein Evjen ; Byskov, Jens ; Hansen, Kristian Schultz ; Bygbjerg, Ib Christian. / Women's experiences and views about costs of seeking malaria chemoprevention and other antenatal services : a qualitative study from two districts in rural Tanzania. In: Malaria Journal. 2010 ; Vol. 9, No. 54.

Bibtex

@article{ae1d446024ad11df8ed1000ea68e967b,
title = "Women's experiences and views about costs of seeking malaria chemoprevention and other antenatal services: a qualitative study from two districts in rural Tanzania",
abstract = "ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: The Tanzanian government recommends women who attend antenatal care (ANC) clinics to accept receiving intermittent preventive treatment against malaria during pregnancy (IPTp) and vouchers for insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) at subsidized prices. Little emphasis has been paid to investigate the ability of pregnant women to access and effectively utilize these services. Objectives To describe the experience and perceptions of pregnant women about costs and cost barriers for accessing ANC services with emphasis on IPTp in rural Tanzania. METHODS: Qualitative data were collected in the districts of Mufindi in Iringa Region and Mkuranga in Coast Region through 1) focus group discussions (FGDs) with pregnant women and mothers to infants and 2) exit-interviews with pregnant women identified at ANC clinics. Data were analyzed manually using qualitative content analysis methodology. FINDINGS: FGD participants and interview respondents identified the following key limiting factors for women's use of ANC services: 1) costs in terms of money and time associated with accessing ANC clinics, 2) the presence of more or less official user-fees for some services within the ANC package, and 3) service providers' application of fines, penalties and blame when failing to adhere to service schedules. Interestingly, the time associated with travelling long distances to ANC clinics and ITN retailers and with waiting for services at clinic-level was a major factor of discouragement in the health seeking behaviour of pregnant women because it seriously affected their domestic responsibilities. CONCLUSION: A variety of resource-related factors were shown to affect the health seeking behaviour of pregnant women in rural Tanzania. Thus, accessibility to ANC services was hampered by direct and indirect costs, travel distances and waiting time. Strengthening of user-fee exemption practices and bringing services closer to the users, for example by promoting community-directed control of selected public health services, including IPTp, are urgently needed measures for increasing equity in health services in Tanzania.",
author = "Mubyazi, {Godfrey M.} and Paul Bloch and Pascal Magnussen and Olsen, {{\O}ystein Evjen} and Jens Byskov and Hansen, {Kristian Schultz} and Bygbjerg, {Ib Christian}",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1186/1475-2875-9-54",
language = "English",
volume = "9",
journal = "Malaria Journal",
issn = "1475-2875",
publisher = "BioMed Central",
number = "54",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Women's experiences and views about costs of seeking malaria chemoprevention and other antenatal services

T2 - a qualitative study from two districts in rural Tanzania

AU - Mubyazi, Godfrey M.

AU - Bloch, Paul

AU - Magnussen, Pascal

AU - Olsen, Øystein Evjen

AU - Byskov, Jens

AU - Hansen, Kristian Schultz

AU - Bygbjerg, Ib Christian

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: The Tanzanian government recommends women who attend antenatal care (ANC) clinics to accept receiving intermittent preventive treatment against malaria during pregnancy (IPTp) and vouchers for insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) at subsidized prices. Little emphasis has been paid to investigate the ability of pregnant women to access and effectively utilize these services. Objectives To describe the experience and perceptions of pregnant women about costs and cost barriers for accessing ANC services with emphasis on IPTp in rural Tanzania. METHODS: Qualitative data were collected in the districts of Mufindi in Iringa Region and Mkuranga in Coast Region through 1) focus group discussions (FGDs) with pregnant women and mothers to infants and 2) exit-interviews with pregnant women identified at ANC clinics. Data were analyzed manually using qualitative content analysis methodology. FINDINGS: FGD participants and interview respondents identified the following key limiting factors for women's use of ANC services: 1) costs in terms of money and time associated with accessing ANC clinics, 2) the presence of more or less official user-fees for some services within the ANC package, and 3) service providers' application of fines, penalties and blame when failing to adhere to service schedules. Interestingly, the time associated with travelling long distances to ANC clinics and ITN retailers and with waiting for services at clinic-level was a major factor of discouragement in the health seeking behaviour of pregnant women because it seriously affected their domestic responsibilities. CONCLUSION: A variety of resource-related factors were shown to affect the health seeking behaviour of pregnant women in rural Tanzania. Thus, accessibility to ANC services was hampered by direct and indirect costs, travel distances and waiting time. Strengthening of user-fee exemption practices and bringing services closer to the users, for example by promoting community-directed control of selected public health services, including IPTp, are urgently needed measures for increasing equity in health services in Tanzania.

AB - ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: The Tanzanian government recommends women who attend antenatal care (ANC) clinics to accept receiving intermittent preventive treatment against malaria during pregnancy (IPTp) and vouchers for insecticide-treated nets (ITNs) at subsidized prices. Little emphasis has been paid to investigate the ability of pregnant women to access and effectively utilize these services. Objectives To describe the experience and perceptions of pregnant women about costs and cost barriers for accessing ANC services with emphasis on IPTp in rural Tanzania. METHODS: Qualitative data were collected in the districts of Mufindi in Iringa Region and Mkuranga in Coast Region through 1) focus group discussions (FGDs) with pregnant women and mothers to infants and 2) exit-interviews with pregnant women identified at ANC clinics. Data were analyzed manually using qualitative content analysis methodology. FINDINGS: FGD participants and interview respondents identified the following key limiting factors for women's use of ANC services: 1) costs in terms of money and time associated with accessing ANC clinics, 2) the presence of more or less official user-fees for some services within the ANC package, and 3) service providers' application of fines, penalties and blame when failing to adhere to service schedules. Interestingly, the time associated with travelling long distances to ANC clinics and ITN retailers and with waiting for services at clinic-level was a major factor of discouragement in the health seeking behaviour of pregnant women because it seriously affected their domestic responsibilities. CONCLUSION: A variety of resource-related factors were shown to affect the health seeking behaviour of pregnant women in rural Tanzania. Thus, accessibility to ANC services was hampered by direct and indirect costs, travel distances and waiting time. Strengthening of user-fee exemption practices and bringing services closer to the users, for example by promoting community-directed control of selected public health services, including IPTp, are urgently needed measures for increasing equity in health services in Tanzania.

U2 - 10.1186/1475-2875-9-54

DO - 10.1186/1475-2875-9-54

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 20163707

VL - 9

JO - Malaria Journal

JF - Malaria Journal

SN - 1475-2875

IS - 54

ER -

ID: 18294649