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Published in: Reproductive Health 1/2018

Open Access 01-12-2018 | Review

Expanding the agenda for addressing mistreatment in maternity care: a mapping review and gender analysis

Authors: Myra L. Betron, Tracy L. McClair, Sheena Currie, Joya Banerjee

Published in: Reproductive Health | Issue 1/2018

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Abstract

Background

This paper responds to the global call to action for respectful maternity care (RMC) by examining whether and how gender inequalities and unequal power dynamics in the health system undermine quality of care or obstruct women’s capacities to exercise their rights as both users and providers of maternity care.

Methods

We conducted a mapping review of peer-reviewed and gray literature to examine whether gender inequality is a determinant of mistreatment during childbirth. A search for peer-reviewed articles published between January 1995 and September 2017 in PubMed, Embase, SCOPUS, and Web of Science databases, supplemented by an appeal to experts in the field, yielded 127 unique articles. We reviewed these articles using a gender analysis framework that categorizes gender inequalities into four key domains: access to assets, beliefs and perceptions, practices and participation, and institutions, laws, and policies. A total of 37 articles referred to gender inequalities in the four domains and were included in the analysis.

Results

The mapping indicates that there have been important advances in documenting mistreatment at the health facility, but less attention has been paid to addressing the associated structural gender inequalities. The limited evidence available shows that pregnant and laboring women lack information and financial assets, voice, and agency to exercise their rights to RMC. Women who defy traditional feminine stereotypes of chastity and serenity often experience mistreatment by providers as a result. At the same time, mistreatment of women inside and outside of the health facility is normalized and accepted, including by women themselves. As for health care providers, gender discrimination is manifested through degrading working conditions, lack of respect for their abilities, violence and harassment,, lack of mobility in the community, lack of voice within their work setting, and limited training opportunities and professionalization. All of these inequalities erode their ability to deliver high quality care.

Conclusion

While the evidence base is limited, the literature clearly shows that gender inequality—for both clients and providers—contributes to mistreatment and abuse in maternity care. Researchers, advocates, and practitioners need to further investigate and build upon lessons from the broader gender equality, violence prevention, and rights-based health movements to expand the agenda on mistreatment in childbirth and develop effective interventions.
Appendix
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Footnotes
1
In many countries, nurse-midwives are referred to as midwives. In this paper we use the term midwife to include nurse-midwives.
 
2
F. McConville, personal communications: Homer C, Pascal M, Portela A, McConville F. Systematic Review of Interventions to Overcome Barriers to the Provision of Quality Care by Midwifery Personnel. [PowerPoint slides], August 22, 2016.
 
3
Obstetric violence is defined in Article 15(13) of Venezuela’s Organic Law on Women’s Right to a Violence-free Life, which was the first to define this form of violence as: the appropriation of a woman’s body and reproductive processes by health personnel, in the form of dehumanizing treatment, abusive medicalization and pathologization of natural processes, involving a woman’s loss of autonomy and of the capacity to freely make her own decisions about her body and her sexuality, which has negative consequences for a woman’s quality of life [31].
 
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Metadata
Title
Expanding the agenda for addressing mistreatment in maternity care: a mapping review and gender analysis
Authors
Myra L. Betron
Tracy L. McClair
Sheena Currie
Joya Banerjee
Publication date
01-12-2018
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
Reproductive Health / Issue 1/2018
Electronic ISSN: 1742-4755
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12978-018-0584-6

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