焦点小组
祖父母
集体主义
医疗保健
护理部
心理学
医学
发展心理学
社会学
政治学
个人主义
人类学
法学
作者
Mira L. Gupta,Raymond Aborigo,Philip Baba Adongo,Sarah Rominski,Abraham Hodgson,Cyril Engmann,Cheryl A. Moyer
标识
DOI:10.1080/17441692.2014.1002413
摘要
Previous research suggests that care-seeking in rural northern Ghana is often governed by a woman's husband or compound head. This study was designed to explore the role grandmothers (typically a woman's mother-in-law) play in influencing maternal and newborn healthcare decisions. In-depth interviews were conducted with 35 mothers of newborns, 8 traditional birth attendants and local healers, 16 community leaders and 13 healthcare practitioners. An additional 18 focus groups were conducted with stakeholders such as household heads, compound leaders and grandmothers. In this region, grandmothers play many roles. They may act as primary support providers to pregnant mothers, care for newborns following delivery, preserve cultural traditions and serve as repositories of knowledge on local medicine. Grandmothers may also serve as gatekeepers for health-seeking behaviour, especially with regard to their daughters and daughters-in-law. This research also sheds light on the potential gap between health education campaigns that target mothers as autonomous decision-makers, and the reality of a more collectivist community structure in which mothers rarely make such decisions without the support of other community members.
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