Afraid of Delivering at the Hospital or Afraid of Delivering at Home: A Qualitative Study of Thai Hmong Families’ Decision-Making About Maternity Services

© 2015, Springer Science+Business Media New York. Thailand has high rates of maternity services; both antenatal care (ANC) and hospital delivery are widely used by its citizens. A recent Northern Thailand survey showed that Hmong women used maternity services at lower rates. Our objectives were to i...

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Main Authors: Kathleen A. Culhane-Pera, Sarinya Sriphetcharawut, Rasamee Thawsirichuchai, Wirachon Yangyuenkun, Peter Kunstadter
Format: Journal
Published: 2018
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http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/54675
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Institution: Chiang Mai University
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-546752018-09-04T10:20:33Z Afraid of Delivering at the Hospital or Afraid of Delivering at Home: A Qualitative Study of Thai Hmong Families’ Decision-Making About Maternity Services Kathleen A. Culhane-Pera Sarinya Sriphetcharawut Rasamee Thawsirichuchai Wirachon Yangyuenkun Peter Kunstadter Medicine © 2015, Springer Science+Business Media New York. Thailand has high rates of maternity services; both antenatal care (ANC) and hospital delivery are widely used by its citizens. A recent Northern Thailand survey showed that Hmong women used maternity services at lower rates. Our objectives were to identify Hmong families’ socio-cultural reasons for using and not using maternity services, and suggest ways to improve Hmong women’s use of maternity services. In one Hmong village, we classified all 98 pregnancies in the previous 5 years into four categories: no ANC/home birth, ANC/home, no ANC/hospital, ANC/hospital. We conducted life-history case studies of 4 women from each category plus their 12 husbands, and 17 elders. We used grounded theory to guide qualitative analysis. Families not using maternity services considered pregnancy a normal process that only needed traditional home support. In addition, they disliked institutional processes that interfered with cultural birth practices, distrusted discriminatory personnel, and detested invasive, involuntary hospital procedures. Families using services perceived physical needs or potential delivery risks that could benefit from obstetrical assistance not available at home. While they disliked aspects of hospital births, they tolerated these conditions for access to obstetrical care they might need. Families also considered cost, travel distance, and time as structural issues. The families ultimately balanced their fear of delivering at home with their fear of delivering at the hospital. Providing health education about pregnancy risks, and changing healthcare practices to accommodate Hmong people’s desires for culturally-appropriate family-centered care, which are consistent with evidence-based obstetrics, might improve Hmong women’s use of maternity services. 2018-09-04T10:20:33Z 2018-09-04T10:20:33Z 2015-11-01 Journal 15736628 10927875 2-s2.0-84943366714 10.1007/s10995-015-1757-3 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84943366714&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/54675
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Kathleen A. Culhane-Pera
Sarinya Sriphetcharawut
Rasamee Thawsirichuchai
Wirachon Yangyuenkun
Peter Kunstadter
Afraid of Delivering at the Hospital or Afraid of Delivering at Home: A Qualitative Study of Thai Hmong Families’ Decision-Making About Maternity Services
description © 2015, Springer Science+Business Media New York. Thailand has high rates of maternity services; both antenatal care (ANC) and hospital delivery are widely used by its citizens. A recent Northern Thailand survey showed that Hmong women used maternity services at lower rates. Our objectives were to identify Hmong families’ socio-cultural reasons for using and not using maternity services, and suggest ways to improve Hmong women’s use of maternity services. In one Hmong village, we classified all 98 pregnancies in the previous 5 years into four categories: no ANC/home birth, ANC/home, no ANC/hospital, ANC/hospital. We conducted life-history case studies of 4 women from each category plus their 12 husbands, and 17 elders. We used grounded theory to guide qualitative analysis. Families not using maternity services considered pregnancy a normal process that only needed traditional home support. In addition, they disliked institutional processes that interfered with cultural birth practices, distrusted discriminatory personnel, and detested invasive, involuntary hospital procedures. Families using services perceived physical needs or potential delivery risks that could benefit from obstetrical assistance not available at home. While they disliked aspects of hospital births, they tolerated these conditions for access to obstetrical care they might need. Families also considered cost, travel distance, and time as structural issues. The families ultimately balanced their fear of delivering at home with their fear of delivering at the hospital. Providing health education about pregnancy risks, and changing healthcare practices to accommodate Hmong people’s desires for culturally-appropriate family-centered care, which are consistent with evidence-based obstetrics, might improve Hmong women’s use of maternity services.
format Journal
author Kathleen A. Culhane-Pera
Sarinya Sriphetcharawut
Rasamee Thawsirichuchai
Wirachon Yangyuenkun
Peter Kunstadter
author_facet Kathleen A. Culhane-Pera
Sarinya Sriphetcharawut
Rasamee Thawsirichuchai
Wirachon Yangyuenkun
Peter Kunstadter
author_sort Kathleen A. Culhane-Pera
title Afraid of Delivering at the Hospital or Afraid of Delivering at Home: A Qualitative Study of Thai Hmong Families’ Decision-Making About Maternity Services
title_short Afraid of Delivering at the Hospital or Afraid of Delivering at Home: A Qualitative Study of Thai Hmong Families’ Decision-Making About Maternity Services
title_full Afraid of Delivering at the Hospital or Afraid of Delivering at Home: A Qualitative Study of Thai Hmong Families’ Decision-Making About Maternity Services
title_fullStr Afraid of Delivering at the Hospital or Afraid of Delivering at Home: A Qualitative Study of Thai Hmong Families’ Decision-Making About Maternity Services
title_full_unstemmed Afraid of Delivering at the Hospital or Afraid of Delivering at Home: A Qualitative Study of Thai Hmong Families’ Decision-Making About Maternity Services
title_sort afraid of delivering at the hospital or afraid of delivering at home: a qualitative study of thai hmong families’ decision-making about maternity services
publishDate 2018
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=84943366714&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/54675
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