Identifying barriers to accessing skilled maternal health care in rural Morocco

Jami Baayd(1), Sara E. Simonsen(2), Joseph B. Stanford(3), Sydney K. Willis(4), Caren J. Frost(5),


(1) College of Nursing, University of Utah
(2) College of Nursing, University of Utah
(3) Family and Preventive Medicine, University of Utah
(4) Boston University School of Public Health
(5) College of Social Work, University of Utah
Corresponding Author

Abstract


Over the past 30 years, the Moroccan government has made enormous strides towards improving maternal health care for Moroccan women, but outcomes for rural women remain much worse than those of their urban counterparts. This study aimed to understand the experiences of women giving birth in rural Morocco, and to identify the barriers they face when accessing facility-based maternity care. Fifty-five participants were recruited from villages in Morocco’s rural south to participate in focus group discussions (FGDs), using appreciative inquiry as the guiding framework. Several themes emerged from the analysis of the focus group data. Women felt well-cared for and safe giving birth both at home and in the large, tertiary care hospitals, but not in the small, primary care hospitals. Women who gave birth at the primary care hospitals reported a shortage of some equipment and supplies and poor treatment at the hands of hospital staff. Locating and paying for transportation was identified as the biggest hurdle in accessing maternity care at any hospital. The findings of this study indicate the need for change within primary care health facilities. (Afr J Reprod Health 2021; 25[1]: 20-28).


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