Exploring how non-clinical factors in childbirth care shape users' experiences in public health facilities in rural Chiapas, Mexico: a qualitative study using the WHO health systems responsiveness framework

BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2024 Feb 29;24(1):173. doi: 10.1186/s12884-024-06357-7.

Abstract

Introduction: Many Mexicans face barriers to receive delivery care from qualified professionals, especially indigenous and poor sectors of the population, which represent most of the population in the state of Chiapas. When access to institutional delivery care is an option, experiences with childbirth care are often poor. This underscores the need for evidence to improve the quality of services from the user's perspective. The present study was conceived with the objective of understanding how non-clinical aspects of care shape women's birthing experiences in public health institutions in Chiapas.

Methods: We conducted an exploratory qualitative study. Data collection consisted in 20 semi-structured interviews to women who had delivered in a public health facility in Chiapas during the last six months prior to the interview. For the design of the interview guide we used the WHO health system responsiveness framework, which focus on the performance of the health system in terms of the extent to which it delivers services according to the "universally legitimate expectations of individuals" and focuses on the non-financial and non-clinical qualities of care. The resulting data were analyzed using thematic analysis methodology.

Results: We identified a total of 16 themes from the data, framed in eight categories which followed the eight domains of the WHO health systems responsiveness framework: Choice of the provider and the facility, prompt attention, quality of basic amenities, access to social support, respectful treatment, privacy, involvement in decisions, and communication. We shed light on the barriers women face in receiving prompt care, aspects of health facilities that impact women's comfort, the relevance of being provided with adequate food and drink during institutional delivery, how accompaniment contributes positively to the birthing experience, the aspects of childbirth that women find important to decide on, and how providers' interpersonal behaviors affect the birthing experience.

Conclusions: We have identified non-clinical aspects of childbirth care that are important to the user experience and that are not being satisfactorily addressed by public health institutions in Chiapas. This evidence constitutes a necessary first step towards the design of strategies to improve the responsiveness of the Chiapas health system in childbirth care.

Keywords: Facility-based childbirth experience; Health systems responsiveness; Mexico; Qualitative study.

MeSH terms

  • Delivery, Obstetric*
  • Female
  • Health Facilities
  • Humans
  • Maternal Health Services*
  • Mexico
  • North American People*
  • Parturition
  • Pregnancy
  • Qualitative Research
  • Quality of Health Care
  • World Health Organization

Supplementary concepts

  • Mexican people