“All These Methods Complement Each Other”: Antenatal Care Acceptability in Contexts of Antenatal Care Pluralism in Rural Manicaland, Zimbabwe

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

“All These Methods Complement Each Other” : Antenatal Care Acceptability in Contexts of Antenatal Care Pluralism in Rural Manicaland, Zimbabwe. / Musiwa, Anthony Shuko; Sinha, Vandna; Hanley, Jill; Ruiz-Casares, Mónica; Skovdal, Morten.

I: Women's Reproductive Health, 2024.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Musiwa, AS, Sinha, V, Hanley, J, Ruiz-Casares, M & Skovdal, M 2024, '“All These Methods Complement Each Other”: Antenatal Care Acceptability in Contexts of Antenatal Care Pluralism in Rural Manicaland, Zimbabwe', Women's Reproductive Health. https://doi.org/10.1080/23293691.2024.2345092

APA

Musiwa, A. S., Sinha, V., Hanley, J., Ruiz-Casares, M., & Skovdal, M. (2024). “All These Methods Complement Each Other”: Antenatal Care Acceptability in Contexts of Antenatal Care Pluralism in Rural Manicaland, Zimbabwe. Women's Reproductive Health. https://doi.org/10.1080/23293691.2024.2345092

Vancouver

Musiwa AS, Sinha V, Hanley J, Ruiz-Casares M, Skovdal M. “All These Methods Complement Each Other”: Antenatal Care Acceptability in Contexts of Antenatal Care Pluralism in Rural Manicaland, Zimbabwe. Women's Reproductive Health. 2024. https://doi.org/10.1080/23293691.2024.2345092

Author

Musiwa, Anthony Shuko ; Sinha, Vandna ; Hanley, Jill ; Ruiz-Casares, Mónica ; Skovdal, Morten. / “All These Methods Complement Each Other” : Antenatal Care Acceptability in Contexts of Antenatal Care Pluralism in Rural Manicaland, Zimbabwe. I: Women's Reproductive Health. 2024.

Bibtex

@article{da77c3bcf04f41b9bd41297ae9113586,
title = "“All These Methods Complement Each Other”: Antenatal Care Acceptability in Contexts of Antenatal Care Pluralism in Rural Manicaland, Zimbabwe",
abstract = "Many current studies focus on the acceptability and utilization of biomedical antenatal care (ANC), neglecting indigenous African ways of providing ANC. Drawing on interviews with 30 health professionals, and consultations, focus groups, and storyboarding with 71 community-level key informants and adult caregivers, we critically examined how ANC is delivered and utilized in Mafararikwa in rural Zimbabwe. We found that families in Mafararikwa actively engage with and utilize ANC from traditional, faith-based, and biomedical health-care systems, usually concurrently, based on their quality-of-care perceptions and local sociocultural factors. Efforts to enhance ANC must consider families{\textquoteright} ANC preferences and promote collaboration between different ANC systems.",
author = "Musiwa, {Anthony Shuko} and Vandna Sinha and Jill Hanley and M{\'o}nica Ruiz-Casares and Morten Skovdal",
note = "doi: 10.1080/23293691.2024.2345092",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1080/23293691.2024.2345092",
language = "English",
journal = "Women's Reproductive Health",
issn = "2329-3691",
publisher = "Taylor & Francis",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - “All These Methods Complement Each Other”

T2 - Antenatal Care Acceptability in Contexts of Antenatal Care Pluralism in Rural Manicaland, Zimbabwe

AU - Musiwa, Anthony Shuko

AU - Sinha, Vandna

AU - Hanley, Jill

AU - Ruiz-Casares, Mónica

AU - Skovdal, Morten

N1 - doi: 10.1080/23293691.2024.2345092

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - Many current studies focus on the acceptability and utilization of biomedical antenatal care (ANC), neglecting indigenous African ways of providing ANC. Drawing on interviews with 30 health professionals, and consultations, focus groups, and storyboarding with 71 community-level key informants and adult caregivers, we critically examined how ANC is delivered and utilized in Mafararikwa in rural Zimbabwe. We found that families in Mafararikwa actively engage with and utilize ANC from traditional, faith-based, and biomedical health-care systems, usually concurrently, based on their quality-of-care perceptions and local sociocultural factors. Efforts to enhance ANC must consider families’ ANC preferences and promote collaboration between different ANC systems.

AB - Many current studies focus on the acceptability and utilization of biomedical antenatal care (ANC), neglecting indigenous African ways of providing ANC. Drawing on interviews with 30 health professionals, and consultations, focus groups, and storyboarding with 71 community-level key informants and adult caregivers, we critically examined how ANC is delivered and utilized in Mafararikwa in rural Zimbabwe. We found that families in Mafararikwa actively engage with and utilize ANC from traditional, faith-based, and biomedical health-care systems, usually concurrently, based on their quality-of-care perceptions and local sociocultural factors. Efforts to enhance ANC must consider families’ ANC preferences and promote collaboration between different ANC systems.

U2 - 10.1080/23293691.2024.2345092

DO - 10.1080/23293691.2024.2345092

M3 - Journal article

JO - Women's Reproductive Health

JF - Women's Reproductive Health

SN - 2329-3691

ER -

ID: 391618144