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“We need good nutrition but we have no money to buy food”: sociocultural context, care experiences, and newborn health in two UNHCR-supported camps in South Sudan

机译:“我们需要良好的营养,但我们没有钱买食物”:在难民署支持的南苏丹两个难民营中,社会文化背景,护理经验和新生儿健康

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Determinants of newborn health and survival exist across the reproductive life cycle, with many sociocultural and contextual factors influencing outcomes beyond the availability of, and access to, quality health services. In order to better understand key needs and opportunities to improve newborn health in refugee camp settings, we conducted a multi-methods qualitative study of the status of maternal and newborn health in refugee camps in Upper Nile state, South Sudan. In 2016, we conducted 18 key informant interviews with health service managers and front-line providers and 13 focus group discussions in two Sudanese refugee camps in Maban County, South Sudan. Our focus group discussions comprised 147 refugee participants including groups of mothers, fathers, grandmothers, traditional birth attendants, community health workers, and midwives. We analysed our data for content and themes using inductive and deductive techniques. We found both positive practices and barriers to newborn health in the camps throughout the reproductive lifecycle. Environmental and contextual factors such as poor nutrition, lack of livelihood opportunities, and insecurity presented barriers to both general health and self-care during pregnancy. We found that the receipt of material incentives is one of the leading drivers of utilization of antenatal care and facility-based childbirth services. Barriers to facility-based childbirth included poor transportation specifically during the night; insecurity; being accustomed to home delivery; and fears of an unfamiliar birth environment, caesarean section, and encountering male health care providers during childbirth. Use of potentially harmful traditional practices with the newborn are commonplace including mixed feeding, use of herbal infusions to treat newborn illnesses, and the application of ash and oil to the newborn’s umbilicus. Numerous sociocultural and contextual factors impact newborn health in this setting. Improving nutritional support during pregnancy, strengthening community-based transportation for women in labour, allowing a birth companion to be present during delivery, addressing harmful home-based newborn care practices such as mixed feeding and application of foreign substances to the umbilicus, and optimizing the networks of community health workers and traditional birth attendants are potential ways to improve newborn health outcomes.
机译:新生儿健康和生存的决定因素存在于整个生殖生命周期中,许多社会文化和环境因素影响着结果,而这些因素超出了获得和获得优质卫生服务的范围。为了更好地了解改善难民营环境中新生儿健康的关键需求和机会,我们对南苏丹上尼罗州难民营的孕产妇和新生儿健康状况进行了多方法定性研究。 2016年,我们在南苏丹马班县的两个苏丹难民营中,与卫生服务经理和一线医疗服务提供者进行了18次关键知情人访谈,并进行了13次焦点小组讨论。我们的焦点小组讨论由147名难民参与者组成,包括母亲,父亲,祖母,传统接生员,社区卫生工作者和助产士。我们使用归纳和演绎技术分析了数据的内容和主题。我们在整个生殖生命周期的营地中都发现了积极的做法和阻碍新生儿健康的障碍。营养不良,缺乏生计机会和不安全感等环境和背景因素,对怀孕期间的总体健康和自我保健构成了障碍。我们发现,获得物质奖励是利用产前护理和基于设施的分娩服务的主要驱动力之一。基于设施分娩的障碍包括交通不便,尤其是在夜间;不安全感习惯于送货上门;以及担心分娩时环境不熟悉,剖腹产以及遇到男性医疗保健提供者。在新生儿身上使用可能有害的传统习俗很普遍,包括混合喂养,使用草药输液治疗新生儿疾病以及在新生儿的脐部使用灰分和油脂。在这种情况下,许多社会文化和背景因素都会影响新生儿健康。改善怀孕期间的营养支持,加强分娩妇女的社区交通,允许分娩时有同伴陪伴,解决有害的家庭式新生儿护理做法,例如混合喂养和将异物应用于脐部,以及优化社区卫生工作者和传统接生员网络是改善新生儿健康结果的潜在方法。

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