Background

Rights-based Respectful Maternity Care (RMC) is crucial for quality of care and improved birth outcomes, yet RMC measurements are rarely included in facility improvement initiatives. We aimed to (i) co-create a routine RMC measurement tool (RMC-T) for congested maternity units in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and (ii) assess the RMC-T’s acceptability among women and healthcare stakeholders.

Method

We employed a participatory approach utilizing multiple mixed methods. This included a scoping review, stakeholder engagement involving postnatal women, healthcare providers, health leadership, and global researchers through interviews, focus groups, and two surveys involving 201 and 838 postnatal women. Cronbach’s alpha and factor analysis were conducted for validation using Stata 15. Theories of social practice and Thematic Framework of Acceptability guided the assessment of stakeholder priorities and tool acceptability.

Results

The multi-phased iterative co-creation process produced the 25-question RMC-T that measures satisfaction, communication, mistreatment (including physical, verbal, and sexual abuse; neglect; discrimination; lack of privacy; unconsented care; post-birth clean-up; informal payments; and denial of care), supportive care (such as food intake and mobility), birth companionship, post-procedure pain relief, bed-sharing, and newborn respect. The pragmatic validation process prioritized stakeholder feedback over strict statistics, lowering Cronbach’s alpha from 0.70 in version 1 to 0.57 for the RMC-T. Women valued the opportunity to share their experiences.

Conclusions

The RMC-T is contextualized, validated, and acceptable for measuring women’s experiences of RMC. Routine use in facility-based quality improvement initiatives, along with targeted actions to address gaps, will advance rights-based RMC. Further validation and community-based studies are needed.

Overview publication

Title‘I am happy to be listened to’: co-creation of a simple tool to measure women’s experiences of respectful maternity care in urban Tanzania.
DateDecember 31st, 2024
Issue nameGlobal health action
Issue numberv17.1:2403972
DOI10.1080/16549716.2024.2403972
PubMed39314117
AuthorsSequeira D'mello B, Housseine N, Kidanto HL, Maaløe N, van Roosmalen J, Meyrowitsch DW, van den Akker T, Muniro Z, Polin E, Ambokile N, Festo C, Sørensen JB & Sando D
KeywordsDar es Salaam, Person-centered maternity care, disrespect and abuse, experience of care, measurement tool, mistreatment, respectful maternity care, urban health
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