Objectives

We sought to understand the facilitators and barriers impacting utilisation of follow-up services for children born preterm as perceived by parents in a low-resource setting.

Methods

We conducted a qualitative study at Mulago Hospital, Uganda, with parents of children born preterm and aged 22-38 months at the time of the study. We collected data using five in-depth interviews and four focus group discussions. Data were analysed using thematic analysis informed by the social-ecological model.

Results

Ten subthemes emerged that could be grouped into three main themes: (1) Individual: parents’ knowledge, parenting skills, perception of follow-up and infant’s condition; (2) Relationship: support for the mother and information sharing; (3) Institution: facility setup, cost of care, available personnel and distance from the facility. Parents of preterm infants perceived receiving timely information, better understanding of prematurity and its complications, support from spouses, availability of free services and encouragement from health workers as facilitators for utilisation of follow-up services. Limited male involvement, parents’ negative perception of follow-up, stable condition of infant, health facility challenges especially congestion at the hospital, distance and care costs were key barriers.

Conclusion

An interplay of facilitators and barriers at individual, interpersonal and health system levels encourage or deter parents from taking their preterm children for follow-up services. Improving utilisation of services will require educating parents on the importance of follow-up even when children are not sick, eliciting maternal support from spouses and peers and addressing health system gaps that make follow-up unattractive and costly.

© 2023 The Authors Tropical Medicine & International Health Published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Overview publication

Title“My baby is fine, no need for more clinic visits.” Facilitators and barriers for utilisation of follow-up services for children born preterm in low-resource setting: Parents’ perceptions.
DateMarch 1st, 2023
Issue nameTropical medicine & international health : TM & IH
Issue numberv28.3:194-202
DOI10.1111/tmi.13857
PubMed36708235
AuthorsNamiiro FB, Nolens B, Rujumba J, Kiguli S, Batte A & van den Akker T
KeywordsUganda, barriers, facilitators, follow-up, preterm, qualitative study
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