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Improving access to maternal health care beyond health care policy: pregnant women's experience of maternal public health care services in Cape Town, South Africa

Unequal access to maternal health care continues to be a concern in South Africa despite the efforts of government and health practitioners to make the system more inclusive and accessible to all women, especially for women who have been previously disadvantaged prior to and during Apartheid. Resear...

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Main Author: Rhoda, Bronwin
Other Authors: Sitas, Friderike
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Environmental and Geographical Science 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Rhoda, Bronwin
author2 Sitas, Friderike
author_browse Rhoda, Bronwin
Sitas, Friderike
author_facet Sitas, Friderike
Rhoda, Bronwin
author_sort Rhoda, Bronwin
collection Thesis
description Unequal access to maternal health care continues to be a concern in South Africa despite the efforts of government and health practitioners to make the system more inclusive and accessible to all women, especially for women who have been previously disadvantaged prior to and during Apartheid. Research in maternal health care has shifted and emphasized the delivery of quality care by medical staff to ensure that the goal of reducing maternal deaths is to improve maternal health care. Despite the global concern and interventions of the local government, many women still experience limited access to quality maternal healthcare services. Waiting for public health care services further highlights women's challenges. There is a need to understand further how waiting impacts the patients' experience and access to care. Acknowledging that gaps exist in the current literature focused on maternal health care, this study employs qualitative research methods to explore pregnant women's experience within the maternal public health care system in the Cape Town Metropole Region. Four specific objectives guided this aim: one, exploring the challenges pregnant women encounter when accessing state maternal facilities; two, exploring the bodily and physical experience of waiting on the delivery of public health care services; three, exploring the vulnerability in waiting through the lens of pregnant women; and four, exploring the relationship of government interventions through waiting. The findings of this research demonstrate that public maternal health care is accessible for most women based on the effectiveness of government policies and interventions. However, medical personnel experience constraints that restrict access to quality care. The challenges associated with waiting and medical personnel continue to impact the perception that women create of the delivery of public health care services. Addressing the challenge of waiting requires policies and interventions to align with expanding human resources to deliver the highest quality services.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:39:50.337Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39842 Improving access to maternal health care beyond health care policy: pregnant women's experience of maternal public health care services in Cape Town, South Africa Rhoda, Bronwin Sitas, Friderike Oldfield Sophie Southern Urbanism Unequal access to maternal health care continues to be a concern in South Africa despite the efforts of government and health practitioners to make the system more inclusive and accessible to all women, especially for women who have been previously disadvantaged prior to and during Apartheid. Research in maternal health care has shifted and emphasized the delivery of quality care by medical staff to ensure that the goal of reducing maternal deaths is to improve maternal health care. Despite the global concern and interventions of the local government, many women still experience limited access to quality maternal healthcare services. Waiting for public health care services further highlights women's challenges. There is a need to understand further how waiting impacts the patients' experience and access to care. Acknowledging that gaps exist in the current literature focused on maternal health care, this study employs qualitative research methods to explore pregnant women's experience within the maternal public health care system in the Cape Town Metropole Region. Four specific objectives guided this aim: one, exploring the challenges pregnant women encounter when accessing state maternal facilities; two, exploring the bodily and physical experience of waiting on the delivery of public health care services; three, exploring the vulnerability in waiting through the lens of pregnant women; and four, exploring the relationship of government interventions through waiting. The findings of this research demonstrate that public maternal health care is accessible for most women based on the effectiveness of government policies and interventions. However, medical personnel experience constraints that restrict access to quality care. The challenges associated with waiting and medical personnel continue to impact the perception that women create of the delivery of public health care services. Addressing the challenge of waiting requires policies and interventions to align with expanding human resources to deliver the highest quality services. 2024-06-03T08:16:06Z 2024-06-03T08:16:06Z 2023 2024-06-03T08:01:30Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39842 eng application/pdf Department of Environmental and Geographical Science Faculty of Science
spellingShingle Southern Urbanism
Rhoda, Bronwin
Improving access to maternal health care beyond health care policy: pregnant women's experience of maternal public health care services in Cape Town, South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Improving access to maternal health care beyond health care policy: pregnant women's experience of maternal public health care services in Cape Town, South Africa
title_full Improving access to maternal health care beyond health care policy: pregnant women's experience of maternal public health care services in Cape Town, South Africa
title_fullStr Improving access to maternal health care beyond health care policy: pregnant women's experience of maternal public health care services in Cape Town, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Improving access to maternal health care beyond health care policy: pregnant women's experience of maternal public health care services in Cape Town, South Africa
title_short Improving access to maternal health care beyond health care policy: pregnant women's experience of maternal public health care services in Cape Town, South Africa
title_sort improving access to maternal health care beyond health care policy pregnant women s experience of maternal public health care services in cape town south africa
topic Southern Urbanism
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39842
work_keys_str_mv AT rhodabronwin improvingaccesstomaternalhealthcarebeyondhealthcarepolicypregnantwomensexperienceofmaternalpublichealthcareservicesincapetownsouthafrica