Table 2.
The Intervention | Health System | Broad Context | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Buy-in and Bonding | Social Support | Time | Medical Concerns | Access to Care | Cultural Norms | |
Barriers |
KMC felt forced
· Were unaware of the benefits of KMC · Were expected to perform KMC with little or no instruction · Could not see newborn during KMC · Did not feel a bond with the infant · Perceived newborn did not enjoy KMC |
Support from Society
· Fear, guilt doing KMC publically · Felt KMC was role of mother · Mothers did not want father to perform KMC |
· Caregivers unable to devote time · Other responsibilities at home or work interfered · Mothers lonely and depressed in KMC ward · Time needed to commute from home to hospital was too much |
Mothers
· Fatigue · Postpartum depression · Pain hindered KMC, particularly after a C-section · Discomfort sleeping upright |
Financing
· Cost associated with travel, food, lodging, parking, clinical fees · Lack of transport and distance to facility |
Traditional Newborn Care
· Infants traditionally carried on back, thus carrying on the front seemed odd · Bathing practices interfered · If breast feeding not pursued KMC less likely to continue · Considered unclean where diapers not used Gender Roles Stigma |
Support from HCWs
· Did not respect family privacy · Unsupportive, loud, uncaring |
Service Delivery
· Lack of privacy · Lack of necessary resources |
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Stigma
· Mothers reported shame of having a preterm infant · Caregivers lied about carrying a newborn on their chest · Others presumed the newborn was ill or deformed |
Support from Family
· Mothers-in-law and grandmothers did not approve · Bad attitudes and peer pressure negatively influenced desire to perform KMC |
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Enablers |
Benefits For Newborns
· Slept longer, less anxious, happier, more willing to feed |
Support from Society
· Societal acceptance of paternal involvement |
· Parents preferred to practice KMC at home than at the facility to at tend to other responsibilities · Unlimited visitation hours at health facility |
Mothers
· KMC helped mother’s recover from post-partum depression · KMC helped to relieve stress and promote emotional well-being |
Financing
· Belief that KMC cut down hospital bills due to early discharge · Assumed to be a cheaper than incubator care · Parents more likely to stay if services were free Service Delivery · Private, quiet spaces for KMC |
Gender Roles
· Normalization of paternal involved in child care |
Benefits For Caregivers
· KMC was calming, relaxing, comforting, natural, instinctive, secure, logical, healing · Created a family bond, inspired caregiver confidence · Sped emotional and physical recovery of mother · Made caregivers feel useful |
Support from HCWs
· Mothers less apprehensive to practice KMC. Best results with continuous training and support Support from Family · Grandmothers, sisters, others helping with chores increased uptake and duration of KMC · Paternal support crucial to success of KMC, they alleviate workload, support, encourage, increase mother’s confidence · More likely to understand and respond well if mother explained KMC |