An Uninformed Decision-Making Process for Cesarean Section: A Qualitative Exploratory Study among the Slum Residents of Dhaka City, Bangladesh.
Jesmin SultanaIpsita SutradharMusarrat Jabeen RahmanAbdullah Nurus Salam KhanMohiuddin Ahsanul Kabir ChowdhuryEnam HasibCharu ChhetriS M Hasan MahmudTahsin KashemSanjeev KumarZaw Toe MyintMahbubur RahmanTarique Mohammad Nurul HudaShams El ArifeenS K Masum BillahPublished in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2022)
The decision-making process and the information flow from physicians to patients regarding deliveries through cesarean section (C-section) has not been adequately explored in Bangladeshi context. Here, we aimed to explore the extent of information received by mothers and their family members and their involvement in the decision-making process. We conducted a qualitative exploratory study in four urban slums of Dhaka city among purposively selected mothers ( n = 7), who had a cesarean birth within one-year preceding data collection, and their family members ( n = 12). In most cases, physicians were the primary decision-makers for C-sections. At the household level, pregnant women were excluded from some crucial steps of the decision-making process and information asymmetry was prevalent. All interviewed pregnant women attended at least one antenatal care visit; however, they neither received detailed information regarding C-sections nor attended any counseling session regarding decisions around delivery type. In some cases, pregnant women and their family members did not ask health care providers for detailed information about C-sections. Most seemed to perceive C-sections as risk-free procedures. Future research could explore the best ways to provide C-section-related information to pregnant women during the antenatal period and develop interventions to promote shared decision-making for C-sections in urban Bangladeshi slums.
Keyphrases
- pregnant women
- decision making
- health information
- healthcare
- pregnancy outcomes
- end stage renal disease
- primary care
- chronic kidney disease
- physical activity
- palliative care
- ejection fraction
- electronic health record
- social media
- peritoneal dialysis
- quality improvement
- hepatitis c virus
- smoking cessation
- prognostic factors
- transcranial direct current stimulation
- high intensity
- data analysis