Cargando…

Obstetric Violence among Pregnant Jordanian Women: An Observational Study between the Private and Public Hospitals in Jordan

Background: Obstetric Violence (OV) is a public health matter that affects women and their children with an incidence rate between 18.3–75.1% globally. The delivery institution of public and private sectors represents a potential factor contributing to OV. This study aimed to assess OV existence amo...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Azzam, Omar A., Sindiani, Amer Mahmoud, Eyalsalman, Maysa M., Odeh, Mira K., AbedAlkareem, Kenda Y., Albanna, Sara A., Abdulrahman, Elaf M., Abukhadrah, Weaam Q., Hazaimeh, Haitham O., Zaghloul, Ashraf Ahmed, Mahgoub, Samir S.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10000996/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36900659
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11050654
_version_ 1784904022806757376
author Azzam, Omar A.
Sindiani, Amer Mahmoud
Eyalsalman, Maysa M.
Odeh, Mira K.
AbedAlkareem, Kenda Y.
Albanna, Sara A.
Abdulrahman, Elaf M.
Abukhadrah, Weaam Q.
Hazaimeh, Haitham O.
Zaghloul, Ashraf Ahmed
Mahgoub, Samir S.
author_facet Azzam, Omar A.
Sindiani, Amer Mahmoud
Eyalsalman, Maysa M.
Odeh, Mira K.
AbedAlkareem, Kenda Y.
Albanna, Sara A.
Abdulrahman, Elaf M.
Abukhadrah, Weaam Q.
Hazaimeh, Haitham O.
Zaghloul, Ashraf Ahmed
Mahgoub, Samir S.
author_sort Azzam, Omar A.
collection PubMed
description Background: Obstetric Violence (OV) is a public health matter that affects women and their children with an incidence rate between 18.3–75.1% globally. The delivery institution of public and private sectors represents a potential factor contributing to OV. This study aimed to assess OV existence among sample of pregnant Jordanian women and its risk factors domains between public and private hospitals. Methodology: This is a case-control study including 259 recently delivered mothers from Al-Karak Public and Educational Hospital and The Islamic Private Hospital. A designated questionnaire including demographic variables and OV domains was used for data collection. Results: A significant difference was seen between patients delivering in the public sector compared to patients delivering the private sector in education level, occupation, monthly income, delivery supervision and overall satisfaction. Patients delivering in the private sector showed a significantly less physical abuse by the medical staff compared to patients delivering in the public sector, and patients delivering in a private room also showed a significantly less OV and risk of physical abuse compared to patients delivering in shared room. In public settings, medications information was lesser versus the private ones, additionally, there is significant association between performing episiotomy, physical abuse by staff and the delivery in shared rooms in private settings. Conclusion: This study showed that OV was less susceptible during childbirth in private settings compared to public settings. Educational status, low monthly income, occupation are risk factors for OV; also, features of disrespect and abuse like obtaining consent for episiotomy performance, delivery provision updates, care perception based on payment ability and medication information were reported.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-10000996
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2023
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-100009962023-03-11 Obstetric Violence among Pregnant Jordanian Women: An Observational Study between the Private and Public Hospitals in Jordan Azzam, Omar A. Sindiani, Amer Mahmoud Eyalsalman, Maysa M. Odeh, Mira K. AbedAlkareem, Kenda Y. Albanna, Sara A. Abdulrahman, Elaf M. Abukhadrah, Weaam Q. Hazaimeh, Haitham O. Zaghloul, Ashraf Ahmed Mahgoub, Samir S. Healthcare (Basel) Article Background: Obstetric Violence (OV) is a public health matter that affects women and their children with an incidence rate between 18.3–75.1% globally. The delivery institution of public and private sectors represents a potential factor contributing to OV. This study aimed to assess OV existence among sample of pregnant Jordanian women and its risk factors domains between public and private hospitals. Methodology: This is a case-control study including 259 recently delivered mothers from Al-Karak Public and Educational Hospital and The Islamic Private Hospital. A designated questionnaire including demographic variables and OV domains was used for data collection. Results: A significant difference was seen between patients delivering in the public sector compared to patients delivering the private sector in education level, occupation, monthly income, delivery supervision and overall satisfaction. Patients delivering in the private sector showed a significantly less physical abuse by the medical staff compared to patients delivering in the public sector, and patients delivering in a private room also showed a significantly less OV and risk of physical abuse compared to patients delivering in shared room. In public settings, medications information was lesser versus the private ones, additionally, there is significant association between performing episiotomy, physical abuse by staff and the delivery in shared rooms in private settings. Conclusion: This study showed that OV was less susceptible during childbirth in private settings compared to public settings. Educational status, low monthly income, occupation are risk factors for OV; also, features of disrespect and abuse like obtaining consent for episiotomy performance, delivery provision updates, care perception based on payment ability and medication information were reported. MDPI 2023-02-23 /pmc/articles/PMC10000996/ /pubmed/36900659 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11050654 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Azzam, Omar A.
Sindiani, Amer Mahmoud
Eyalsalman, Maysa M.
Odeh, Mira K.
AbedAlkareem, Kenda Y.
Albanna, Sara A.
Abdulrahman, Elaf M.
Abukhadrah, Weaam Q.
Hazaimeh, Haitham O.
Zaghloul, Ashraf Ahmed
Mahgoub, Samir S.
Obstetric Violence among Pregnant Jordanian Women: An Observational Study between the Private and Public Hospitals in Jordan
title Obstetric Violence among Pregnant Jordanian Women: An Observational Study between the Private and Public Hospitals in Jordan
title_full Obstetric Violence among Pregnant Jordanian Women: An Observational Study between the Private and Public Hospitals in Jordan
title_fullStr Obstetric Violence among Pregnant Jordanian Women: An Observational Study between the Private and Public Hospitals in Jordan
title_full_unstemmed Obstetric Violence among Pregnant Jordanian Women: An Observational Study between the Private and Public Hospitals in Jordan
title_short Obstetric Violence among Pregnant Jordanian Women: An Observational Study between the Private and Public Hospitals in Jordan
title_sort obstetric violence among pregnant jordanian women: an observational study between the private and public hospitals in jordan
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10000996/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36900659
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11050654
work_keys_str_mv AT azzamomara obstetricviolenceamongpregnantjordanianwomenanobservationalstudybetweentheprivateandpublichospitalsinjordan
AT sindianiamermahmoud obstetricviolenceamongpregnantjordanianwomenanobservationalstudybetweentheprivateandpublichospitalsinjordan
AT eyalsalmanmaysam obstetricviolenceamongpregnantjordanianwomenanobservationalstudybetweentheprivateandpublichospitalsinjordan
AT odehmirak obstetricviolenceamongpregnantjordanianwomenanobservationalstudybetweentheprivateandpublichospitalsinjordan
AT abedalkareemkenday obstetricviolenceamongpregnantjordanianwomenanobservationalstudybetweentheprivateandpublichospitalsinjordan
AT albannasaraa obstetricviolenceamongpregnantjordanianwomenanobservationalstudybetweentheprivateandpublichospitalsinjordan
AT abdulrahmanelafm obstetricviolenceamongpregnantjordanianwomenanobservationalstudybetweentheprivateandpublichospitalsinjordan
AT abukhadrahweaamq obstetricviolenceamongpregnantjordanianwomenanobservationalstudybetweentheprivateandpublichospitalsinjordan
AT hazaimehhaithamo obstetricviolenceamongpregnantjordanianwomenanobservationalstudybetweentheprivateandpublichospitalsinjordan
AT zaghloulashrafahmed obstetricviolenceamongpregnantjordanianwomenanobservationalstudybetweentheprivateandpublichospitalsinjordan
AT mahgoubsamirs obstetricviolenceamongpregnantjordanianwomenanobservationalstudybetweentheprivateandpublichospitalsinjordan