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Intersections between patient-provider communication and antenatal anxiety in a public healthcare setting in Pakistan

This study explores pregnant women’s and healthcare providers’ perspectives on the role of patient-provider communication in experiences of antenatal anxiety within a low-resource setting. In 2017–18, we consecutively sampled pregnant women (n = 19) with at least mild anxiety and purposively sampled...

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Autores principales: Kazi, Asiya K., Rowther, Armaan A., Atif, Najia, Nazir, Huma, Atiq, Maria, Zulfiqar, Shaffaq, Malik, Abid, Surkan, Pamela J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7864403/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33544747
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0244671
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author Kazi, Asiya K.
Rowther, Armaan A.
Atif, Najia
Nazir, Huma
Atiq, Maria
Zulfiqar, Shaffaq
Malik, Abid
Surkan, Pamela J.
author_facet Kazi, Asiya K.
Rowther, Armaan A.
Atif, Najia
Nazir, Huma
Atiq, Maria
Zulfiqar, Shaffaq
Malik, Abid
Surkan, Pamela J.
author_sort Kazi, Asiya K.
collection PubMed
description This study explores pregnant women’s and healthcare providers’ perspectives on the role of patient-provider communication in experiences of antenatal anxiety within a low-resource setting. In 2017–18, we consecutively sampled pregnant women (n = 19) with at least mild anxiety and purposively sampled antenatal care providers (n = 10) from a public hospital in Punjab Province, Pakistan. We then conducted in-depth interviews and thematically coded them with a combination of inductive and deductive coding methodologies. We found that patients expressed a desire for warm, empathetic communication from providers who demonstrate respect, attentiveness, and a shared lived experience. Providers revealed an awareness that their heavy caseloads, high stress levels, and discourteous tones adversely influenced communication with pregnant women and may exacerbate their anxieties, but also reported that compassionately addressing women’s concerns, providing financial problem-solving and/or assistance, and moderating conflicting healthcare desires between patients and their families could alleviate anxiety in pregnant women. Patients reported feelings of anxiety stemming from a belief that they received lower quality communication from antenatal providers at public hospitals than patients received from antenatal providers at private hospitals, an experience that they partially attributed to their low socioeconomic status. Meanwhile, some providers disclosed potentially stigmatizing views of women from particular sociocultural backgrounds or low socioeconomic status, including perceptions that appeared to shape communication with these patients in antenatal care encounters. Our findings provide preliminary evidence that communication between pregnant women and antenatal providers that is warm, normalizes patient fears, and integrates patients’ interpersonal and financial considerations can mitigate pregnant women’s experiences of anxiety and reduce barriers to accessing antenatal care in Pakistan’s public healthcare facilities.
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spelling pubmed-78644032021-02-12 Intersections between patient-provider communication and antenatal anxiety in a public healthcare setting in Pakistan Kazi, Asiya K. Rowther, Armaan A. Atif, Najia Nazir, Huma Atiq, Maria Zulfiqar, Shaffaq Malik, Abid Surkan, Pamela J. PLoS One Research Article This study explores pregnant women’s and healthcare providers’ perspectives on the role of patient-provider communication in experiences of antenatal anxiety within a low-resource setting. In 2017–18, we consecutively sampled pregnant women (n = 19) with at least mild anxiety and purposively sampled antenatal care providers (n = 10) from a public hospital in Punjab Province, Pakistan. We then conducted in-depth interviews and thematically coded them with a combination of inductive and deductive coding methodologies. We found that patients expressed a desire for warm, empathetic communication from providers who demonstrate respect, attentiveness, and a shared lived experience. Providers revealed an awareness that their heavy caseloads, high stress levels, and discourteous tones adversely influenced communication with pregnant women and may exacerbate their anxieties, but also reported that compassionately addressing women’s concerns, providing financial problem-solving and/or assistance, and moderating conflicting healthcare desires between patients and their families could alleviate anxiety in pregnant women. Patients reported feelings of anxiety stemming from a belief that they received lower quality communication from antenatal providers at public hospitals than patients received from antenatal providers at private hospitals, an experience that they partially attributed to their low socioeconomic status. Meanwhile, some providers disclosed potentially stigmatizing views of women from particular sociocultural backgrounds or low socioeconomic status, including perceptions that appeared to shape communication with these patients in antenatal care encounters. Our findings provide preliminary evidence that communication between pregnant women and antenatal providers that is warm, normalizes patient fears, and integrates patients’ interpersonal and financial considerations can mitigate pregnant women’s experiences of anxiety and reduce barriers to accessing antenatal care in Pakistan’s public healthcare facilities. Public Library of Science 2021-02-05 /pmc/articles/PMC7864403/ /pubmed/33544747 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0244671 Text en © 2021 Kazi et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Kazi, Asiya K.
Rowther, Armaan A.
Atif, Najia
Nazir, Huma
Atiq, Maria
Zulfiqar, Shaffaq
Malik, Abid
Surkan, Pamela J.
Intersections between patient-provider communication and antenatal anxiety in a public healthcare setting in Pakistan
title Intersections between patient-provider communication and antenatal anxiety in a public healthcare setting in Pakistan
title_full Intersections between patient-provider communication and antenatal anxiety in a public healthcare setting in Pakistan
title_fullStr Intersections between patient-provider communication and antenatal anxiety in a public healthcare setting in Pakistan
title_full_unstemmed Intersections between patient-provider communication and antenatal anxiety in a public healthcare setting in Pakistan
title_short Intersections between patient-provider communication and antenatal anxiety in a public healthcare setting in Pakistan
title_sort intersections between patient-provider communication and antenatal anxiety in a public healthcare setting in pakistan
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7864403/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33544747
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0244671
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