Exploring meaning and types of trust in maternity care in peri-urban Kenya: A qualitative cross-perspective analysis
Document Type
Article (peer-reviewed)
Publication Date
2018
Abstract
Trust offers a distinctive lens on facility responsiveness during labor and birth. Though acknowledged in prior literature, limited work exists linking conceptual and empirical spheres. This study explores trust in the maternity setting in Kenya through a theoretically driven qualitative approach. Focus groups (n = 8, N = 70) with women who recently gave birth (WRB), pregnant women, and male partners, and in-depth-interviews (n = 33) with WRB, frontline providers, and management, were conducted in and around a peri-urban public hospital. Combined coding and memo-writing showed that trust in maternity care is nested within understandings of institutional and societal trust. Content areas of trust include confidence, communication, integrity, mutual respect, competence, fairness, confidentiality, and systems trust. Trust is relevant, multidimensional, and dynamic. Examining trust provides a basis for developing quantitative measures and reveals structural underpinnings, repercussions for trust in other health areas, and health systems inequities, which have implications for maternal health policy, programming, and service utilization.
Recommended Citation
Sripad, Pooja, Sachiko Ozawa, Maria W. Merritt, Larissa Jennings, Deanna Kerrigan, Charity Ndwiga, Timothy Abuya, and Charlotte E. Warren. 2018. "Exploring meaning and types of trust in maternity care in peri-urban Kenya: A qualitative cross-perspective analysis," Qualitative Health Research 28(2): 305–320.
DOI
10.1177/1049732317723585
Language
English
Project
Heshima: Promoting Dignified and Respectful Care During Childbirth