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Cultural adaptation of birthing services in rural Ayacucho, Peru

Maternal mortality is particularly high among poor, indigenous women in rural Peru, and the use of facility care is low, partly due to cultural insensitivities of the health care system. A culturally appropriate delivery care model was developed in poor and isolated rural communities, and implemente...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Bulletin of the World Health Organization 2009-09, Vol.87 (9), p.724-729
Main Authors: GABRYSCH, Sabine, LEMA, Claudia, BEDRINANA, Eduardo, BAUTISTA, Marcoa, MALCA, Rosa, CAMPBELL, Oona Mr, JAIME MIRANDA, J
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Maternal mortality is particularly high among poor, indigenous women in rural Peru, and the use of facility care is low, partly due to cultural insensitivities of the health care system. A culturally appropriate delivery care model was developed in poor and isolated rural communities, and implemented between 1999 and 2001 in cooperation with the Quechua indigenous communities and health professionals. Data on birth location and attendance in one health centre have been collected up to 2007. The international nongovernmental organization, Health Unlimited, and its Peruvian partner organization, Salud Sín Límites Perú, conducted the project in Santillana district in Ayacucho. The model involves features such as a rope and bench for vertical delivery position, inclusion of family and traditional birth attendants in the delivery process and use of the Quechua language. The proportion of births delivered in the health facility increased from 6% in 1999 to 83% in 2007 with high satisfaction levels. Implementing a model of skilled delivery attendance that integrates modern medical and traditional Andean elements is feasible and sustainable. Indigenous women with little formal education do use delivery services if their needs are met. This contradicts common victim-blaming attitudes that ascribe high levels of home births to 'cultural preferences' or 'ignorance'.
ISSN:0042-9686
1564-0604
DOI:10.2471/blt.08.057794