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Pre-and-post-operative aversion among men whose partners had caesarean delivery in a patriarchal setting
Authors:Abiodun S Adeniran  Olumuyiwa O Ogunlaja  Idowu P Ogunlaja  Shukurat B Okesina  Adegboyega A Fawole  Kikelomo T Adesina  Abiodun P Aboyeji
Affiliation:1. Obstetrics & Gynaecology Department, University of Ilorin/ University of Ilorin Teaching Hospital, Ilorin, Nigeria;2. Department of Obstetrics & Gynaecology, Bowen University, Iwo / Bowen University Teaching Hospital, Ogbomoso, Nigeria;3. Obstetrics & Gynaecology Department, General Hospital, Ilorin, Nigeria;4. Obstetrics & Gynaecology Department, State Specialist Hospital, Ilorin, Nigeria
Abstract:ObjectivesThe study evaluated pre and post-operative perception and aversion to caesarean delivery (CD) among men whose partners underwent the procedure.DesignA multicentre cross-sectional study.SettingTwo tertiary and two secondary health facilities.ParticipantsMen whose partners underwent CD at the study sites.MethodsParticipants were recruited by purposive sampling, data collection was through interaction via an interviewer-administered questionnaire first immediately the decision for CD was made and thereafter on the third postoperative day. Men whose partners had vaginal delivery were excluded from the study and data management was with SPSS version 21.0 while p<0.05 was significant.ResultsAwareness about CD was 84.0% mainly through the healthcare workers (42.1%) and the female partner (34.1%); 88.0% of participants recommended CD for medically-indicated reasons. The greatest influence on consent was the male partner (48.8%). The major pre-operative concerns were limitation of family size (34.7%) and fear of repeat CD (34.0%). Pre-operative perceptions of CD included being expensive (60.7%), fear of the procedure (48.0%), fear of complications (45.3%) and longer hospital stay (44.0%). Aversion to CD was 30.0% pre and 5.3% post-operation; predictors of aversion were history of previous surgery among male or female partner and awareness about CD. However, there were reductions in negative perception and aversion post-operation.ConclusionThe high negative perception and aversion to CD among male partners were reduced post-operation. Healthcare workers should address the concerns and negative perceptions about CD and prioritize patient-friendly experiences during surgical operations.FundingFunding was by the researchers; no grant or external support was received for the study.
Keywords:Caesarean delivery   aversion   perception   male partner   patriarchal setting
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