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Lived Experiences Of Pregnancy Among Women With Sickle Cell Disease Receiving Care At Mulago Hospital: A Qualitative Study

Lived Experiences Of Pregnancy Among Women With Sickle Cell Disease Receiving Care At Mulago Hospital: A Qualitative Study

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dc.contributor.author KENNETH TUMWESIGE
dc.contributor.author Namagembe Imelda
dc.contributor.author Kayiga Herbert
dc.contributor.author Munube Deogratias
dc.contributor.author Rujumba Joseph
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-11T13:51:54Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-11T13:51:54Z
dc.date.issued 2019
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/49693
dc.description.abstract Abstract; Background Women with sickle cell disease in Mulago National Referral Hospital face challenges when they become pregnant and they receive the same care as all other high risk pregnant women who come to the hospital. This study explored the lived experiences of pregnancy among women with sickle cell disease receiving care at Mulago National Referral Hospital.Methods This was a qualitative phenomenological study conducted on 15 participants who were women with sickle cell disease with the experience of pregnancy. In-depth audio recorded interviews were conducted to collect data from women who were pregnant at time of study or had ever been pregnant aged 16 to 38 years of age with sickle cell disease. Recorded data was transcribed and analyzed using content thematic approach.Results This study revealed that pregnant women with sickle cell disease faced both negative and positive health care experiences and individual lived experiences of pregnancy. The few positive individual lived experiences were joy of motherhood and giving birth to child free of sickle cell disease whereas the negative individual lived experiences reported were recurrent painful crises, pregnancy loss, premature delivery, stigma and discouragement, relationship discord and desertion by spouse. There were few positive healthcare experiences reported in this study which included: dedicated care and support from health workers, referral to specialist services, support from their male partners and the negative healthcare experiences reported were delay to get medical assistance, informal hospital charges, unsatisfactory care, and advocacy for caesarian section Vs normal delivery.Conclusion Pregnant women with sickle cell disease lived with great expectation and in fear of being further weakened by the disease. Their experiences were in general negative at both individual, social and health system levels.
dc.publisher Research Square
dc.title Lived Experiences Of Pregnancy Among Women With Sickle Cell Disease Receiving Care At Mulago Hospital: A Qualitative Study
dc.type Preprint
dc.identifier.doi 10.21203/rs.2.13857/v1
dc.identifier.lens 101-071-814-878-534


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