CESAREAN section, CHILDBIRTH, FEAR, HEALTH services accessibility, PROPRIETARY hospitals, INTERVIEWING, MATERNAL health services, RESEARCH methodology, MEDICAL quality control, PSYCHOLOGY of mothers, ECONOMIC status, SOCIOECONOMIC factors, DATA analysis software, LABOR pain (Obstetrics)
Abstract
In this paper, we examine the perceptions and experiences of childbirth among a group of wealthier women in Dhaka through in-depth interviews. We find that a number of factors including preference for Caesarean Section (CS), socio-economic position, family structure, and perceptions of modern childbirth contributed to the women's overuse of medical childbirth services. Furthermore, women's capacity to purchase modern maternal health care in the private sector did not necessarily ensure high quality care in a health system which approaches maternal healthcare as a profit-making enterprise rather than as an essential human right. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]