Birthing Practices of Traditional Birth Attendants in South Asia in the Context of Training Programmes

Author:

Saravanan Sheela1,Turrell Gavin2,Johnson Helen3,Fraser Jennifer4

Affiliation:

1. Sheela Saravanan is a Post-doctoral Researcher, Karl Jasper Centre, Heidelberg, Germany.

2. Gavin Turrell is Associate Professor, School of Public Health, Faculty of Health, Institution of Health and Biomedical Innovation, Queensland University of Technology, Australia.

3. Helen Johnson is Senior Lecturer in Anthropology, School of Social Science, University of Queensland, Australia.

4. Jennifer Fraser is Senior Lecturer, Post Graduate Research Coordinator, School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Queensland, Australia.

Abstract

Traditional Birth Attendants (TBA) training has been an important component of public health policy interventions to improve maternal and child health in developing countries since the 1970s. More recently, since the 1990s, the TBA training strategy has been increasingly seen as irrelevant, ineffective or, on the whole, a failure due to evidence that the maternal mortality rate (MMR) in developing countries had not reduced. Although, worldwide data show that, by choice or out of necessity, 47 percent of births in the developing world are assisted by TBAs and/or family members, funding for TBA training has been reduced and moved to providing skilled birth attendants for all births. Any shift in policy needs to be supported by appropriate evidence on TBA roles in providing maternal and infant health care service and effectiveness of the training programmes. This article reviews literature on the characteristics and role of TBAs in South Asia with an emphasis on India. The aim was to assess the contribution of TBAs in providing maternal and infant health care service at different stages of pregnancy and after-delivery and birthing practices adopted in home births. The review of role revealed that apart from TBAs, there are various other people in the community also involved in making decisions about the welfare and health of the birthing mother and new born baby. However, TBAs have changing, localised but nonetheless significant roles in delivery, postnatal and infant care in India. Certain traditional birthing practices such as bathing babies immediately after birth, not weighing babies after birth and not feeding with colostrum are adopted in home births as well as health institutions in India. There is therefore a thin precarious balance between the application of biomedical and traditional knowledge. Customary rituals and perceptions essentially affect practices in home and institutional births and hence training of TBAs need to be implemented in conjunction with community awareness programmes.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Health Policy

Reference129 articles.

1. Human Touch vs. Axillary Digital Thermometry for Detection of Neonatal Hypothermia at Community Level

2. Baer, Hans, A. and Robbie Davis-Floyd (2006). Entry on ‘health care, alternative’. Encyclopedia of Anthropology (pp. 1146–48). Thousand Oaks C.A.: SAGE Publications .

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