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Identifying pregnant and postpartum women's priorities for enhancing nutrition support through social needs programmes in a resource-constrained urban community in South Africa

Identifying pregnant and postpartum women's priorities for enhancing nutrition support through social needs programmes in a resource-constrained urban community in South Africa
Identifying pregnant and postpartum women's priorities for enhancing nutrition support through social needs programmes in a resource-constrained urban community in South Africa
Background: malnutrition remains a pressing public health concern for mothers and children in South Africa. Despite the government’s multisectoral response, unaddressed social needs prevent some mothers getting full benefit from interventions, spanning financial planning, income stability, housing, access to government services, social support, and provision of affordable, nutritious foods. Engaging with mothers and prioritising their concerns is important if we wish to overcome obstacles to women benefiting from government nutrition interventions. This study aimed to identify the programmes that women perceived as a priority in addressing the social needs of mothers of young infants and pregnant women to enhance nutrition in a resource-constrained urban township in South Africa.

Methods: a cross-sectional study employed a quantitative preference elicitation survey, administered to 210 mothers and pregnant women from five primary healthcare facilities in Soweto. The survey tool was developed with the community to identify unmet social needs and potential solutions, which were synthesised with findings from the literature. The survey described 15 programmes, grouped into three delivery levels: clinics, community, and government. Participants were required to rank programme options in two stages. First, they selected their top two programmes within each delivery level. Subsequently, they allocated stickers to indicate the strength of their preference among the top programmes across the levels. Rankings were analysed using descriptive statistics.

Results: the highest priority was given to five programmes. Two delivered at the community level: Women’s economic empowerment groups and Job search assistance, two at the clinic level: Social needs assessment and referral, and Prescription-based food, and one at the government level: Free quality childcare. The lowest-ranked programmes were two clinic-based programmes, specifically Maternal nutrition groups and Couple antenatal education.

Conclusion: women expressed strong views about which programmes should be prioritised to support mothers and pregnant women in addressing their social needs and improving nutrition. Key areas included providing support with job searching and entrepreneurship, accessing childcare and the healthy foods recommended at clinics, as well as finding information on available community and government services. Leveraging multisectoral collaboration, aligned policy objectives, efficient public financing, and strengthened implementation capacity will be pivotal in delivering these programmes.
Adolescent, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Nutritional Support, Postpartum Period, Pregnancy, Pregnant Women/psychology, Social Support, South Africa, Surveys and Questionnaires, Urban Population, Young Adult, Nutrition, Preference elicitation, Maternal and child health, Social needs
1471-2458
Erzse, Agnes
817251b4-544e-4535-8ceb-4d1126fe0102
Desmond, Chris
ea386a5f-c492-452d-9bde-6fec77d1c65c
Hofman, Karen
29fcd194-0248-4bce-914e-9812ec4d3243
Barker, Mary
374310ad-d308-44af-b6da-515bf5d2d6d2
Christofides, Nicola Joan
7f1e7928-1047-426a-9ca7-a9a77a2b587c
Erzse, Agnes
817251b4-544e-4535-8ceb-4d1126fe0102
Desmond, Chris
ea386a5f-c492-452d-9bde-6fec77d1c65c
Hofman, Karen
29fcd194-0248-4bce-914e-9812ec4d3243
Barker, Mary
374310ad-d308-44af-b6da-515bf5d2d6d2
Christofides, Nicola Joan
7f1e7928-1047-426a-9ca7-a9a77a2b587c

Erzse, Agnes, Desmond, Chris, Hofman, Karen, Barker, Mary and Christofides, Nicola Joan (2024) Identifying pregnant and postpartum women's priorities for enhancing nutrition support through social needs programmes in a resource-constrained urban community in South Africa. BMC Public Health, 24 (1), [2231]. (doi:10.1186/s12889-024-19591-7).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: malnutrition remains a pressing public health concern for mothers and children in South Africa. Despite the government’s multisectoral response, unaddressed social needs prevent some mothers getting full benefit from interventions, spanning financial planning, income stability, housing, access to government services, social support, and provision of affordable, nutritious foods. Engaging with mothers and prioritising their concerns is important if we wish to overcome obstacles to women benefiting from government nutrition interventions. This study aimed to identify the programmes that women perceived as a priority in addressing the social needs of mothers of young infants and pregnant women to enhance nutrition in a resource-constrained urban township in South Africa.

Methods: a cross-sectional study employed a quantitative preference elicitation survey, administered to 210 mothers and pregnant women from five primary healthcare facilities in Soweto. The survey tool was developed with the community to identify unmet social needs and potential solutions, which were synthesised with findings from the literature. The survey described 15 programmes, grouped into three delivery levels: clinics, community, and government. Participants were required to rank programme options in two stages. First, they selected their top two programmes within each delivery level. Subsequently, they allocated stickers to indicate the strength of their preference among the top programmes across the levels. Rankings were analysed using descriptive statistics.

Results: the highest priority was given to five programmes. Two delivered at the community level: Women’s economic empowerment groups and Job search assistance, two at the clinic level: Social needs assessment and referral, and Prescription-based food, and one at the government level: Free quality childcare. The lowest-ranked programmes were two clinic-based programmes, specifically Maternal nutrition groups and Couple antenatal education.

Conclusion: women expressed strong views about which programmes should be prioritised to support mothers and pregnant women in addressing their social needs and improving nutrition. Key areas included providing support with job searching and entrepreneurship, accessing childcare and the healthy foods recommended at clinics, as well as finding information on available community and government services. Leveraging multisectoral collaboration, aligned policy objectives, efficient public financing, and strengthened implementation capacity will be pivotal in delivering these programmes.

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s12889-024-19591-7 - Version of Record
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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 25 July 2024
Published date: 16 August 2024
Keywords: Adolescent, Adult, Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Nutritional Support, Postpartum Period, Pregnancy, Pregnant Women/psychology, Social Support, South Africa, Surveys and Questionnaires, Urban Population, Young Adult, Nutrition, Preference elicitation, Maternal and child health, Social needs

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 495217
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495217
ISSN: 1471-2458
PURE UUID: dfaf4e78-6f6e-4784-bf3a-df35b1e9af14
ORCID for Mary Barker: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-2976-0217

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Date deposited: 01 Nov 2024 18:02
Last modified: 02 Nov 2024 02:35

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Contributors

Author: Agnes Erzse
Author: Chris Desmond
Author: Karen Hofman
Author: Mary Barker ORCID iD
Author: Nicola Joan Christofides

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