The barriers to providing quality maternity care were found to have significant physiological, psychological and socioeconomic consequences on Ghanaian midwives. These in turn, constrain on their inability to provide quality care. The overarching category in which the data representing the consequences for midwives of working with myriad barriers to quality care was labelled ‘I go off track’, and this comprises three subcategories, titled: ‘It’s exhausting and fatiguing; it stresses me out’, ‘It's frustrating; it makes us angry and we get off track’, and ‘It affects my household’.
It’s exhausting and fatiguing; it stresses me out: The participants in this study indicated that the challenges they faced in relation to their profession and to their desire to provide quality care left them feeling overwhelmingly weary and tense. As well as the exhaustion and fatigue from their work, according to Kafui, a participant, they experience “mental stress”. Participants also described how their stress at times engendered a state of distress.
The midwives indicated that, because they take care of women through the whole childbearing episode, it is necessary that they stay close to the women for long periods of time in order to be able to monitor them throughout the birth stages. The high number of women that midwives take care of coupled with chronic staff shortages mean that their workload is extremely demanding. As indicated by Akwele, “there is always a lot at hand”. Adding to their high workload and the related stress is the lack of or broken-down equipment, which means they must go back and forth to other units to borrow essential equipment and look for supplies, making the whole process a struggle. This, the midwives indicate, leaves them exhausted by the time they finish their shifts. Asibi, like many of the study midwives, said:
“Because of the pressure, I feel very tired, especially when I get home. Toward dawn, I feel so tired. But I have to come to work. It is not easy”.
The midwives also indicated that because they stand or bend for long periods of time to support birthing women, they have back pain as a result of poor manual handling. The poor conditions of birthing couches and the need to transfer clients from one surface to another without the right equipment were cited by the midwives as the cause of their injuries. In most cases, the cost of treatment for workplace injury is borne by the midwives. Fafa provided an example: ‘I am having spondylosis, they referred me from here to [the referral hospital]. I take treatment at my own expense. Nobody cares.’
As well as the risk of injury, the respondents perceived that the high workload and long working hours affected their physical health more generally, thereby causing frequent requests for time off. This is reportedly compounded by the midwives’ inability to utilize their breaks to attend to their nutritional needs because of the demands of the work, Selasie intimated thus: “ The stress can make you lose your appetite for dinner” and a number of respondents speculated that they have acquired health conditions as a result. Asibi gave an example:
I have developed [an] ulcer because of the work. At times we say it is a wrong profession but we are in it. What can we do? We don’t have time for ourselves at all. We always look tired and sick. Always you have body pains and waist pains. Some [of us] are consulting physiotherapists here because of lifting of cases.
Selasie went on to explain that back injuries often occur in emergencies: “When she [the woman] is bleeding you become restless, you just want to save the client.”
The midwives also indicated that because of the heavy workload on the labour wards, they often stay longer than their working hours. Additionally, demands are placed on them especially when they have staff shortages and when colleagues are late in reporting to work. The consequence of this for many is that, due to the long distances between midwives’ workplace and their home, and also because of the fact that they do not have their own means of transport, as indicated by Nakie, “going back home is a problem”. Participants indicated that they get to their homes late in the night, especially when they are on the afternoon shift. This then impacts their ability to get to work on time the next day, thus compounding the problem. Further, some midwives feared or actually reported being attacked by thieves in the night when returning home from work. The experience or thought of this was so stressful that, as Khadija explains, she and some of her colleagues had made the difficult choice not to return to their homes and family when they work late because of the threats to their wellbeing and safety:
If your house is far and you are staying [working longer hours], you have to sleep here and go home the following day, because of the fear that you will be attacked. They [thieves] attacked some of my midwives from this hospital and collected their phones from them.
As well as the threat of attack outside of the hospital, the respondents also reported experiencing verbal attacks as well as threats of physical attacks by women, women’s relatives and members of the community when those involved perceive negative outcomes to be the result of negligence by midwives. Dela sheds more light on this issue in the statement below:
“A woman gave birth [while] I was on shift… The baby’s cord, there are times you have it straight and there are times that you have it coiled like macaroni. The lady was delivered [safely] and went home. In the night we heard some young men hitting the door with stones and sticks. We were like what is it? and they were like their sister said she delivered the baby with a rosary and the midwife has taken the rosary home. I could not help it so I started laughing. Me laughing made them even more upset...”
Further, adding to the participants’ stress was the fact that they face infection risks every day due to the lack of or broken-down autoclaves and shortage of personal protective equipment (PPE). According to Elsie, there is also always the fear that they will, “transfer the infection to the woman”. The respondents indicated that due to frequent shortage of supplies such as surgical gloves, masks, gowns etc., they are forced to perform procedures without the right personal protective equipment. Midwives mentioned using examination gloves instead of surgical gloves, using short gloves instead of long gloves or doing mouth-to- mouth to resuscitate babies of unknown infection status because of the absence of ambubags. Elsie gives an example of the risks posed to her and others due to insufficient infection control supplies and equipment:
For some of the procedures, you need an elbow glove, maybe to go into the uterus for examination, but we only have the surgical ones which are short. You end up bringing your hand out and your whole arm is bloody. With this hepatitis, HIV and syphilis, you do it and you run to put your hand in the bleach. You remove it, wash your hands and use sanitizer too, hoping that all will be well.
The respondents also indicated that because there are too few instrument sets for the high number of births that occur, in settings where autoclaves do not always work, midwives must sterilize the equipment with bleach instead of autoclaving so that they can use them again immediately. This exposes the midwives, the women and neonates to infections. Mansah explains why midwives do this below:
We have 10 birthing packs. We can do many deliveries and it will get finished. So when we put it into the bleach for 10 minutes and we wash it and put it in another one for 5 minutes then we use it for them (women and neonates). We cannot say that because we have used up all our instruments women should go to another facility.
What reportedly made participants’ stress and fatigue worse was the perception that management often did not support them when things went wrong, as indicated by Sika: “ The health worker is not their [management] priority, it is the patient [that is their priority]”. The respondents indicated that even though other factors such as the lack of resources especially equipment may be the cause of the outcome, midwives perceive management to always be on the side of the clients. As Mercy, whose views form part of this subcategory label, also said:
Whatever you have, you use it. It stresses me out. I get tired. Like yesterday the baby was dying. You don’t have suction machine. At the end of the day too, they [the baby’s parents and the management] will put the blame on you. I get anxious.
Even in the face of seeming lack of support from management, midwives showed a great sense of responsibility in their work due to a general acknowledgement among the respondents that their care impacts not only on the birthing woman and the neonate but also the woman’s family. Elie captured this view in the following statement: “You are not only dealing with mother [woman]; you are not only dealing with child [newborn]. You are dealing with the whole family. Mother is here but children are in the house waiting for mother, husband is in the house waiting for mother even grandmother is depending on mother so you are dealing with the whole family. Should something go wrong the whole family is affected.
Although this huge sense of responsibility shown by midwives is a source of motivation, it is also indicated by midwives as a source of pressure on them given the barriers that they face at work.
As well as the stressors noted above, other aspects of the job confer additional stress on midwives that give rise to emotional tension. One significant factor mentioned by many of the participants was that, because of infrastructural constraints, midwives do not have equipment and other resources to care for women or newborns who need Intensive Care Unit (ICU) or Neonatal Intensive Care Unit (NICU)-level care. Because of this, midwives have to refer and transfer most emergency cases to other health care sites. Because most of the facilities do not have their own ambulances, delays in getting ambulances or other transport to convey clients to referral facilities, as well as getting referral facilities to accept referred patients, were mentioned by midwives as a major source of stress and anxiety. Margaret, like others, described a typical emergency transfer scenario:
You are now going to put the person into a car and send the person to [another hospital]. When you get to [the other hospital], [they] will say the place is full, you go to [a different hospital], [that hospital] says it is full and you are the midwife in the car. Your heart will be pounding. You will get anxious.
Another cause of midwives’ anxiety is the uncertainty of getting the required drugs and supplies to use when needed. Participants indicated that although the hospital pharmacies stock most of the drugs needed for the care of women and neonates, sometimes there are shortages of emergency drugs and supplies, meaning, the midwives do not always get the emergency drugs they need to treat a woman on time, especially during emergencies because clients’ relatives have to go outside the health facilities to buy the drugs at pharmacies. Expatiating on the issue, Ayele pondered, “So if someone does not provide it [drug] when labour starts what do you do?” As well as birth sets, elbow gloves and ambubags, shortages of supplies such as surgical gloves, sutures, syringes, and transfusion sets for babies was also mentioned by midwives as a source of stress. Kafui summarizes it thus:
There is also mental stress. I think too much. When I want to do something, I get confused. I don’t know what to do. Maybe you come to work you need drugs, you need syringes, and these are not available and you still have to work. You have to go about looking for some, if you don’t get, you manage with what you have.
Unreliable patient history was also mentioned by midwives as a cause of anxiety and stress in the workplace. In some cases, women either intentionally or unintentionally provide inaccurate medical history. Respondents indicated that often, women who had not attended antenatal appointments would suddenly report to the labor ward without midwives knowing their medical or obstetric history. The respondents indicated that the absence of or inaccurate health information was a source of stress and anxiety, because it seriously impacted their bid to provide quality care to women and neonates. Amina explain this further:
It causes anxiety. If a scan has been done and everything is clear, it is easy. But if the person has not done all the tests, no scan, you still have to manage her because if you don’t manage her, she will go back to the house. Anything can happen to her.
It's frustrating; it makes us angry and we get off track: The midwives in the study indicated that they get frustrated when they do not get the required input to help women and neonates. This situation is complicated when delays in the process of care occur as a result of the unavailability of resources such as drugs or equipment, and when infrastructural issues result in low quality care or maternal or neonatal deaths. The hostile environment in which clinical audits are conducted was also mentioned by midwives as a cause of their frustration. The participants also indicated that high levels of frustration sometimes result in anger, and some disclosed that their anger sometimes affects how they interact with women. Asibi, like other participants, spoke frankly about how their working conditions can impact on women in their care:
When you have a lot of people or when you are under pressure, you tend to vent out that frustration on patients and you end up talking to them anyhow. People take it like midwives are rude but sometimes you have to be in this situation to know what it takes. We try.
Predominantly though, the midwives indicated directing their anger towards their managers, immediate supervisors and colleagues from other departments when they perceive that management or other health personnel are not doing enough to help them get the needed resources to help in their work. As Buruwah said, ‘We report to the appropriate quarters but if nothing is done what will you do? At the individual level, I get angry, I report [to my superiors]. Those to whom she reports the problems are, she says, in highly influential positions, but, like others, Buruwah went on to say that even when she gets angry and confronts her superiors, ‘they don’t say anything… We don’t see any effect. Nothing is implemented, so you talk and talk and talk but nothing happens.’
The result of midwives’ frustration and anger, and of them having to constantly demand the things that they need for a long period of time before they are provided, or the failure of management to provide the needed resources, causes them demotivation. According to the participants, the feeling of demotivation is even higher when there are poor maternal or newborn outcomes because they feel that if they’d had the full complement of the equipment needed to provide optimal care, the outcome may have been different. In a quote from Mariama, she described the demotivation she felt as a result of all the challenges she experienced at work, and their impact on her, as ‘going off track’: ‘…it puts me off. Maybe I need something to do my work and it is not there. Maybe for a while I may go off track just because I don’t have what I actually need.’
Finally, compounding participants’ frustration and anger, and sending them ‘off track’ is the ever present spectre of clinical audit which, according to the respondents, is highly emotionally challenging. When a mother or a neonate dies intrapartum, the midwife who provided care must attend a maternal or neonatal audit meeting (known in other contexts as Root Cause Analysis meetings) to explain what happened. As indicated by Asibi, at this meeting, “they make you [feel] useless, as if you don’t know your left from your right.” The midwives indicated that the audit process causes them a great deal of frustration because they cannot always pinpoint exactly what they could have done about the negative outcome due to the unavailability of resources. Akwele further explains the confusion and its impact for midwives in this scenario below, and in her quote, the need for and absence of any emotional support for midwives in this situation is evident:
When you care for somebody and unfortunately the person goes off (dies), the kind of thinking that you the midwife you will go through… It is not only because you will be going for auditing and they will be asking you a lot of questions, but you will ask yourself what went wrong. You were trying to do your possible best and at the end of the day you did not know what went wrong. It has happened to me before. I did not sleep. I sat for the whole night for about 2 days. I was stressed out because I was trying my best but…
It affects my household, my friendships and my community standing
Earlier, some of the impact on midwives’ households, friendships and community standing of the work-related challenges they face were reported: because of the constant heavy workload and their long working hours, the participants indicated that they are always exhausted by the time they get home after their shifts. This, coupled with the demands of the work such as having to work on weekends and on holidays, makes it seem to participants that they are always at work, as the following quote by Akos indicates: “All the time I am here [at the facility]”. This, according to all respondents, makes it difficult for them to spend quality time with their family. Ashokor, went so far as to say that, “Once you are here, you cannot have family life”. This seemed to be particularly difficult for those who have school going children, as Asibi suggests: “They [her children] hardly see me at home”. Participants also indicated that the constant exhaustion as a result of the high workload makes it difficult for them to complete their household chores. Clara indicated in a quote that:
By the time you finish your work and the documentation you will be exhausted. When you go home, you have to pick [up] your children and do other things. I do not get enough time for my husband and children.
The high workload on the labour ward also reportedly affects breastfeeding midwives, who are not able to leave to attend to their infants. Even though there is a policy provision for them to do so, they find it difficult to absent themselves when there are many clients and the remaining midwives are not enough to take care of them. As Margaret said,
The young ones too it is affecting them. As somebody who is having a child, they say they should do exclusive breastfeeding but if you see the ward you can’t leave … because if your colleagues are there and they have cases and you see them going up and down, you cannot say you are going.
As well as the implications of working as a midwife in a resource and support-scarce, context outlined earlier, the respondents indicated that shift work and working on weekends, on holidays and other festive occasions affects their marriages. According to the midwives in this study, because of their work schedule, they are unable to join their spouses for celebrations such as weddings and other events or for trips during Christmas, Easter and other holidays. For some newly trained midwives, having to stay apart from their husbands because of their posting negatively affect their marriages. Elsie went into more detail in the following quote:
Taking transfer from one place to the other, that one, it will take more than six months, at times a year. If your partner is one who cannot hold on to his ego or libido, you will end up going to meet another woman in your matrimonial home, because nobody is there to cook, clean the house or satisfy him emotionally.
Having to work on weekends and public holidays means that midwives are not able to attend most social events, thereby causing their isolation from their larger families and their community. As a result, some are perceived as uninterested or uncommitted community members. Amina explains in the following quote:
To be frank with you, it has been a problem because we Muslims, when you are around [in your community], naming ceremonies, marriage ceremonies, and funerals, you need to be attending, even if not all of them. But because of this work, when something happens I can’t go. So people will say that I don’t care about anybody.”
The midwives that work in rural facilities are also faced with the challenge of not being able to take their annual leave though they often live very far away from their families and friends; this is because of the difficulty of finding relieving midwives to take their place whilst they are on leave. Sika, who is a rural midwife, indicated that she has not been on leave for two years. In explaining the reason why, she indicated: “I feel that when I leave my client will come and I will not be there.”
The barriers to the midwife’s ability to provide quality care also have economic consequences for them personally. Because of their desire to see women and or neonates survive, and also because they do not want shortage-related negative outcomes that they will be held accountable for, midwives reported that they often contribute their own money to buy essential drugs, pay for blood, buy food for women or buy supplies. As indicated by Elsie – “even if it is the last money on you, you are forced to give it out.” Midwives, especially those in rural areas, are also often burdened with the cost of conveying patients to referral facilities. The respondents indicated that although they get significant number of such cases, it is only on a few occasions that their monies are refunded. Though midwives indicated that they have a strong desire to see the women and their neonates survive, most of the time, they feel they have no choice but to use their own money because of the fear of negative outcomes both for those in their care and themselves as indicated by Tani below:
“The midwives who were on duty had to contribute money to go and buy blood to serve as a standby. The midwives didn’t want a situation whereby the woman will go into labour and develop any complications and it will be on them. It is not that they want to give the money. They are forced to because they don’t want it [negative clinical outcome] to happen on their shift or even in the unit.”
The financial implications brought about for midwives because of their work context include the need to buy family support in their absence. The inability of the respondents to complete their household chores due to the fatigue from their demanding workload and also because of their long working hours, that causes them to stay away from their children for long periods, midwives reported having to pay nannies to help them with their domestic chores and other activities in their homes because they find it difficult to do them themselves. As an example, Akua described the monetary impact for her family thus:
“I am not able to see my girl [her daughter] for maybe 2 to 3 weeks. I only call and send money. I pay the teacher 70 cedis every week, and at the end of the month I have to pay 150 [Ghana] cedis to her for taking care of my baby.”