Do black women's lives matter? A study of the hidden impact of the barriers to access maternal healthcare for migrant women in South Africa

被引:1
|
作者
Jaiswal, Abha [1 ]
Carrasco, Lorena Nunez [2 ]
Arrow, Jairo
机构
[1] City Coll New York CUNY, Bronx Community Coll BCC, New York, NY USA
[2] Univ Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa
关键词
migrant women; maternal mortality; South Africa; xenophobia; African migrant; MIGRATION; ABUSE; HIV;
D O I
10.3389/fsoc.2024.983148
中图分类号
C91 [社会学];
学科分类号
030301 ; 1204 ;
摘要
Background Studies on the barriers migrant women face when trying to access healthcare services in South Africa have emphasized economic factors, fear of deportation, lack of documentation, language barriers, xenophobia, and discrimination in society and in healthcare institutions as factors explaining migrants' reluctance to seek healthcare. Our study aims to visualize some of the outcome effects of these barriers by analyzing data on maternal death and comparing the local population and black African migrant women from the South African Development Countries (SADC) living in South Africa. The heightened maternal mortality of black migrant women in South Africa can be associated with the hidden costs of barriers migrants face, including xenophobic attitudes experienced at public healthcare institutions.Methods Our analysis is based on data on reported causes of death (COD) from the South African Department of Home Affairs (DHA). Statistics South Africa (Stats SA) processed the data further and coded the cause of death (COD) according to the WHO classification of disease, ICD10. The dataset is available on the StatsSA website (http://nesstar.statssa.gov.za:8282/webview/) for research and statistical purposes. The entire dataset consists of over 10 million records and about 50 variables of registered deaths that occurred in the country between 1997 and 2018. For our analysis, we have used data from 2002 to 2015, the years for which information on citizenship is reliably included on the death certificate. Corresponding benchmark data, in which nationality is recorded, exists only for a 10% sample from the population and housing census of 2011. Mid-year population estimates (MYPE) also exist but are not disaggregated by nationality. For this reason, certain estimates of death proportions by nationality will be relative and will not correspond to crude death rates.Results The total number of female deaths recorded from the years 2002 to 2015 in the country was 3740.761. Of these, 99.09% (n = 3,707,003) were deaths of South Africans and 0.91% (n = 33,758) were deaths of SADC women citizens. For maternal mortality, we considered the total number of deaths recorded for women between the ages of 15 and 49 years of age and were 1,530,495 deaths. Of these, deaths due to pregnancy-related causes contributed to approximately 1% of deaths. South African women contributed to 17,228 maternal deaths and SADC women to 467 maternal deaths during the period under study. The odds ratio for this comparison was 2.02. In other words, our findings show the odds of a black migrant woman from a SADC country dying of a maternal death were more than twice that of a South African woman. This result is statistically significant as this odds ratio, 2.02, falls within the 95% confidence interval (1.82-2.22).Conclusion The study is the first to examine and compare maternal death among two groups of women, women from SADC countries and South Africa, based on Stats SA data available for the years 2002-2015. This analysis allows for a better understanding of the differential impact that social determinants of health have on mortality among black migrant women in South Africa and considers access to healthcare as a determinant of health. As we examined maternal death, we inferred that the heightened mortality among black migrant women in South Africa was associated with various determinants of health, such as xenophobic attitudes of healthcare workers toward foreigners during the study period. The negative attitudes of healthcare workers toward migrants have been reported in the literature and the media. Yet, until now, its long-term impact on the health of the foreign population has not been gaged. While a direct association between the heightened death of migrant populations and xenophobia cannot be established in this study, we hope to offer evidence that supports the need to focus on the heightened vulnerability of black migrant women in South Africa. As we argued here, the heightened maternal mortality among migrant women can be considered hidden barriers in which health inequality and the pervasive effects of xenophobia perpetuate the health disparity of SADC migrants in South Africa.
引用
收藏
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Women's Land Rights and Maternal Healthcare in Southwestern Uganda: Exploring the Implications of Women's Decision-Making Regarding Sale and Use of Land on Access to Maternal Healthcare
    Nyakato, Viola N.
    Rwabukwali, Charles
    Kools, Susan
    AFRICAN JOURNAL OF REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH, 2020, 24 (01): : 62 - 80
  • [32] Impact of South Africa's April 2022 floods on women and men's lives and gender relations in low-income communities: A qualitative study
    Jewkes, R.
    Gibbs, A.
    Mkhwanazi, S.
    Zembe, A.
    Khoza, Z.
    Mnandi, N.
    Washington, L.
    Khaula, S.
    Gigaba, S.
    Nothling, J.
    Abrahams, N.
    Willan, S.
    SSM-MENTAL HEALTH, 2023, 4
  • [33] A qualitative study on the role of alcohol in the lives of a group of sexual minority women in South Africa
    Padmanabhanunni, Anita
    Mckenzie, Sharon
    SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY, 2025,
  • [34] Centering Black Women's Voices: Illuminating Systemic Racism in Maternal Healthcare Experiences
    Brailey, Carla
    Slatton, Brittany C.
    SOCIETIES, 2024, 14 (05):
  • [35] The shifting image of black women's hair in Tshwane (Pretoria), South Africa
    Alubafi, Mathias Fubah
    Ramphalile, Molemo
    Rankoana, Agnes Sejabaledi
    COGENT SOCIAL SCIENCES, 2018, 4 (01):
  • [36] Motherlands: Black women's writing from Africa, the Caribbean and South Asia
    Ganguly, K
    RESEARCH IN AFRICAN LITERATURES, 1998, 29 (04) : 187 - 190
  • [37] Exploring the equity impact of a maternal and newborn health intervention: a qualitative study of participatory women’s groups in rural South Asia and Africa
    Joanna Morrison
    David Osrin
    Glyn Alcock
    Kishwar Azad
    Jyoti Bamjan
    Bharat Budhathoki
    Abdul Kuddus
    Mahfuza Akter Mala
    Dharma Manandhar
    Albert Nkhata
    Shrijana Pathak
    Tambosi Phiri
    Shibanand Rath
    Prasanta Tripathy
    Anthony Costello
    Tanja A. J. Houweling
    International Journal for Equity in Health, 18
  • [38] Exploring the equity impact of a maternal and newborn health intervention: a qualitative study of participatory women's groups in rural South Asia and Africa
    Morrison, Joanna
    Osrin, David
    Alcock, Glyn
    Azad, Kishwar
    Bamjan, Jyoti
    Budhathoki, Bharat
    Kuddus, Abdul
    Mala, Mahfuza Akter
    Manandhar, Dharma
    Nkhata, Albert
    Pathak, Shrijana
    Phiri, Tambosi
    Rath, Shibanand
    Tripathy, Prasanta
    Costello, Anthony
    Houweling, Tanja A. J.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL FOR EQUITY IN HEALTH, 2019, 18 (1)
  • [39] The failure of United States maternal mortality reporting and its impact on women's lives
    MacDorman, Marian F.
    Declercq, Eugene
    BIRTH-ISSUES IN PERINATAL CARE, 2018, 45 (02): : 105 - 108
  • [40] The Failure of United States Maternal Mortality Reporting and Its Impact on Women's Lives
    不详
    OBSTETRICAL & GYNECOLOGICAL SURVEY, 2018, 73 (11) : 615 - 616