Families' Perception of Cognitive and Emotional Support From Healthcare Professionals Across the Maternal and Newborn Care Continuum
Christina Schuler, George Edward Ntow, Wisdom Kudzo Axame, Emmanuel Bansah, Barbara Preusse‐Bleuler, Riccardo E. Pfister, Agbozo Faith

TL;DR
This study shows that families in Ghana feel healthcare professionals provide inadequate emotional and cognitive support during maternal and newborn care, especially for high-risk pregnancies and sick newborns.
Contribution
The study reveals that emotional support is significantly lower than cognitive support and highlights the need for improved communication and inclusion of all family members in care.
Findings
Families rated overall support from healthcare professionals as deficient, with emotional support lower than cognitive support.
Older family members and males felt excluded from care decisions and information.
Families requested integration of alternative medicine and spirituality into care plans.
Abstract
During the perinatal period, women and newborns require high‐quality supportive care. While cognitive and emotional care support is central to family systems care, few quantitative studies have explored this in sub‐Saharan Africa. We investigated families' perspectives on the support provided by healthcare professionals during maternal and newborn care, examining the impact of family demographics on their perceived support and identifying unmet support needs. This cross‐sectional survey was conducted in the Hohoe Municipality, Ghana. Participants included high‐risk pregnant, birthing and postnatal women, mothers with small/sick newborns and their family members. Family support was assessed using the Icelandic Family Perceived Support Questionnaire (5‐point Likert; scores: cognitive 5–25, emotional 9–45, overall 14–70). Descriptive and inferential statistics were conducted with STATA.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInfant Development and Preterm Care · Global Maternal and Child Health · Maternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and Postpartum
