Philip Baba Adongo
University of Ghana
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Featured researches published by Philip Baba Adongo.
Social Science & Medicine | 1997
Philip Baba Adongo; James F. Phillips; Beverly Kajihara; Clara K. Fayorsey; Cornelius Debpuur; Fred Binka
This study presents a focus group investigation of reasons why women in a rural, Sahelian community are reluctant to adopt family planning even when convenient services are made freely available. First, women opting to practice contraception must do so at considerable risk of social ostracism or familial conflict. Implementing individual preference is something that must be done without the support of others. Second, few women view personal decisions about contraceptives as theirs to make. Women and children are the property of the corporate family-kin and community militate against reproductive control. Third, although children are highly valued for a variety of economic, social, and cultural reasons, mortality risks remain extremely high. Low fertility imposes the unacceptable risk that a woman will have no surviving children at the end of her reproductive life. Taken together, these findings attest to the inadequacy of service strategies focused on the contribution of distribution, individual agency, or personal choice. Outreach should also build a sense of community legitimacy for the program, collective health action, and traditional leadership support for family planning behavior.
Midwifery | 2014
Cheryl A. Moyer; Philip Baba Adongo; Raymond Aborigo; Abraham Hodgson; Cyril Engmann
OBJECTIVE to explore community and health-care provider attitudes towards maltreatment during delivery in rural northern Ghana, and compare findings against The White Ribbon Alliances seven fundamental rights of childbearing women. DESIGN a cross-sectional qualitative study using in-depth interviews and focus groups. SETTING the Kassena-Nankana District of rural northern Ghana between July and October 2010. PARTICIPANTS 128 community members, including mothers with newborn infants, grandmothers, household heads, compound heads, traditional healers, traditional birth attendants, and community leaders, as well as 13 formally trained health-care providers. MEASUREMENTS AND FINDINGS 7 focus groups and 43 individual interviews were conducted with community members, and 13 individual interviews were conducted with health-care providers. All interviews were transcribed verbatim and entered into NVivo 9.0 for analysis. Despite the majority of respondents reporting positive experiences, unprompted, maltreatment was brought up in 6 of 7 community focus groups, 14 of 43 community interviews, and 8 of 13 interviews with health-care providers. Respondents reported physical abuse, verbal abuse, neglect, and discrimination. One additional category of maltreatment identified was denial of traditional practices. KEY CONCLUSIONS maltreatment was spontaneously described by all types of interview respondents in this community, suggesting that the problem is not uncommon and may dissuade some women from seeking facility delivery. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE provider outreach in rural northern Ghana is necessary to address and correct the problem, ensuring that all women who arrive at a facility receive timely, professional, non-judgmental, high-quality delivery care.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2006
Frank Baiden; Abraham Hodgson; Martin Adjuik; Philip Baba Adongo; B. Ayaga; Fred Binka
Objectives To describe the trend and causes of neonatal deaths in a rural district in northern Ghana.
Studies in Family Planning | 1995
Alex Nazzar; Philip Baba Adongo; Fred Binka; James F. Phillips; Cornelius Debpuur
This article describes the first six months of the strategic planning process to develop a culturally appropriate community health and family planning program for a traditional community in a district of northern Ghana, served by the Navrongo Health Research Centre. To explain the context within which fertility decisions are made, this article describes the districts severe ecological, social, economic, and health constraints to family planning. It discusses related programmatic obstacles and presents the strategies developed to respond to them. A system of care has been developed that is closely coordinated with traditional leaders and communication networks. Management systems support outreach workers by emphasizing the importance of peer leadership, supervisory support, and community liaison in the implementation of village-based services. A large-scale experiment will be fielded to test the demographic impact of this approach.
International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2008
Alessandra N. Bazzano; Betty Kirkwood; Charlotte Tawiah-Agyemang; Seth Owusu-Agyei; Philip Baba Adongo
To examine the social costs to women of skilled attendance at birth in rural Ghana.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2008
Alessandra N. Bazzano; Betty Kirkwood; Charlotte Tawiah-Agyemang; Seth Owusu-Agyei; Philip Baba Adongo
Objectives To assess newborn care‐seeking practices in a rural area of Ghana where most births take place at home in order to inform potential strategies for reducing newborn mortality.
Studies in Family Planning | 1998
Philip Baba Adongo; James F. Phillips; Fred Binka
This article presents findings from a study of the influence of traditional religion on reproductive preferences of Kassena-Nankana lineage heads in northern Ghana. Seven reproductive preference questions were administered to nine lineage heads who are primary practitioners of the cult of soothsaying. With the assistance of soothsayers, interviews were repeated in conjunction with the invocation of religious rites in order to determine the views of ancestral spirits on the seven questions. Pairs of lineage head and ancestral interviews are compared to determine the role of traditional religion in shaping male reproductive preferences. Interview pairs reflect a shared preference for sons, large compounds, and a growing lineage. Findings nonetheless show that some ancestral spirits want small families, some even wanting fewer children than corresponding lineage heads. Spiritual consultations are nondogmatic and open to external ideas and influences, suggesting that family planning introduction will not encounter systematic religious opposition among the Kassena-Nankana.
Maternal and Child Health Journal | 2014
Cheryl A. Moyer; Philip Baba Adongo; Raymond Aborigo; Abraham Hodgson; Cyril Engmann; Raymond DeVries
To explore the impact of social factors on place of delivery in northern Ghana. We conducted 72 in-depth interviews and 18 focus group discussions in the Upper East Region of northern Ghana among women with newborns, grandmothers, household heads, compound heads, community leaders, traditional birth attendants, traditional healers, and formally trained healthcare providers. We audiotaped, transcribed, and analyzed interactions using NVivo 9.0. Social norms appear to be shifting in favor of facility delivery, and several respondents indicated that facility delivery confers prestige. Community members disagreed about whether women needed permission from their husbands, mother-in-laws, or compound heads to deliver in a facility, but all agreed that women rely upon their social networks for the economic and logistical support to get to a facility. Socioeconomic status also plays an important role alone and as a mediator of other social factors. Several “meta themes” permeate the data: (1) This region of Ghana is undergoing a pronounced transition from traditional to contemporary birth-related practices; (2) Power hierarchies within the community are extremely important factors in women’s delivery experiences (“someone must give the order”); and (3) This community shares a widespread sense of responsibility for healthy birth outcomes for both mothers and their babies. Social factors influence women’s delivery experiences in rural northern Ghana, and future research and programmatic efforts need to include community members such as husbands, mother-in-laws, compound heads, soothsayers, and traditional healers if they are to be maximally effective in improving women’s birth outcomes.
Tropical Medicine & International Health | 2011
Cyril Engmann; Paul Walega; Raymond Aborigo; Philip Baba Adongo; Cheryl A. Moyer; Layla Lavasani; John E. Williams; Carl Bose; Fred Binka; Abraham Hodgson
Objective To calculate perinatal mortality (stillbirth and early neonatal death: END) rates in the Upper East region of Ghana and characterize community‐based stillbirths and END in terms of timing, cause of death, and maternal and infant risk factors.
African Journal of Reproductive Health | 2003
Pierre Ngom; Cornelius Debpuur; Patricia Akweongo; Philip Baba Adongo; Fred Binka
Among the Kassena-Nankana of northern Ghana, compound heads and husbands impede womens prompt access to modern health care. This paper shows that such gate-keeping systems have a negative effect on child survival. To investigate the social construction of compound-based gate-keeping systems, the authors relied on a series of qualitative interviews conducted in the Kassena-Nankana district These data reveal that whilst compound heads are gate-keepers for spiritual reasons, husbands play such role for economic reasons. But more important, this article presents health interventions that are on trial in Navrongo (northen Ghana) and how they undermine such gate-keeping systems.