British Journal of Midwifery
Volume 26, Issue 9, 2018, Pages 591-596

The experiences of pregnant migrant women in detention: A qualitative study (Article)

Arshad F.* , Haith-Cooper M. , Palloti P.
  • a Bradford Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, United Kingdom
  • b University of Bradford, United Kingdom
  • c University of Nottingham, United Kingdom

Abstract

Background Pregnant migrant women held in detention centres in the UK can be particularly vulnerable. They may have poor physical and mental health, which is exacerbated by their incarceration, and are at a disproportionally increased risk of maternal and perinatal mortality. Unpublished studies have found that pregnant migrant women have poor experiences in detention. Aim To explore pregnant migrant women's experiences of living in detention. Method Four migrant women who had been held in detention while pregnant and two volunteer health professionals were interviewed. Findings Results suggest that migrant women have very poor experiences in detention. Four key themes emerged: 'challenges to accessing UK healthcare', 'exacerbation of mental health conditions, 'feeling hungry' and 'lack of privacy'. Conclusion These findings could be used to review maternity care in detention and ensure that detention staff understand the experiences of detained pregnant women so that the needs of this vulnerable group can be met. © 2018 MA Healthcare Ltd.

Author Keywords

Pregnant Phenomenology Vulnerable migrant Detention maternity

Index Keywords

[No Keywords available]

Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85053113405&doi=10.12968%2fbjom.2018.26.9.591&partnerID=40&md5=088598e4beef72e99ad61d460dbcb3a3

DOI: 10.12968/bjom.2018.26.9.591
ISSN: 09694900
Original Language: English