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<title>RELATIONAL COMMUNICATION BEHAVIOUR IN GROUP PRENATAL CARE CLINICS IN IBADAN, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1817</link>
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<dc:date>2026-04-07T00:29:55Z</dc:date>
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<title>RELATIONAL COMMUNICATION BEHAVIOUR IN GROUP PRENATAL CARE CLINICS IN IBADAN, NIGERIA</title>
<link>http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/1818</link>
<description>RELATIONAL COMMUNICATION BEHAVIOUR IN GROUP PRENATAL CARE CLINICS IN IBADAN, NIGERIA
AJALA, Bukola Christiana
Relational communication behaviour in group prenatal care explores the relational&#13;
interaction between caregivers and pregnant women. Existing studies on group&#13;
prenatal care in Nigeria have focused on evolving antenatal practices, with little&#13;
attention paid to the implication of systemic issues for relational communication in the&#13;
Nigeria group care programme. Therefore, this study was designed to investigate the&#13;
dynamics of systemic issues in the prenatal care clinics in Ibadan, Nigeria. This was&#13;
with a view to determining the influence of systemic issues on how pregnant women,&#13;
nursing mothers and care providers perceived the care quality.&#13;
Attribution, Systems and Communication Accommodation theories were used as the&#13;
framework, while the mixed methods design was employed. Eight group prenatal&#13;
clinics were purposively selected (Jericho Nursing Home, Jericho Specialist, Ring&#13;
Road Specialist, Maternal and Child Health Apata, Our Lady of Apostles Oluyoro, St.&#13;
Peters Aremo, Moniya General and Adeoyo Teaching Hospitals). Group prenatal care&#13;
questionnaire was administered to 355 available pregnant women from June to&#13;
October, 2018 across the selected hospitals. In-depth interviews were conducted with&#13;
eight group care nurses, while four sessions of focus group discussion with eight&#13;
respondents per group, were held across four randomly selected hospitals. Through a&#13;
20-item observational checklist, pregnant women and nurses’ verbal and non-verbal&#13;
behaviours were observed for five months across the sampled hospitals. Quantitative&#13;
data were analysed using ANOVA at 0.05 level of significance, while qualitative data&#13;
were content-analysed.&#13;
Pregnant women at Adeoyo Hospital reported a statistically significant difference&#13;
[F(3;256) =7.48] in nurses’ rapport, listening [F(3;256)=8.84], informing [F(3;256)=10.38]&#13;
and feedback skills F(3;254)=2.87]. Conversely, there was no significant difference in&#13;
nurses’ confirming/disconfirming behaviours at Adeoyo. The Chief Medical Director&#13;
(CMD) of St. Peters Hospital Aremo noted the hospital’ s location within a cemetery&#13;
made pregnant women avoid it. Nursing mothers at St. Peters Aremo disagreed with&#13;
the CMD’ s claims, stressing that their manageable group size contributed to the good&#13;
relational care. The absence of a feedback checking mechanism in seven of the eight&#13;
hospitals explains why interviewed caregivers could not determine how feedback&#13;
modified the conduct of prenatal care. Differences in the administration of prenatal&#13;
care across the hospitals were based on group size, care provider and situational&#13;
factors. Rapport building, listening, confirming (acknowledgement and supportive&#13;
responses), disconfirming (side-talk, conversational dominance and one-sided&#13;
laughter) and feedback skills were the index of relational communication behaviours.&#13;
The unmanageable sizes of groups of pregnant women at three hospitals accounted for&#13;
their inattentiveness and side talk. Providers’ conversational dominance was,&#13;
however, common across the hospitals. Nursing mothers at two of the hospitals&#13;
attested to the disconfirming behaviours of nurses.&#13;
Prevalent systemic issues weakened existing relational communication between care&#13;
receivers and the nurses in prenatal care clinics in Ibadan, Nigeria.
</description>
<dc:date>2022-02-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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