ABSTRACT E-r. year at least half a million women die from pregnancy related causes of which., 99% come from developing countries. The root cause of this situation IS due to the fact that the decision-making power women regarding the right to decide on how many children to have and when (whether) to have them, the use of contraceptives and the right to refuse sex with their husbands have been circumcised by socio-economic conditions within which they live. The study data were based on primary and secondary sources from four settlements in the Ga District - Kokrobite, Kweman, Dome and Amasarnan. Field interviews, questionnaires, focus group discussions and personal observation were used to collect the primary data while the secondary data were derived from the hospitals, MlCH care clinics and other institutions such as the National Council on Women and Development(NCWD), Federation of Women Lawyers(FIDA), the 31" December Women's Movement and the District Assemblies. In the Ga (the study area), women's sexual and reproductive heahh is not dependent exclusively on their own behaviours, but also. situations and behaviours of others. Thus, ahhough decisions on some issues in the household such as breast-feeding and abstinence may be arrived at jointly, women will always respond to men's sexual demands irrespective ofthe implications because ofthe fear ofreaction from their husbands. Also, as women have relatively low economic resources, they still rely on their husbands for economic support and so their control over their sexuality and reproduction is circumscnbed by that fuet. Thus, despite the fuct that the women in the study area were geoerally aware of their reproductive rights they were unable to exercise these rights because oftheir low status in the society. The socio-economic status of women such as level of education of hoth men and women and the type of residence were the main fuetors that have influenced health-seeking behaviour of women. For instance, the antenatal health seeking behaviour of women in Ga district was influenced by fuetors such as the educational level of the woman, distance to health centre, parity, type of marriage( polygynous or monogamous) and hll",,"~'s educational attainment. Moreover. the decision ofthe women to choose a place ofdelivery depends greatly on her place ofresidence, level of education, her husband and imllffliate IiuniIy members. AD these fuetors directly or indirectly affect women's status ";'Jd decision-making in the ~me and society at large. The relationship between women's rights and maternal health IS therefure not direct but is mediated by a set soocioeconomic. cultural and political mechanisms.
MPRAH, W (2021). MATERNAL HEALTH AND WOMEN'S RIGHTS IN THE GA DlSTRlCT. Afribary. Retrieved from https://track.afribary.com/works/maternal-health-and-women-s-rights-in-the-ga-dlstrlct
MPRAH, WISDOM "MATERNAL HEALTH AND WOMEN'S RIGHTS IN THE GA DlSTRlCT" Afribary. Afribary, 09 Mar. 2021, https://track.afribary.com/works/maternal-health-and-women-s-rights-in-the-ga-dlstrlct. Accessed 26 Dec. 2024.
MPRAH, WISDOM . "MATERNAL HEALTH AND WOMEN'S RIGHTS IN THE GA DlSTRlCT". Afribary, Afribary, 09 Mar. 2021. Web. 26 Dec. 2024. < https://track.afribary.com/works/maternal-health-and-women-s-rights-in-the-ga-dlstrlct >.
MPRAH, WISDOM . "MATERNAL HEALTH AND WOMEN'S RIGHTS IN THE GA DlSTRlCT" Afribary (2021). Accessed December 26, 2024. https://track.afribary.com/works/maternal-health-and-women-s-rights-in-the-ga-dlstrlct