Literature DB >> 15967551

A critical ethnographic study of encounters between midwives and breast-feeding women in postnatal wards in England.

Fiona Dykes1.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To explore the nature of interactions between midwives and breast-feeding women within postnatal wards.
DESIGN: A critical ethnographic study using participant observation and focused interviews.
SETTING: Two maternity units in Northern England, UK. PARTICIPANTS: 61 postnatal women and 39 midwives.
FINDINGS: The interactions between midwives and women were encompassed by the global theme of 'taking time and touching base'. However, most encounters were characterised by an absence of 'taking time' or 'touching base'. This related to midwives' experiences of temporal pressure and inability to establish relationality with women due to their working patterns. The global theme was underpinned by five organising themes: 'communicating temporal pressure'; 'routines and procedures'; 'disconnected encounters'; 'managing breast feeding'; and 'rationing information'. KEY
CONCLUSIONS: The organisational culture within the postnatal wards contributed to midwives experiencing profound temporal pressures and an inability to establish relationality with women. Within this context, the needs of breast-feeding women for emotional, esteem, informational and practical support were largely unmet. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Transformative action is required to dramatically reorganise the provision of hospital-based, postnatal ward midwifery care in parts of the UK. This should include a re-conceptualisation of caring time, with recognition that midwives need sufficient time in order to give time to others. This, in turn, requires recognition that caring time is cyclical and rhythmical, allowing for relationality, sociability, mutuality and reciprocity. The midwifery staffing structure in postnatal wards needs to be reviewed, as it is unacceptable to midwives and service users for staff to be rapidly relocated according to other demands within the institution. Most radically, it is argued that now is the time to reconsider the suitability of the hospital as the place and space within which women commence their breast-feeding journey.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2005        PMID: 15967551     DOI: 10.1016/j.midw.2004.12.006

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Midwifery        ISSN: 0266-6138            Impact factor:   2.372


  26 in total

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3.  The education of health practitioners supporting breastfeeding women: time for critical reflection.

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4.  Maternal accounts of their breast-feeding intent and early challenges after caesarean childbirth.

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5.  Shame if you do--shame if you don't: women's experiences of infant feeding.

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6.  Women's sense of coherence related to their infant feeding experiences.

Authors:  Gill Thomson; Fiona Dykes
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7.  A statewide review of postnatal care in private hospitals in Victoria, Australia.

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8.  A qualitative study of the experiences and expectations of women receiving in-patient postnatal care in one English maternity unit.

Authors:  Sarah Beake; Val Rose; Debra Bick; Annette Weavers; Julie Wray
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9.  Making use of expertise: a qualitative analysis of the experience of breastfeeding support for first-time mothers.

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Journal:  Matern Child Nutr       Date:  2013-04-05       Impact factor: 3.092

10.  Pressure and judgement within a dichotomous landscape of infant feeding: a grounded theory study to explore why breastfeeding women do not access peer support provision.

Authors:  Louise Hunt; Gill Thomson
Journal:  Matern Child Nutr       Date:  2016-04-01       Impact factor: 3.092

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