Literature DB >> 17070742

The influence of the birthplace and models of care on midwifery practice for the management of women in labour.

Lesa M Freeman1, Vivienne Adair, Helen Timperley, Sandra H West.   

Abstract

This paper will examine how the settings in which midwives practice (the birthplace) and models of care affect midwives' decision making during the management of labour. One-hundred-and-four independent, team and hospital based midwives and 100 low obstetric risk nulliparous women to whom labour care was provided were surveyed. These midwives and women resided in the Auckland metropolitan area of New Zealand. The majority of midwives who participated worked in models of care which provided women with continuity of carer and care, however, this was not found to influence the way the midwives provided labour care. Instead, practice was found to be relatively homogenous regardless of whether the midwives worked in independent, team, or hospital-based practice. The birthplace setting in which the labour care took place did influence midwifery practice. The majority of midwives provided labour care in large obstetric hospitals and identified practices dominated by the medical model of care. Practice was described as being influenced by intervention and the need for technology, however, this did not prevent the majority of women from perceiving they were actively involved in the decision making process and that they worked in partnership with their midwives. Closer examination of the midwives' decision making processes whilst providing the labour care revealed that the midwives' individual decisions were influenced by the needs of the women rather than the hospital protocols. What became evident was that the midwives in this study had adopted a humanistic approach to care whereby technology was used alongside relationship-centred care.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17070742     DOI: 10.1016/j.wombi.2006.10.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Women Birth        ISSN: 1871-5192            Impact factor:   3.172


  2 in total

1.  Birth Care Providers' Experiences and Practices in a Brazilian Alongside Midwifery Unit: An Ethnographic Study.

Authors:  Michelly Christiny M Nunes; Luciana M Reberte Gouveia; Jessica Reis-Queiroz; Luiza A K Hoga
Journal:  Glob Qual Nurs Res       Date:  2016-09-28

2.  Reproducing normative femininity: Women's evaluations of their birth experiences analysed by means of word frequency and thematic analysis.

Authors:  Agneta Westergren; Kerstin Edin; Monica Christianson
Journal:  BMC Pregnancy Childbirth       Date:  2021-04-14       Impact factor: 3.007

  2 in total

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