| Literature DB >> 21631910 |
Austyn Snowden1, Colin Martin, Julie Jomeen, Caroline Hollins Martin.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This paper reports original research on choice and control in childbirth. Eight women were interviewed as part of a wider investigation into locus of control in women with pre-labour rupture of membranes at term (PROM).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21631910 PMCID: PMC3123250 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2393-11-40
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Literature search, inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Search Criteria | Returns | |
|---|---|---|
| CINAHL | In abstract: (Labour OR labour OR childbirth) AND pregnan* AND narrative AND choice AND control | 41 articles |
| Pubmed | (Labour OR labour OR childbirth) AND pregnan* AND narrative AND choice AND control | 55 articles |
| ProQuest | (Labour OR labour OR childbirth) AND pregnan* AND narrative | 20 articles |
A further source of information was to follow leads from the reference lists of all the above literature to ensure as few as possible pertinent sources of information were missed.
Papers were included for review if they entailed narrative or description reported first hand, related to issues of choice in childbirth, and grounded in experience of that process.
Papers were included if they were methodologically coherent. This judgement was made based on Cohen and Crabtree's quality criteria (18) for qualitative research. All papers included were adjudged to be ethical, important, clearly articulated and used appropriate, rigorous methods.
Papers were excluded if they did not contain primary qualitative data from original research, if they did not meet the quality criteria, or if they were reported in language other than English.
Literature summary
| Author(s) | Sample | Methodology |
|---|---|---|
| Munro et al, 2009 [ | 17 primiparous women in British Columbia, | Semi structured interviews: exploratory qualitative study |
| Fenwick et al, 2008[ | 14 women who had requested a caesarean section in their first pregnancy in Australia | Telephone interviews: exploratory descriptive approach: |
| Kennedy et al, 2009[ | 234 women during the postpartum period in US | Qualitative interviews: narrative and thematic analysis |
| McCourt &Pearce, 2000 [ | 20 UK women receiving different models of maternity care | Semi-structured narrative interviews at 6 months postnatal |
| Houvouras, 2006[ | 15 postpartum women in US | Active and feminist interviews: Constructivist grounded theory |
| Parry, 2006 [ | Personal reflection and 8 women in Canada, 1 in US (7 pregnant, 2 postpartum) | Personal ethnography and interviews: narrative presentation |
| Crossley, 2007[ | Single case study in UK | Personal reflection, unfolding narrative: exploratory qualitative design |
| Shaw, 2007 [ | Critical response to Crossley (2007) | Personal reflection grounded in doctoral thesis data |
| Stokhill, 2007 [ | Critical response to Crossley (2007) | Personal reflection grounded in autoethnography |
| Namey & Lyerly, 2010 [ | 72 US women who as part of a larger study had spontaneously mentioned control | Semi structured interviews: Concept analysis |
| Hall & Holloway, 1998[ | 9 UK women who chose to give birth in water | In depth interviews analysed using grounded theory |
| Walker. 2005 [ | 32 UK women who had delivered in a midwife led care unit | In depth focused interviews, analysed using grounded theory |
| Viisainen, 2001[ | 21 women and 12 partners of women who had planned a home birth in Finland | Semi structured interviews, narrative and thematic analysis |
| Viisainen, 2000 [ | 21 women and 12 partners of women who had planned a home birth in Finland | Semi structured interviews, narrative and thematic analysis |
| Morison et al, 1998[ | 10 couples who had a home birth in Australia | Interviews and homebirth video observation: phenomenological approach |
| Morison et al, 1999[ | ||
| Kontoyannis &Katsetos, 2008[ | 12 women who had experienced planned home birth in Greece. | Semi structured interviews: phenomenology |
| Kennedy &Shannon, 2004 [ | Purposive sample of 14 midwives in US | Interview data: Narrative analysis |
| Lynn Clark et al, 2003[ | Childbearing women in US, Scandinavia, Middle East, China and Tonga (n = 100) | Secondary analysis of narrative transcripts |
| Lundgren & Dahlberg, 1998[ | Nine women, four primiparous and five multiparous who were two to four days post delivery. | Interview data: Narrative analysis with phenomenological interpretation of meaning |
| Halldorsdottir & Karlsdottir, 1996[ | 14 postnatal women in Iceland | Interactive interviews: Phenomenology |
| Maher, 2008[ | 10 postnatal women between 3 and 12 months in Australia | Semi-structured interviews: Narrative based approach |
| McCallum & Reis, 2005[ | 26 women admitted for childbirth in Brazil | Participant observation and semi structured interviews: ethnographic and narrative analysis |
| Liamputtong, 2009 [ | 15 middle class mothers, 15 lower class mothers in Thailand | Semi structured interviews: phenomenological thematic analysis |
Figure 1Locus of control: Thematic analysis of factors impacting on choice in childbirth.
Perceiving risk
| Examples from the interviews | Examples from the literature |
|---|---|
| When you're not living far from the hospital, you know you can always go in, it's only a short car ride.(Interview 3) | [In hospital] the safety time limit from labour ward to operating theatre is 10 minutes. I live so close I could make it (Viisainen 2000, p801) |
| I knew I wasn't that far away from the hospital um(p..). I weren't panicky as such, we talked about it and he you know said 'it's totally up to you, if you want to go home, we'll go home, as soon as you want to go back we'll just get in the car and go back.(Interview 1) | Mia didn't tell them anything [about the plan, during ultrasound]. We thought that if they had known about our home birth plan we could not be sure they would give us honest information, they would start finding things. [We had this before. I]f you want something alternative they [health staff] start finding things. (Viisainen 2000, p807) |
| I want to know that I'm in a place where everything's on hand, if anything happens whatsoever, everything's there you know...[i]f the contractions had come on really really fast at home and that had happened that would have panicked me. (Interview 8) | There is risk in everything you do and to me, having a caesarean section presented me with less risk than the vaginal. I felt I was bypassing the risk and so did my doctor' (Fenwick et al. 2008, p398) |
| With Emily, I didn't start in labour at all and I expected to either start in labour or be induced but I did expect to be kept in. I thought that that normal ... I think I would have preferred to stay in if it was my first one I think I would have felt a bit more worried.(Interview 3) | ... the great danger (of intervention) is at the hospital. The immense danger comes when you start interfering with something as natural as giving birth.' (Nepheli) (Kontoyannis & Katsetos 2008, p46) |
| Giving birth in hospital is like making love in a railway station. (Viisainen 2001, p1114) |
Reflecting on Experience
| Interviews | literature |
|---|---|
| I'd definitely choose to come in [to hospital] when I was ready.... I mean most first time parents I think probably want to stay in where as people that have been there before probably want to go home. (Interview 5) | The amount of choice and control I felt I had in each of these births varied, and not as might be expected in the form of a positive correlation between experience and confidence; my fourth birth was in many respects as 'taken over' and managed as the first. (Stockill 2007, p574) |
| I'd probably come home [next time], because you know what's going on then don't you. People feel more comfortable in their own homes. I think that's the difference when it's your first one and you're young, you don't know what's coming erm, probably with your second one you'd be alright to go home, you'd know when to say 'I think now I need to go back for the pain' or whatever. Next time I would come home.(Interview 4) | Maybe I was more courageous with the fourth because the previous |
| There's a lot of pressure especially when it's your second baby I think you don't realise how in a sense it's easier to have a first baby, than it is for subsequent babies because you're torn between wanting to do your best for the baby you're having and the one that's left at home its quite a difficult scenario isn't it?(Interview 5) | You see things totally different afterwards, you have another way of understanding, you accept things differently, you become stronger, you can cope with things better than before, before petty details could ruin life, and now you just shake it off your shoulders, you don't become another personality, but you mature and become a stronger personality, when you've had a baby and have gone through that pain. I think that is the purpose of it, what the meaning of life is. I think it is to protect our children, to be stronger, a way of managing everyday life and become stronger, and that it is a life from your own flesh and blood and that too helps you to go through the delivery. (Interview 2) (Lundgren & Dahlberg, 1998) |
| ...we were talking for some time but because I had bad experience with N I was scared (McCourt and Pearce 2000, p150) |
Being prepared
| Literature | |
|---|---|
| I had several disagreements with my doctor concerning specific issues that finally assisted my decision on a home birth. For instance he said that shaving, enema and episiotomy will definitely take place because I am a first-time mum and it is very important not to lose the flexibility of my pelvic floor. (Kontoyannis & Katsetos 2008, p47) | |
| She had a second child and had it planned right, so like I called her up and said, 'When's the baby due?,' and she was like, 'Oh you know, like July 1st at 3:15.' And I'm like 'What?,' and she's, 'Oh we're planning it this time. If I couldn't do it the first time I'm not doing it the second time.' And starting from then, I sort of went, 'Oh, what a civilized way of doing it. (Munro et al. 2009, p376) | |
| What struck me during my research was how difficult I personally would find it (with my limited understanding of many medical interventions related to childbirth) to exercise choice about birth if it meant being assertive with health care professionals who were not encouraging and who might set my choice against the 'needs', 'safety' and 'well-being' of the unborn child. (Shaw 2007, p566) |
maintaining control
| Interviews | literature |
|---|---|
| ...[R]eally I didn't want anything anyway except gas and air but when I got there I was thinking mmm shall I have an epidural but she said well you need to decide I mean you'll probably be a while just try the gas and air and I said all right then and I didn't need anything else anyway (Interview 8) | I found myself incredible, because I saw that woman screaming, creating a huge scene, and I just stayed normal. I was calm. And so, I was like, when the pain came strong I was ... after each one I would doze off, you know. It was really no problem, I bore it all really well. (McCallum & Reis, 2005) |
| [I]ts amazing how your body adjusts and you get used to it every stage that you really cope its amazing after Syntocinon, you see the pain is very intense very very quickly so who wouldn't want a break but then again...[i]t was an absolutely gorgeous experience without pain relief it was and I had loads of feelings as well afterwards which I suppose I didn't know about first time around I was just legs up stitches where I didn't know. (Interview 5) | I didn't want to be there alone ... and it helped to have someone to actually just talk to, like as a friend. That turned me around right there. I started feeling more in control and I started thinking positively"(Namey and Lyerly 2010, p773). |
| I think they were threatening caesarean at one point and I said oh I don't want to have a caesarean I want to have my baby naturally and then I think he decided to put in an appearance and she said you know go on push then and yes it was just like as if by magic it all came together yes it was great (Interview 7) | The experience of childbirth made me grow up a lot. It really did. I've learned a lot about my capacity. When I thought I was just too tired to push any more I found another 15 minutes worth of it. I just learned I have a lot more strength than I thought I did. Childbirth brought me more in tune with my body because I know what my capacities are: My mental capacity, my strength. I just know I could do a lot more than I thought I could. (Lynn Clark et al. 2003 p147) |
relinquishing control
| Interviews | Literature |
|---|---|
| ...I just thought what's the point, I thought just get the baby out I mean I'd been in labour for about twelve hours they said he was getting distressed and I thought just get him out you know and make sure he's OK.(Interview 3) | So, with my first baby I couldn't be on top of the situation in the hospital and I did lose control. I just couldn't be in a fighting frame of mind all the time.' (Kontoyannis and Katsetos 2008, p46) |
| I was... determined to try and stay at home for as long as I could, until I (laughs) couldn't take it any longer (Interview 7) | I was afraid that the baby might be in danger, but I felt confident in the doctor. He possessed knowledge of getting the baby out by suction, so I trusted that he would be able to help me. (Liamputtong, 2004) |
| At that stage you know in a way, you're glad to get to the hospital anyway and put yourself in their hands, but I didn't know how long it was going to be. I wasn't really sure,... it did get to the point when the pains really did get quite bad and I thought I'd like to go in now you know and put myself in the midwives hands, which is what I did. I don't think there was any doubt that I would end up in hospital you know, for the safety net I suppose. (Interview 6) | I allowed myself to sit back on the bed and breathe a secret sigh of relief. One of the midwives arranged for some lunch to be brought to me, and I sat and ate it slowly, then leaned back and closed my eyes. I didn't sleep, but just felt the sense of relief flood over me - at last, someone was taking things out of my hands and I could allow myself to 'let things go', if only because that's what the medical staff were telling me I had to do. (Crossley 2007, p553) |
| ...my obstetrician said 'this is what's going on' and umm, look I trusted her absolutely. We had talked about the alternatives [before] and I just totally trusted her.(Maher 2008, p134) |