| Literature DB >> 23730128 |
Ana C Sanchez Birkhead, Lynn Clark Callister, Nicole Fletcher, Allison Holt, Samantha Curtis.
Abstract
For low-risk childbearing women, fewer technological interventions are associated with better physical and psychosocial outcomes; yet, the number of unmedicated physiologic births is decreasing. As a result, fewer undergraduate nursing students experience caring for women who choose physiologic birth, which presents a challenge for nurse educators and implications for preparing students to provide appropriate care for all childbearing women after the students graduate. This exploratory descriptive qualitative study was conducted among 150 randomly selected undergraduate nursing programs in the United States to explore the challenges of educating nursing students about low-intervention birth. Four themes described current challenges: lack of placement opportunities, education versus clinical practice, evidence-based support of physiologic birth, and the need for more research on pedagogical strategies that effectively educate future nurses to advocate for minimal intervention birth options for all women.Entities:
Keywords: evidence-based practices in childbirth; maternal–newborn nursing education; natural birth; physiologic birth
Year: 2012 PMID: 23730128 PMCID: PMC3392603 DOI: 10.1891/1058-1243.21.3.169
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Perinat Educ ISSN: 1058-1243