| Literature DB >> 25037919 |
Janneke T Gitsels-van der Wal1, Judith Manniën, Lisanne A Gitsels, Hans S Reinders, Pieternel S Verhoeven, Mohammed M Ghaly, Trudy Klomp, Eileen K Hutton.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the Netherlands, prenatal screening follows an opting in system and comprises two non-invasive tests: the combined test to screen for trisomy 21 at 12 weeks of gestation and the fetal anomaly scan to detect structural anomalies at 20 weeks. Midwives counsel about prenatal screening tests for congenital anomalies and they are increasingly having to counsel women from religious backgrounds beyond their experience. This study assessed midwives' perceptions and practices regarding taking client's religious backgrounds into account during counseling. As Islam is the commonest non-western religion, we were particularly interested in midwives' knowledge of whether pregnancy termination is allowed in Islam.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25037919 PMCID: PMC4223558 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2393-14-237
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Items from the questionnaire completed by midwives about counseling on prenatal screening
| 1. | Do you think you should take the religious background of pregnant women and their partners into account during counseling? (yes/no) |
| 2a. | Do you actually take the religious background of pregnant women and their partners into account during counseling? (yes/no) |
| 2b. | If you do not take the religious background into account, what are the reasons why you do not do this? (multiple answers possible, as well as open-ended) |
| 3a. | Do you counsel a pregnant Muslim woman differently to a pregnant non-Muslim woman? (yes/no) |
| 3b. | If you counsel in a different way, in what way do you counsel Muslim and non-Muslim differently? (open ended) |
| 1. | What do you know about termination of pregnancy with regard to Islam? (four statements: true/false) |
| 2. | If a termination is allowed, until what gestational age is it permitted under Islam? (open ended or ‘don’t know’) |
| 3. | If you do know anything about termination and Islam, what are your sources? (multiple answers possible, as well as open-ended) |
| 4. | Do you need or are you interested in (more) education on religion with respect to prenatal screening? (yes/no) |
Demographic characteristics of the study population (N = 98)
| | |
|---|---|
| Median: 34.5 years; missing: 1 | |
| | <40 years: 56 (57%) |
| | >55% years: 6 (6%) |
| Male: 1 (1%) | |
| | Female: 97 (99%) |
| ≤ 5 years: 28 (29%) | |
| | 6-10 years: 20 (20%) |
| | ≥ 11 years: 50 (51%) |
| Roman Catholic: 13 (16%) | |
| | Protestant: 16 (20%) |
| | Muslim: 1 (1%) |
| | Humanist: 2 (2%) |
| | None: 47 (59%) |
| | Don’t know/would not say: 1 (1%) |
| Missing: 18 |
Client’s religious background taken into account by midwives during counseling on prenatal screening
| | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | 67 (68%) | 7 (7%) | 74 (75%) | |
| | No | 1 (1%) | 23 (24%) | 24 (25%) |
| Total | 68 (69%) | 30 (31%) | 98 (100%) | |
Reasons of midwives for not taking the client’s religious background into account during prenatal counseling (N = 30)
| Survey-supplied reasons (closed) | |
| - Not enough time for counseling | 0 |
| - Religion is irrelevant | 13 |
| - It is stringent, difficult or stressful | 0 |
| - Not aware of this possibility | 3 |
| - Dutch privacy legislation prohibits data processing about religious backgrounds | 2 |
| Respondent-supplied reasons (open-ended) | |
| - The onus is on the client to bring religion into the discussion | 10 |
| - It is not necessary because of the autonomous decision of the client | 7 |
| - You have to approach every client as equal | 3 |
| - Only if the client hesitates about their decision | 1 |
| - Only in relation with the choice to terminate | 1 |
*Respondents were allowed to select more than one option.
The number (percentage) of participants who correctly answered the statements about permissibility of termination from an Islamic perspective
| | | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Termination is not allowed (false) | 56 (70) | 15 (83) | 71 (72) |
| Termination is allowed when the health of the mother is in danger (true) | 22 (28) | 13 (72) | 35 (36) |
| Termination is allowed when the child has Down syndrome (true) | 2 (3) | 1 (6) | 3 (3) |
| Termination is allowed when the child has severe congenital abnormalities (true) | 11 (14) | 1 (6) | 12 (12) |