| Literature DB >> 26955832 |
Elisabeth Kurth1,2,3,4, Katrin Krähenbühl5, Manuela Eicher6,7, Susanne Rodmann8,9, Luzia Fölmli10, Cornelia Conzelmann11, Elisabeth Zemp12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The length of postpartum hospital stay is decreasing internationally. Earlier hospital discharge of mothers and newborns decreases postnatal care or transfers it to the outpatient setting. This study aimed to investigate the experiences of new parents and examine their views on care following early hospital discharge.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26955832 PMCID: PMC4782306 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-016-1300-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Fig. 1Diagrammatic plan of analysis: a Focus group discussions were recorded and photos taken of the playful design elements. b All text and visual data were coded by two investigators in an iterative process, steadily comparing emerging codes until consensus of a final code book was reached. Codes were then sorted into themes. During this process, two multidisciplinary meetings were held for in-depth discussion of the data, refining the code list, and reaching consensus on central themes. c The two investigators compared the findings from all focus groups to identify recurrent patterns. During two multidisciplinary meetings the team members deepened the comparative analyses and developed a thematic map of the central topics and the relationships between central themes. d The integrated findings were vetted with the representatives of the focus groups participants
Demographic characteristics of the participants (n = 24)
| Characteristics | No. (%) |
|---|---|
| Age |
|
| mean 32.7 ± X yrs | |
| range 26–43 yrs | |
| Sex |
|
| Female | 20 (83 %) |
| Male | 04 (17 %) |
| Professional education |
|
| > 4 yrs | 14 (58 %) |
| 2–4 yrs | 09 (38 %) |
| < 2 yrs | 01 (04 %) |
| Origin |
|
| Swiss background | 16 (67 %) |
| Migrant backgroundb | 08 (33 %) |
| Family situation |
|
| Partnered | 23 (96 %) |
| Single | 01 (04 %) |
| Parity |
|
| One child | 21 (88 %) |
| Two children | 02 (08 %) |
| Three children | 01 (04 %) |
| Place of delivery |
|
| Hospital | 22 (92 %) |
| Birthing center | 02 (08 %) |
| Mode of delivery |
|
| Vaginal | 06 (25 %) |
| Assisted vaginal | 08 (33 %) |
| Cesarean | 10 (42 %) |
| Duration of hospital stay |
|
| > 5 days | 06 (26 %) |
| 4–5 days | 14 (61 %) |
| ≤ 3 days | 03 (13 %) |
| Midwifery care at home |
|
| 19 (80 %) | |
| Use of community-based health visitors |
|
| 20 (87 %) |
aunknown for one participant bGermany, Turkey, Iceland, South Africa and two double nationalities not counted in the statistic (Switzerland-France, Switzerland-Netherlands)
Fig. 2Thematic map of main themes and subthemes
Fig. 3Care model developed by fathers: Process-orientated illustration of pregnancy (green), delivery (red) and postpartum (yellow) where the points of intersection between health professionals overlap, preventing parents from falling through the network
Fig. 4Care model developed by German-speaking, first-time mothers: The health professionals surround the mother (“sitting on the throne” – red seat with plants) and are connected with white strips, creating a network with clear lines of communication