| Literature DB >> 29316887 |
Ruth A Sanders1,2, Kenda Crozier3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Women approach birth using various methods of preparation drawing from conventional healthcare providers alongside informal information sources (IIS) outside the professional healthcare context. An investigation of the forms in which these informal information sources are accessed and negotiated by women, and how these disconnected and often conflicting elements influence women's decision-making process for birth have yet to be evaluated. The level of antenatal preparedness women feel can have significant and long lasting implications on their birth experience and transition into motherhood and beyond. The aim of this study was to provide a deeper understanding of how informal information sources influence women's preparation for birth.Entities:
Keywords: Birth preparation; Childbirth; Decision-making; Informal information sources; Meta-synthesis; Pregnancy
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29316887 PMCID: PMC5761120 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-017-1648-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Search strategy in MEDLINE
| S1-S4 – first and ‘core’ structure of the search |
| S1 TX pregnant women OR expectant mothers OR women preparing for birth |
| S2 TX birth OR childbirth OR labour OR labor OR parturition |
| S3 TX qualitative* OR focus group OR interview OR phenomenolog* OR grounded theory OR narrative analysis OR descriptive analysis OR thematic analysis OR ethnography |
| S4 TX Information seeking behaviour OR choice OR decision making OR anxiety OR women’s experience OR women’s perception OR birth plan* OR women’s preparedness for birth |
| S6- S9 added individually to the core search to generate results |
| S6 TX Internet OR internet forum OR digital media OR social media OR blog OR podcast OR webcast OR mobile applications OR smart phone OR mobile phone technology |
| S7 TX TV OR television OR reality television OR documentary film OR television documentary OR movie OR film OR cinema OR motion picture OR visual media OR radio OR entertainment |
| S8 TX Newspaper OR newspaper articles OR magazine OR magazine articles OR self help books OR childbirth literature OR pregnancy literature OR childbirth magazine OR pregnancy magazine OR pregnancy books OR childbirth books OR news reports |
| S9 TX Birth stories OR birth narratives OR birth Storytelling OR childbirth stories OR childbirth narratives OR childbirth storytelling OR oral tradition OR social networks OR peer support |
Quality assessment tool
| ++ | All or most checklist criteria is met, and where have not been met conclusions are unlikely to altar. |
| + | Some of the checklist criteria have been met, where they have not been met or not adequately described, conclusions are unlikely to altar. |
| – | Few or no checklist criteria have been met and conclusions are likely or very likely to alter. |
Fig. 1Flow chart of search strategy and outcomes [37]
Table of Paper Characteristics (below)
| AUTHORS | TITLE | AIMS | METHODS | POPULATION/PARTICIPANT | ANALYSIS | QUALITY ASSESSMENT TOOL | FINDINGS & CONCLUSIONS |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Carolan M | Health literacy and the information needs and dilemmas of first-time mothers over 35 years | To highlight information based dilemmas for women over 35. | 1:2:1 interviews | 22 first time mothers > 35 years, antenatal/ | Thematic content analysis |
| Mothers were given large amounts of clinical information, despite common perceptions of empowerment these women often found the amount of information overwhelming. |
| Dahlen H, Barclay L, Homer, C 2008 | Preparing for the First Birth: Mother’s Experiences at Home and in Hospital in Australia, | To explore experiences of first-time mothers who had given birth in Australia. | In depth interviews postnatally. | 19 women | Grounded theory |
| Women cite that the period of preparation for birth has significant influence on and being an important part of their entire birth experience. Women who planned home births felt more prepared and better supported than those planning hospital births. |
| Fenwick J, Staff L, Gamble J, Creedy D, Bayes S 2010 | Why do women request a caesarean in a normal healthy first pregnancy? | To describe Australian women’s request for cesarean section in the absence of medical indicators in their first pregnancy. | An explorative descriptive approach | 14 women 1:2:1 interviews | Thematic analysis |
| Fear, safety, control and devaluing the female body and vaginal birth were contributing factors to women’s decision for caesarean birth. |
| Fenwick J, Hauck Y, Downie J, Butt J 2005 | The childbirth expectations of a self-selected cohort of Western Australian women | To explore/describe women’s expectations of labour and birth and to identify influencing factors | qualitative study using an explorative descriptive design and techniques associated with constant comparison. | 202 women pregnant or birthed | Thematic analysis |
| Particularly influential on women’s expectations of childbirth were private and public discourses of birth exemplified by books magazines and stories from mothers and sisters. |
| Flemming S, Vandermause R, Shaw M 2014 | First-time mothers preparing for birth in an electronic world: internet and mobile phone technology | Uncover the meaning of how mothers self prepare with electronic media | sequential mix of two qualitative designs: | All low income | primary hermeneutic (interpretive) design one-to-one in-depth interviews from a purposive sample ( |
| FTMs were preparing for birth ‘what ifs’ with electronic media based on what is ‘known’ about birthing. Mothers became educated but also this increased levels of fear and anxiety. |
| Freeze R 2008 USA | Born free: Unassisted childbirth in North America. | To explore reasons women, choose to have unassisted birth. | interviews and personal correspondence, surveys, and archives of internet discussion groups and forums. | sixty-one survey responses | Thematic Analysis? – not clearly stated but approach was documented as thematic |
| The process of freebirth is complex and an understanding of why women free birth is needed to identify why some women are driven away from certain models of care offered by professionals. The study highlights the abuses and limitations of current paradigms of care UC bridges the gap drawing from professional practices but acknowledging women’s need for autonomy in the birthing process. |
| Lagan B, Sinclair M & Kernohan G 2011 UK | What Is the Impact of the Internet on Decision-Making in Pregnancy? A Global Study | To build on studies to explore women’s experiences and perceptions of using the internet for pregnancy related information and influences this has on decision making. | Interpretative qualitative | 92 women who had accessed the Internet for pregnancy-related information over a 3-month period. | Framework analysis |
| The internet has a marked impact on women’s decision making across the entirety of their pregnancy, highlighting a great need for information. |
| Miller A 2009 USA | ‘Midwife to myself’: Birth narratives among women choosing unassisted homebirth | Detailed women’s narratives created by women choosing to birth unassisted | 127 unassisted homebirth stories sourced from Yahoo and google | 10 participants | Grounded theory |
| Women rely on both medical and midwifery models and wider understandings from unassisted childbirth circles to formulate agency around birth. They reference formal models of care whilst seeking to liberate themselves from it. |
| Munro S, Kornelson J & Hutton E 2009 Canada | Decision-making in Patient-Initiated Elective Cesarean Delivery: The Influence of Birth Stories | Exploring birth stories and cultural knowledge that women use to inform decisions for elective cesarean without medical indication. | Explorative in depth interviews with 17 women | 17 primiparous women | Grounded theory |
| Women drew heavily from social and cultural knowledge in forming their decisions to birth by caesarean. |
| Regan M, McElroy KG, Moore K 2013 USA | Choice? Factors That Influence Women’s Decision Making for Childbirth | Filling the gap in knowledge investigating factors that influence women’s decisions about birth | Mixed method | 49 primiparous women 21–36 yrs. majority white | Consensual Qualitative Research method | ++ | Four major categories were found but only birth stories and attending a birth have lasing effect on influencing birth choices |
| Rodger D Skuse A, Wilmore M, S. Humphreys S Dalton J Flabouris M & Clifton V.L 2013 Australia | Pregnant women’s use of information and communications technologies to access pregnancy-related health information in South Australia. | Examines how pregnant women living in South Australia use information and communication technologies (ICTs), principally Internet and mobile phones, to access pregnancy-related information. | 35 semistructured interviews conducted as part of the larger ‘Health-e Baby’ project, a qualitative study | 35 women aged between 19 and 40 yrs. | unstated | + | Shows that ICTs have great potential for health promotion communication high levels of access not easy to predict personal choices pregnant women make for mode of communications they access, prefer & trust |
| Seibold C 2003 Australia | Young single women’s experiences of pregnancy, adjustment, decision-making and ongoing identity construction. | To examine young pregnant women’s experiences of embodiment, identity construction decision making and how these are influenced. | Explorative descriptive study using feminist principles | 5 women | Techniques of grounded theory were used |
| All women welcomed the physical changes of pregnancy. Acceptance of pregnancy was assisted by supportive families, friends and sympathetic healthcare professionals, as well as exposure to opinions via classes, information and educational opportunity. |
| Song F, West J, Lundy L, Dahmen N 2012 USA | WOMEN, PREGNANCY, AND HEALTH INFORMATION ONLINE: | To explore how white middle class women use the internet during experiences of conception, pregnancy and childbirth to ascertain how internet usage challenges, and medical paradigms shape women to make decisions | Part of a descriptive study on the information-seeking habits of women in five areas of early mother- hood: conception and fertility; pregnancy; labor and delivery; child’s feeding and nutrition; child’s health and safety products. | 32 mothers | Grounded Theory | + | Internet enables socially privileged women to perform an informed patient role ad demonstrate their competencies as mothers. |
| Weston C, Anderson J 2014 UK | Internet use in Pregnancy | Perceived Value of internet in pregnancy from the view points of midwives, pregnant women and postnatal women. | Thirteen midwives, seven antenatal women and six postnatal women | Appropriate internet use was valued by all groups | + | Appropriate internet usage during pregnancy was positively valued by all groups. Greater collaboration between midwives and pregnant women is required to enable access to consistent, verified internet information which can be used appropriately and confidently. |
Fig. 2Meta-Synthesis Development Process