| Literature DB >> 30559163 |
Carol Kingdon1, Soo Downe1, Ana Pilar Betran2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To establish the views and experiences of healthcare professionals in relation to interventions targeted at them to reduce unnecessary caesareans.Entities:
Keywords: caesarean section; health professionals; over treatment; qualitative evidence synthesis
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30559163 PMCID: PMC6303601 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025073
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1PRISMA diagram. CS, caesarean section.
Characteristics of included studies and quality assessment
| Author | Aim | Country (region) | Resource | Setting | Number of participants | Type of participant | Method | Quality assessment |
| Melman | To explore barriers and facilitators for delivering optimal care as described in clinical practice guidelines. | The Netherlands (European) | High | Rural and urban | 30 | Obstetricians and midwives | Telephone interviews and focus groups | B |
| Foureur | To explore the views and experiences of providers in caring for women considering VBAC. | Australia (Western Pacific) | High | Urban | 18 | Obstetricians and midwives | Semistructured interviews | B |
| Lundgren | To explore the views of clinicians from countries with low VBAC rates on factors of importance for improving VBAC rates. | Ireland, Italy and Germany (European) | High | Rural and urban | 71 | Obstetricians, midwives, neonatologist and GP. | Focus groups | A− |
| Lundgren | To investigate the views of clinicians working in countries with high VBAC rates on factors of importance for improving VBAC rates. | Finland, Sweden and the Netherlands (European) | High | Rural and urban | 44 | Obstetricians and midwives | Interviews and focus groups | A− |
| Litorp | To explore obstetric caregivers’ rationales for their hospital’s CS rate to identify factors that might cause CS overuse. | Tanzania (African) | Low | Urban | 32 | Obstetricians and midwives | Observation, interviews and focus groups | A |
| Marshall | To evaluate the ‘Focus on Normal Birth and Reducing Caesarean section Rates’ programme. | UK (European) | High | Rural and urban | 16 | Obstetricians and midwives | Semistructured interviews | B |
| Colomar | To assess opinions of the determinants of the high rate of caesarean births in Nicaragua as well as possible barriers to and facilitators of optimal caesarean birth rates. | Nicaragua (Americas) | Middle | Unclear | 17 | Doctors and obstetric decision makers | Focus groups | A |
| Lofti | To explore effective strategies to reduce caesarean delivery rates in Iran. | Iran (Eastern Mediterranean) | Middle | Unclear | 10 | Obstetricians and midwives | Semistructured interviews | C |
| Dunn | To reduce high rates of ERCS <39 weeks across the Eastern Ontario region. | Canada (Americas) | High | Unclear | 9 | Nursing cirectors and managers | Key informant interviews | C |
| Wang and Ding | To explore reasons for obstetric medical staff choosing CS for themselves in the absence of medical indication. | China (Western Pacific) | Middle | Urban | 11 | Health professionals | Semistructured interviews | C |
| Liu | To explore affecting factors of continuing increase in CS rate in rural area. | China (Western Pacific) | Middle | Rural | 9 | Health professionals | Focus groups | C |
| Cox | To explore the barriers associated with the ACOG VBAC guidelines. | USA (Americas) | High | Rural and urban | 24 | Obstetricians, midwives and an administrator | Semistructured interviews | A- |
| Yazdizadeh | To identify barriers to reduce the CS rate in Iran, as perceived by obstetricians and midwives as the main behavioural change target groups. | Iran (Eastern Mediterranean) | Middle | Urban | 26 | Hospital directors, obstetricians and midwives | In-depth interviews | A− |
| Wanyonyi | To determine perceptions on the practice of VBAC among maternity service providers in East Africa and possible solutions (including acceptability of evidence, guidelines, and audit). | Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania and Ethiopia (African) | Low | Unclear | 63 | Doctors and midwives | Semistructured questionnaire | C− |
| Chen | To explore informed choice and autonomy of uterine-incision delivery making in China. | China (Western Pacific) | Middle | Urban | 51 | Health professionals | In-depth interviews | D |
| Chaillet and Dumont | To investigate obstetricians perceptions of clinical practice guidelines and to identify the barriers to, facilitators of, and obstetricians’ solutions for implementing these guidelines in practice. | Canada (Americas) | High | Urban | 27 | Obstetricians | Focus groups and semistructured interviews | C |
| Kamal | To explore the views of health professionals on the factors influencing repeat CS. | UK (European) | High | Urban | 25 | Doctors and midwives | Semistructured interviews | A |
ACOG, American College of Obstetrician and Genecologists; CS, caesarean section; ERCS, elective repeat caesarean section; GP, general practitioner; VBAC, vaginal birth after caesarean.
CERQual summary of findings (SoFs)
| Review finding | Studies contributing to review finding | CERQual assessment | Explanation of confidence in the evidence assessment |
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| 44–46, 54, 57–62, 64–66 | Moderate confidence | Thirteen studies with minor to significant methodological limitations. Rich data from 14 countries across four geographical regions, high-income and middle- income levels and high and low CS rates. Reasonable level of coherence with uncertain confidence in LICs. |
|
| 47, 54–57, 63 | Low confidence | Six studies with minor to moderate methodological limitations. Thin data, with major concerns about coherence across settings. |
|
| 54–55, 57–59, 61–64 | Moderate confidence | Ten studies with minor to moderate methodological limitations. Rich data from across three geographical regions but limited data from LICs. High coherence across HICs and MICs. Uncertain confidence in LICs. |
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| 54–55, 57–59, 61–64 | Moderate confidence | Nine studies with no to moderate methodological limitations. Thick data from Europe. Only one study from African region contributed to this finding. High coherence. |
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| 45, 54–55, 57–58, 61, 63–64 | Moderate confidence | Eight studies, with no to moderate methodological limitations. Rich data from five countries. Moderate coherence. |
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| 45, 47, 55, 57–58, 60–61, 63 | Moderate confidence | Eight studies with minor to moderate methodological limitations. Rich data predominantly from middle-income countries. High coherence. |
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| 46, 57–61, 63 | Moderate confidence | Seven studies with minor to moderate methodological limitations. Fairly rich data from two studies and convenience a theme in a third. High coherence. |
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| 45–47, 54–61, 63–66 | High confidence | Fifteen studies with no to moderate methodological limitations. Thick data from 15 countries, across five world regions, high-income, middle-income and low-income settings with high CSRs. High coherence. |
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| 47, 55–63, 65 | Moderate confidence | Eleven studies with minor to moderate methodological limitations. Thick data from across resource settings. High coherence. |
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| 47,55-59,61-63,65 | Moderate confidence | Ten studies with no to moderate methodological limitations. Thin data from 13 countries, and thick data from Iran. High coherence. |
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| 47, 54–66 | Moderate confidence | Fourteen studies with no to moderate methodological limitations. Thick data from HICs and MICs. The finding may have higher confidence in settings where the level of resource is sufficient to sustain necessary CS. |
|
| 45, 47, 55–57, 59, 61, 65–66 | Low confidence | Nine studies with minor to significant methodological limitations. Thick data from one study. Extent of coherence unclear. |
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| 55, 57, 59, 61–63 | Low confidence | Six studies with minor to significant methodological limitations. Thick data from one study. Extent of coherence unclear. |
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| 44–47, 54–55, 57–59, 61–64, 66 | Moderate confidence | Fourteen studies with no to significant methodological limitations. Thick data from HICs, MICs and one LIC. High coherence. |
BMI, body mass index; CS, caesarean section; HIC, high-income country; LICs, low-income countries; MICs, middle-income countries; VBAC, vaginal birth after caesarean.
Summary of initial concepts, emergent themes and final themes
| Initial concepts | Emergent themes/SoFs | Studies contributing to review finding | Final themes |
| Belief in a common approach to birth across obstetrics and midwifery |
| 44–46, 54, 57–62, 64–66 |
|
| Belief in value of physiological labour and vaginal birth | |||
| Belief in CS as progressive for birth | |||
| Doubts about the value of CS and concerns about comorbidities | |||
| Belief CS rate determined by factors beyond health professionals control |
| 47, 54–57, 63 | |
| Ambiguity surrounding medical indications for CS | |||
| Views and experiences of seeking a second opinion | |||
| Evidence as mechanism for change |
| 54–55, 57–59, 61–64 | |
| Evidence as incomplete, unconvincing or not applicable | |||
| Views about guideline adherence and local audit | |||
| Belief CS rates are too high |
| 54–55, 57–59, 61–64 | |
| Belief unnecessary CS is unethical, negligent practice | |||
| Positive attitudes towards guidelines, second opinion, audit and feedback | |||
| Fear of blame in event of poor outcome of NVD |
| 45, 54–55, 57–58, 61, 63–64 |
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| Fear of threat to professional identify and career progression | |||
| Fear of litigation | |||
| Value greater monetary reward associated with CS |
| 45, 47, 55, 57–58, 60–61, 63 | |
| Value scheduling CS and less time commitment compared NVD |
| 46, 57–61, 63 | |
| Perception women are changing |
| 45–47, 54–61, 63–66 | |
| Perceptions of what woman want | |||
| Belief women lack confidence in NVD | |||
| No team work within profession/not easy to listen to opinion of peers |
| 47, 55–63, 65 | |
| Little or no cross-professional working | |||
| Marginalisation of MWs | |||
| Concerns about the organisation of care |
| 47, 55–59, 61–63, 65 |
|
| Insufficient human resource | |||
| Need 24 hours anaesthetic cover |
| ||
| Need 24 hours consultant cover | |||
| Need for more equipment | |||
| Challenges to need for technology | |||
| Belief strategy/intervention would not be effective |
| 45, 47, 55–57, 59, 61, 65–66 | |
| Preregistration and postregistration education does not prioritise NVD skills and training | |||
| Perception insufficient time to implement | |||
| Perception insufficient resources | |||
| Positive tone of intervention (reflective and facilitative) |
| 55, 57, 59, 61–63 | |
| Without fear of blame or threat to professional identify | |||
| Use of language (ie, not conditional verb tense – should) | |||
| Women’s right to choose CS |
| 44–47, 54–55, 57–59, 61–64, 66 | |
| Informed decision making too lengthy | |||
| Doctor’s decision takes precedence | |||
| Decision-making process with women |
CS, caesarean section; MWs, midvives; NVD, normal vaginal delivery; SoFs, summary of findings.