| Literature DB >> 33271896 |
Bente Dahl1, Kristiina Heinonen2,3, Terese Elisabet Bondas4.
Abstract
Provision of antenatal care includes risk identification, prevention and management of pregnancy-related diseases, but also health education, health promotion, support and guidance to smooth the transition to parenthood. To ensure good perinatal health, high-quality, free and easily accessed antenatal care is essential. The aim of this study was to identify, integrate and synthesize knowledge of midwives' experiences of providing antenatal care, attending to clients' individual needs whilst facing multiple challenges. We conducted a meta-ethnography, which is a seven-step grounded, comparative and interpretative methodology for qualitative evidence synthesis. A lines-of-argument synthesis based on two metaphors was developed, based on refutational themes emerging from an analogous translation of findings in the included 14 papers. The model reflects midwives' wished-for transition from a midwife-dominated caring model toward a midwifery-led model of antenatal care. Structural, societal and personal challenges seemingly influenced midwives' provision of antenatal care. However, it emerged that midwives had the willingness to change rigid systems that maintain routine care. The midwifery-led model of care should be firmly based in midwifery science and evidence-based antenatal care that emphasize reflective practices and listening to each woman and her family. The change from traditional models of antenatal care towards increased use of digitalization no longer seems to be a choice, but a necessity given the ongoing 2020 pandemic.Entities:
Keywords: antenatal care; meta-ethnography; meta-synthesis; midwife; prenatal care; qualitative research
Year: 2020 PMID: 33271896 PMCID: PMC7730105 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17238946
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Steps in meta-ethnography.
| 1 | Getting started—identifying the topic of the study and defining the aim |
| 2 | Deciding what is relevant to the initial interest—including relevant studies, describing search strategy and criteria for inclusion and exclusion |
| 3 | Reading the studies—noting studies’ interpretative metaphors through repeated readings |
| 4 | Determining how the studies are related—determining the relationship between the studies by creating a list of key metaphors (themes, concepts, phrases, ideas) and assessing whether the relationships are reciprocal (i.e., findings across studies are comparable), refutational (findings stand in opposition to each other) or represent a line of argument |
| 5 | Translating the studies into one another—comparing metaphors and their interactions within single studies and across studies, and at the same time protecting uniqueness and holism |
| 6 | Synthesizing translations—creating a new whole from the sum of the parts, enabling a second-level analysis |
| 7 | Expressing the synthesis—finding the appropriate form for the synthesis to be effectively communicated to the audience |
The eMERGe meta-ethnography reporting guidance.
| Criteria Headings | Reporting Criteria | Pages |
|---|---|---|
| Describe the methods and processes for determining how the | ||
| Describe the methods of translation: | ||
| Describe the methods used to develop overarching concepts | ||
| Summarize the main interpretive findings of the translation and synthesis, and compare them to existing literature | 11–16 |
Figure 1PRISMA Flow Diagram.
Quality assessment of included studies.
| Study | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alden et al., (2008) | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | Y- | YY | YY | YY | YY |
| Andersson et al., (2014) | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | Y- | YY | YY | YY | YY |
| Aquino et al., (2015) | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | Y- | YY | Y- | YY | YY |
| Browne et al., (2014) | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | -- | YY | YY | YY | YY |
| Dalton et al., (2014) | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | -- | Y- | Y- | Y- | YY |
| Dove et al., (2014) | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | Y- | YY | YY | YY | YY |
| Goodwin et al., (2018) | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | -- | YY | YY | YY | YY |
| McCourt (2006) | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | -- | -- | YY | YY | YY |
| Olsson et al., (1996) | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | Y- | Y- | YY | YY | YY |
| Proctor (1998) | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | -- | -Y | YY | YY | YY |
| Rominov et al., (2017) | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY |
| Sword et al., (2012) | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY |
| Whitford et al., (2014) | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | -- | YY | YY | YY | YY |
| Wright et al., (2018) | YY | YY | YY | YY | YY | -Y | YY | -Y | YY | YY |
Abbreviations: Y = Yes; N = No; - = Cannot tell. Assessment questions: (1) Was there a clear statement of the aims of the research? (2) Is a qualitative methodology appropriate? (3) Was the research design appropriate to address the aims of the research? (4) Was the recruitment strategy appropriate to the aims of the research? (5) Was the data collected in a way that addressed the research issue? (6) Has the relationship between researcher and participants been adequately considered? (7) Have ethical issues been taken into consideration? (8) Was the data analysis sufficiently rigorous? (9) Is there a clear statement of findings? (10) How valuable is the research?
Characteristics of included studies.
| Author (Year) | Aim | Sample & Setting | Methodology | Methods for Data Collection & Analysis | Key Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ahlden et al., (2008) | To describe perceptions of parenthood education among midwives and obstetricians in charge of antenatal care. | Midwives ( | Qualitative phenomeno | Focus group interviews | Support in transition to parenthood was important. Parenthood education should focus on awareness of the expected child, confidence in the biological processes and the change of roles. |
| Andersson et al., (2014) | To investigate and describe antenatal midwives’ perceptions and experiences of their current work, focusing on their opinions about group-based antenatal care. | Midwives ( | Mixed methods | Interviews with closed questions and comments | Midwives were satisfied with their work, but had reservations concerning time constraints and parental classes. Many expressed interest in group-based care, but expressed personal and organizational obstacles to implementing the model. |
| Aquino et al., (2015) | To explore midwives’ experiences of providing care for Black and minority ethnic women. | Midwives ( | Qualitative design | Semi-structured interviews | Midwives found it difficult to communicate with women whose English was limited. They described a mismatch between midwives’ and women’s expectations of care and highlighted the necessity of inter-agency collaboration to address holistic care. |
| Browne et al., (2014) | To explore midwives’ communication techniques intended to promote a wellness focus in the antenatal period. | Midwives ( | Qualitative design | Focus group interviews | Midwives used health-promoting strategies in their work as an effort to reduce women’s anxiety and promote wellness-focused care. |
| Dalton et al., (2014) | To investigate midwives’ attitudes toward and experiences of ICT use to identify potential causal factors that encourage or inhibit their usage in ANC. | Midwives ( | Semi-structured interviews, | Midwives recognized potential benefits of ICT use to deliver pregnancy-related health information, but had reservations about their use in everyday work. | |
| Dove & Muir-Cochrane (2014) Australia | To examine how midwives and women within a continuity of care midwifery programme conceptualized childbirth risk and the influences of these conceptuali | Midwives ( | Critical ethnography | Semi-structured interviews and observation | Midwives assumed a risk-negotiator role in order to mediate relationships between women and hospital-based maternity staff. This role relied on the trust engendered by their relationship with the women. |
| Goodwin et al., (2018) | To explore the relationship between first-generation migrant women and midwives focusing on factors contributing to these relationships and their effect on the caring experience. | Midwives ( | Focused ethnography | Semi-structured interviews | The midwife–woman relationship was important for participants’ experiences of care. Social and ecological factors influenced the relationship, and marked differences were identified between midwives and women in their perceived importance of these factors. |
| McCourt (2006) | To explore the nature of information giving, choice and communication with pregnant women, in both conventional and caseload midwifery care. | Booking visits with pregnant women ( | Qualitative design | Non- participant observation | Interactional patterns differed according to model and setting of care. A continuum of styles of communication were identified, and were more formal in conventional care than in caseload midwifery care. |
| Olsson et al., (1996) | To describe antenatal ‘booking’ interviews regarding content and to illuminate the meaning of the ways midwives and expectant parents relate to each other. | Booking visits with midwives ( | Qualitative design | Video-recorded booking interviews | Two perspectives of antenatal midwifery care, obstetric and parental, operated alternately and in competition within the interviews. |
| Proctor (1998) | To identify and compare the perceptions of women and midwives concerning women’s beliefs about what constitutes quality in maternity services. | Midwives ( | Qualitative design | Focus group interviews | An understanding of the concerns of women by maternity care staff is important in the development of a woman-centred service. |
| Rominov et al., (2017) | To describe midwives, perceptions and experiences of engaging fathers in perinatal services. | Midwives ( | Multi-method approach | Semi-structured interviews ( | Midwives unanimously agreed that engaging fathers is part of their role and acknowledged the importance of receiving education to develop knowledge and skills with regard to fathers. |
| Sword et al., (2012) | To explore women’s and care providers’ perspectives of quality prenatal care to inform the development of items for a new instrument. | Prenatal care providers ( | Qualitative descriptive approach | Semi-structured interviews | A recurrent theme woven throughout the data reflected the importance of a meaningful relationship between a woman and her prenatal care provider that was characterized by trust. |
| Whitford et al., (2014) | To consider the use of a standard birth plan section within a national, woman-held maternity record. | Women ( | Exploratory qualitative and longitudinal study | Interviews | Staff and women were generally positive about the provision of a birth plan. |
| Wright et al., (2018) | To reveal how midwives enact woman-centred care in practice. | Midwives ( | Contempo | Interviews and | The ways in which midwives interacted with women during routine antenatal care demonstrated that some practices in a hospital setting can either support or undermine a woman-centred philosophy. |
CERQual Qualitative Evidence Profile. Check row alignment in this table
| Review Finding | Studies Contributing to the Review Finding | Assessment of | Assessment of | Assessment of Coherence | Assessment of | Overall | Explanation of | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Will to change | Lack of support from colleagues | Andersson | Minor methodological limitations. | Minor concerns about relevance. Nurse-midwives/midwives working at antenatal clinics in community/hospital setting in four countries. | Minor concerns regarding coherence. Data reasonably consistent within and across studies. | Minor concerns about adequacy of data. Six studies presented moderate or rich data. | Moderate confidence. | The finding was graded as moderate confidence because of minor methodological considerations, minor concerns about relevance, coherence and adequacy of data. |
| Need to change rigid systems that maintain routine care | Frustrated by unfit premises, restricted access to ICT and interpret | Andersson | Minor methodological limitations. Two studies had minor concerns about data analysis. All studies but two lacked clarity about reflexivity. One study lacked clarity about ethical considerations. | Minor concerns about relevance. | Minor concerns regarding coherence. Data reasonably consistent within and across studies. | Moderate concerns about adequacy of data. Six studies presented rich data. Four studies presented moderate data, two studies presented thin data. | Moderate confidence. | The findings were graded as moderate confidence because of minor methodological limitations, minor concerns about relevance and coherence and moderate concern about data adequacy in two studies. |
| Readiness for midwife-led- and family-centred models of ANC | Readiness to use ICT to complement personal encounters | Dalton | Minor | Minor concerns about relevance. | Minor concerns regarding coherence. Data reasonably consistent within and across studies. | Minor concerns about adequacy of data. | Moderate confidence. | The findings were graded as moderate confidence because of minor |
Definitions of levels of confidence from the CERQual evaluation: High confidence: It is highly likely that the review finding is a reasonable representation of the phenomenon of interest. Moderate confidence: It is likely that the review finding is a reasonable representation of the phenomenon of interest. Low confidence: It is possible that the review finding is a reasonable representation of the phenomenon of interest. Very low confidence: It is not clear whether the review finding is a reasonable representation of the phenomenon of interest.
Figure 2Antenatal care, from a midwife-dominated toward a midwifery-led perspective.