Evaluation of birth companions perinatal and peer support provision in two prison settings in England: a mixed-methods study.

IF 1.1 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH International Journal of Prisoner Health Pub Date : 2023-05-10 Epub Date: 2022-02-02 DOI:10.1108/IJPH-09-2021-0099
Gill Thomson, Rose Mortimer, Michelle Baybutt, Karen Whittaker
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Abstract

Purpose: This paper reports on insights from an evaluation of Birth Companions (BC) (a UK-based charity) perinatal support in two prison settings in England. The initiative involved the provision of group and/or one-to-one perinatal support and training women prisoners as peer supporters.

Design/methodology/approach: A mixed-methods study was undertaken that involved observations of support groups and peer support supervision sessions (n = 9); audio recorded interviews (n = 33) with prison and health-care staff, women in prison, peer supporters and BC staff; analysis of existing routinely collected data by BC and notes undertaken during regular meetings (n = 10) with the BC Project Manager. Thematic analysis was undertaken supported by MAXQDA qualitative data analysis software.

Findings: BC provided instrumental/practical support, emotional support, information support, signposting to services and advocating for women to the prison concerning their perinatal needs and rights. Key themes revealed that support had an impact on the lives of perinatal women by creating a safe place characterised by meaningful interactions and women-centred approaches that facilitated access to wider care and support. The service made a difference by empowering women and providing added value for peer supporters, prison, health-care and BC staff. Key enablers and strategies for the care of perinatal women and the delivery of perinatal support are also detailed.

Originality/value: Through longitudinal data and the involvement of a range of stakeholders, this study evidences the subtleties of support provided by BC and the potential it has to make a difference to perinatal women in prison and those volunteering or working within the prison system.

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对英格兰两所监狱提供的生育陪伴围产期和同伴支持服务的评估:一项混合方法研究。
目的:本文报告了 "生育伴侣"(BC)(英国一家慈善机构)在英格兰两所监狱开展的围产期支持活动的评估结果。该项目包括提供小组和/或一对一的围产期支持,以及培训女囚犯成为同伴支持者:采用混合方法进行研究,包括观察支持小组和同伴支持监督课程(n = 9);对监狱和医疗保健人员、狱中妇女、同伴支持者和 BC 工作人员进行录音访谈(n = 33);分析 BC 收集的现有常规数据以及与 BC 项目经理定期会面时所做的记录(n = 10)。在 MAXQDA 定性数据分析软件的支持下进行了专题分析:BC 提供了工具/实践支持、情感支持、信息支持、服务指点,并向监狱宣传妇女的围产期需求和权利。关键主题显示,通过创造一个安全的场所,以有意义的互动和以妇女为中心的方法为围产期妇女的生活带来影响,从而促进她们获得更广泛的护理和支持。这项服务通过增强妇女的能力,为同伴支持者、监狱、医疗保健和 BC 工作人员提供附加值,从而带来了改变。此外,还详细介绍了围产期妇女护理和提供围产期支持的主要促进因素和策略:本研究通过纵向数据和一系列利益相关者的参与,证明了 BC 所提供的支持的微妙之处,以及它为监狱中的围产期妇女和监狱系统中的志愿者或工作人员带来改变的潜力。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Prisoner Health
International Journal of Prisoner Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
21.40%
发文量
56
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