How does place impact intrapartum practice for midwives and obstetricians?

IF 4.4 2区 医学 Q1 NURSING Women and Birth Pub Date : 2024-10-25 DOI:10.1016/j.wombi.2024.101829
Christine Mellor, Marion Hunter, Elizabeth Smythe
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Abstract

Background

Rising rates of labour and birth interventions are causing concern, having the potential to cause harm if used inappropriately. International evidence demonstrates that place itself influences birth outcomes, but evidence is limited as to how. In New Zealand there are differences in the rates of spontaneous vaginal births by place, along with differences when benchmarking uncomplicated primiparae birthing in hospital maternity facilities throughout the country.

Aim

To develop understanding of how place influenced midwives’ and obstetricians’ practice in relation to supporting physiological birth.

Method

For this Hermeneutic Phenomenological study participants were purposively selected and consisted of nine midwives (employed and self-employed) and three obstetricians, all practising in midwifery led units or hospital maternity facilities. Data was collected using semi-structured interviews. The method of analysis involved writing and rewriting to surface interpretive insights, drawing on philosophical notions from Heidegger and Gadamer.

Findings

The findings revealed that place influences what practitioners are attuned to, what is easier for them to achieve, and their ability to provide woman-centred care. Competing tensions and pressures within place can blur the perceived relationship between normality and risk, influencing what is considered to be safe.

Summary

Place is not neutral; it influences how midwives and obstetricians practise and shapes how they support physiological labour and birth. The findings of this research contribute to a deeper understanding of the barriers and enablers to supporting physiological birth within place.
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地方如何影响助产士和产科医生的产前实践?
背景:分娩和分娩干预率的上升引起了人们的关注,如果使用不当,有可能造成伤害。国际证据表明,地方本身会影响分娩结果,但如何影响的证据却很有限。在新西兰,不同地区的阴道自然分娩率存在差异,全国各地医院产科设施的无并发症初产妇分娩率也存在差异。目的:了解不同地区如何影响助产士和产科医生支持生理分娩的做法:在这项诠释现象学研究中,有目的性地选择了 9 名助产士(受雇和自雇)和 3 名产科医生作为研究对象,她们都在助产士领导的单位或医院产科设施中工作。数据收集采用半结构式访谈。分析方法包括书写和改写,以便借鉴海德格尔和伽达默尔的哲学概念,得出解释性见解:研究结果表明,地点影响着从业人员所关注的内容、他们更容易做到的事情以及他们提供以妇女为中心的护理的能力。地点之间相互竞争的紧张关系和压力会模糊正常与风险之间的感知关系,从而影响被认为是安全的护理。本研究的结果有助于加深对在地方支持生理分娩的障碍和促进因素的理解。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Women and Birth
Women and Birth NURSING-OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
CiteScore
7.20
自引率
13.20%
发文量
371
审稿时长
27 days
期刊介绍: Women and Birth is the official journal of the Australian College of Midwives (ACM). It is a midwifery journal that publishes on all matters that affect women and birth, from pre-conceptual counselling, through pregnancy, birth, and the first six weeks postnatal. All papers accepted will draw from and contribute to the relevant contemporary research, policy and/or theoretical literature. We seek research papers, quality assurances papers (with ethical approval) discussion papers, clinical practice papers, case studies and original literature reviews. Our women-centred focus is inclusive of the family, fetus and newborn, both well and sick, and covers both healthy and complex pregnancies and births. The journal seeks papers that take a woman-centred focus on maternity services, epidemiology, primary health care, reproductive psycho/physiology, midwifery practice, theory, research, education, management and leadership. We also seek relevant papers on maternal mental health and neonatal well-being, natural and complementary therapies, local, national and international policy, management, politics, economics and societal and cultural issues as they affect childbearing women and their families. Topics may include, where appropriate, neonatal care, child and family health, women’s health, related to pregnancy, birth and the postpartum, including lactation. Interprofessional papers relevant to midwifery are welcome. Articles are double blind peer-reviewed, primarily by experts in the field of the submitted work.
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