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1.
J Nurs Educ ; : 1-4, 2024 Jun 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38916860

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The revision of a textbook covering prenatal and postnatal care provided our editorial team with an opportunity to critically examine language choices and incorporate gender-inclusive language. METHOD: Guided by scientific evidence, professional recommendations, editorials, and a deep respect for the humanity of our clients, we undertook this task with humility and determination. RESULTS: This article describes the societal and clinical imperative for this change, the strategies and resources we used to make these changes, and our experiences in discussing these changes and coming to consensus with contributing authors. CONCLUSION: Challenges are discussed, as well as recommendations for authors and editors. [J Nurs Educ. 2024;63(X):XXX-XXX.].

2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38357720

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: Postgraduate fellowships are growing in midwifery and yet are poorly understood by the profession. These fellowships are optional for midwives interested in developing advanced skills, transitioning to specialty practice, or entering or re-entering professional practice. The purpose of this study was to explore the characteristics and outcomes of US postgraduate midwifery fellowships as described by midwifery fellowship program directors. METHODS: Postgraduate midwifery fellowship programs in the United States were identified through an environmental scan and snowball sampling. Directors of these fellowship programs were invited to complete a survey and an open-ended interview to determine their program's characteristics and outcomes. Quantitative data were summarized, and thematic analysis was used to explore the qualitative data. RESULTS: An environmental scan and snowball sampling identified 17 postgraduate midwifery fellowship programs. Thirteen fellowship program directors completed a survey (76.5%), and 11 completed an interview (64.7%). The findings identified program characteristics, including location, structure, funding, and educational offerings, of midwifery fellowship programs. The thematic analysis revealed the emergence of 3 themes highlighting the creation of support for midwives in transition, including new graduates and practicing midwives returning to practice after a hiatus or shifting to specialty practice: (1) stepping stones, (2) empowered and equipped, and (3) innovative future. Community birth practice was defined as specialty practice by these directors. DISCUSSION: The results of this study inform the profession of the availability of fellowships and the development of future high-quality midwifery fellowships. Postgraduate midwifery fellowships should not be required for entry to practice but have a place in the work-study opportunities available to US midwives.

3.
Nurse Educ ; 49(1): 47-51, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37540621

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Policies, regulations, and laws influence all aspects of health care, including the education of health care professionals, independent practice, and patient access to care. Health equity and social justice are mediated through policy. PROBLEM: While health policy knowledge and skills are recognized as essential competencies within nursing and midwifery curricula, most students graduate with limited or no experience engaging in advocacy efforts to advance legislation that would improve health systems and the delivery of care. APPROACH: An experiential learning activity is described that gives students authentic experience in federal legislative advocacy. OUTCOMES: Students report powerful, positive learning from interacting with their legislators. CONCLUSION: Support of a legislative advocacy experiential learning activity requires ongoing faculty initiative and can promote advancement of health policy bills into law. Opportunities to participate in legislative advocacy need to be expanded within nursing and midwifery education to cultivate leaders who can effect policy change.


Subject(s)
Midwifery , Students, Nursing , Pregnancy , Humans , Female , Problem-Based Learning , Nursing Education Research , Health Policy , Students
4.
J Midwifery Womens Health ; 66(3): 366-371, 2021 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34114314

ABSTRACT

Health care education programs were faced with the need to quickly adapt to a new reality during the coronavirus disease 2019 pandemic. Students were temporarily suspended from campus and clinical sites, requiring prompt changes in structure to their didactic and clinical learning. This article describes the rapid adjustments that one midwifery and women's health nurse practitioner education program created using both synchronous and asynchronous simulation experiences to promote student learning and ongoing engagement. Flexibility and reflexivity were needed by faculty and students alike in the face of the multiple changes wrought by the pandemic. Curricular changes were made simultaneously in many courses. Objective structured clinical examinations simulate telehealth experiences that assess knowledge, clinical reasoning, and professional behaviors via a scripted scenario and an actor patient. On-call simulations mimic telephone triage and provide students the opportunity to build listening, assessment, and management skills for prenatal and intrapartum scenarios. Students are provided equipment and virtual instruction in an intrauterine device insertion session, which promotes skill acquisition and self-confidence. Trigger films are used to visualize real-life or scripted clinical encounters, leading to discussion and decision-making, particularly in the affective domain. Bilateral learning tools, similar to case studies, provide students an opportunity to demonstrate their knowledge and critical thinking with a mechanism for faculty feedback. Web-based virtual clinical encounter learning tools using patient avatars prompt additional student learning. Suturing skills introduced in live remote group sessions are augmented with video-guided individual practice. This article describes each of these adapted and innovative simulation methods and shares lessons learned during their development and implementation.


Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Curriculum , Midwifery/education , Nurse Practitioners/education , Simulation Training , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , SARS-CoV-2 , Students
5.
Nurs Womens Health ; 25(1): 82-92, 2021 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33453157

ABSTRACT

The midwifery and occupational health faculty of a U.S. university were approached by parish and health care leaders from Caldwell, Liberia, for assistance in addressing critical maternal health care needs in their community. Liberia has suffered setbacks in its efforts to improve health care for its people due to recent civil wars and the Ebola epidemic of 2014 to 2016. Initial discussions among international groups centered around realistic ways to help in the face of multiple compelling needs. Grant support for U.S. faculty to conduct exploratory meetings and educational workshops in Liberia was secured. Ethical principles and best practices in partnering across borders guided this partnership and include reciprocity, equity, and empowerment of health care workers, including nurses, midwives, community workers, and health center staff. Here, we describe the preparation for and implementation of these workshops, as well as plans for continuing collaborations that emerged from these workshops.


Subject(s)
Education, Nursing , Intersectoral Collaboration , Midwifery/education , Female , Humans , Liberia , Maternal Health Services , Nurses , United States
6.
Nurs Womens Health ; 24(3): 210-227, 2020 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32505360

ABSTRACT

Body art has become common and mainstream. Tattoos and body piercings represent highly individual expressions of identity and personal values. Health care services are enhanced when clinicians understand the anatomy and physiology, common discomforts, and real but rare serious risks of body modification and are prepared to provide compassionate support for individuals' choices. Special consideration must be given to the needs of childbearing women. By opening channels of communication, clinicians can engage with clients in shared decision making to help those who possess or desire body art take steps to reduce the risk of adverse effects and obtain prompt and effective medical care when problems arise. Through respectful discussion of existing body art, the therapeutic relationship is strengthened, and greater insight into an individual's health needs may be achieved.


Subject(s)
Body Piercing/adverse effects , Counseling/methods , Tattooing/adverse effects , Body Piercing/methods , Body Piercing/psychology , Counseling/trends , Humans , Social Stigma , Tattooing/methods , Tattooing/psychology
8.
J Midwifery Womens Health ; 64(2): 154-169, 2019 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30806488

ABSTRACT

Tattooing is a type of body modification that is both ancient and modern. Tattooing is rapidly increasing in popularity and prevalence, especially among younger people. Therefore, health care providers require knowledge about this form of artistic expression, including potential health implications and psychosocial significance. Tattooing is richly laden with cultural and personal meaning, but despite the increasingly mainstream status of this art form, individuals with tattoos may experience stigma, stereotyping, and discrimination in their personal and professional lives. The legal and regulatory aspects of tattoos have lagged behind the rapid growth of this art form, causing confusion and variation in practice. Particularly concerning is the multitude of largely unregulated tattoo inks marketed for human use but untested on humans. Common and uncommon side effects and complications of this procedure include hypersensitivity, infection, and regret. More women than men are now tattooed, and tattooing is associated with important implications for women's health care, including pregnancy, childbirth, and breastfeeding. Because of the frequency of regret, many individuals wish to be rid of previously acquired body art. Therefore, health care providers also need to be conversant with tattoo removal: motivations, techniques, risks, and factors influencing success. Familiarity with the many dimensions of body art will facilitate safe, compassionate health care provision and will enhance the therapeutic relationship enjoyed by clinicians and the individuals they serve.


Subject(s)
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Tattooing/history , Tattooing/legislation & jurisprudence , Tattooing/psychology , Coloring Agents/adverse effects , Creativity , Dermatitis/etiology , Female , History, 17th Century , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, 21st Century , Humans , Hypersensitivity/etiology , Infections/etiology , Male , Motivation , Needles/adverse effects , Social Perception , Social Stigma
9.
J Midwifery Womens Health ; 62(5): 521-530, 2017 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28806494

ABSTRACT

Body piercing has evolved from a behavior once considered extreme to an accepted choice among the general population. Earlobe piercing is so common that it is now considered a normative behavior. The motivations for choosing body piercing have changed and are associated with piercing site and number of piercings chosen by the individual. Meanings ascribed to body piercing were traditionally related to enhanced sexual desirability and experience, but now range from the innocuous, such as a fashion statement, to the risk laden, such as nonsuicidal self-injury. Professional piercers are the primary providers of piercing services, and people will first turn to their professional piercer for advice when complications of the site arise, thus delaying entry into needed health care. Health care providers are often perceived as uninformed, dismissive, and biased against individuals, who are pierced particularly those with multiple piercings and piercings in intimate areas of the body. Common complications of piercing include infection, bleeding, and problems relating to tissue trauma and scarring, and are reported by nearly 50% of individuals who are pierced. Metal allergies can develop as a result of piercing, making the type of jewelry used for body adornment an important consideration. Additionally, management of the piercing site becomes critical under certain conditions, such as during pregnancy and birth, lactation, or surgery. This article provides information supporting midwives and other health care providers to offer anticipatory guidance and health care services in a nonjudgmental and supportive manner to individuals choosing body piercing.

10.
Midwifery Today Int Midwife ; (108): 62-3, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24511849

ABSTRACT

Interest in the CM pathway to midwifery education is widely distributed across the US and not just tied to states in which the CM credential is legally recognized. The challenges to gain widespread legal recognition should not prevent us from losing sight of the potential for national growth in the midwifery workforce through advocacy for this credential. Midwifery leaders, practitioners and new graduates, CNMs, CMs and CPMs together, must work concurrently in education and health policy to bring about such change. Innovative solutions to expand midwifery that are firmly situated in the philosophical tenets and hallmarks of midwifery care are important to explore. Growing educational pathways leading to the CM credential is an example of an innovation that will strengthen and grow the American midwifery workforce, for the betterment of the women we serve.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence/standards , Credentialing/standards , Medical Staff Privileges/standards , Midwifery/education , Midwifery/standards , Curriculum , Female , Humans , Obstetrics/standards , Pregnancy , Schools, Nursing/organization & administration , Societies, Nursing/standards
11.
J Midwifery Womens Health ; 53(5): 413-20, 2008.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18761294

ABSTRACT

The imperative for midwifery educators is to transmit to their students midwifery's unique body of knowledge and hallmarks of care that guide midwifery practice. Concerns have been raised about the ability to maintain the unique aspects of midwifery practice in a culture where routine use of intervention prevails. A theory-practice gap may lead to fewer student midwives exposed to the perspective and practices of midwifery during their clinical education. Preceptor role modeling is important to developing student confidence, conceptualized as self-efficacy, to persist in the practice of midwifery hallmark behaviors, particularly under conditions that undermine these practices. This study examined student perceptions of preceptor behaviors of two midwifery hallmarks of practice: therapeutic presence and non-intervention in the absence of complication and student self-efficacy for performing these behaviors. Recent graduates of education programs accredited by the American College of Nurse-Midwives Division of Accreditation completed researcher-developed tools regarding perceptions of preceptor behaviors of therapeutic presence and non-intervention and their outcome expectancy and self-efficacy for the same behaviors. The results indicate that preceptor behaviors influence student confidence to perform hallmark behaviors. Student belief in the value of the hallmark to benefit women is the biggest predictor of self-efficacy for hallmark behaviors. Clinical and educational implications and directions for future research are discussed.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence , Midwifery/education , Preceptorship/standards , Self Efficacy , Cross-Sectional Studies , Empathy , Female , Humans , Midwifery/standards , Natural Childbirth , Nurse-Patient Relations , Philosophy, Nursing , Preceptorship/methods , Pregnancy , Students , Surveys and Questionnaires
12.
J Midwifery Womens Health ; 51(6): 493-501, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17081941

ABSTRACT

Basic elements of the structure, process, and outcomes of midwifery practice have not been fully determined, particularly in the areas of women's gynecologic and primary health care. The American College of Nurse-Midwives (ACNM) supported the development of clinical data sets to describe structure, process, and outcomes of midwifery practice for use by clinical practitioners. The Woman's Health Care Minimum Data Set was developed using a panel of expert midwives and other women's health care professionals, as well as literature resources. Students of the Graduate Midwifery Program at Philadelphia University performed pilot testing of the Woman's Health Care Minimum Data Set as a service to the profession of midwifery while applying concepts learned in their research methods courses. Each student (n = 19) recruited a midwifery practice in which she had a clinical affiliation, and gathered data sets on the previous 30 consecutive women's health care encounters by CNMs or CMs (n = 569). Item analysis and refinement were done. Criterion-related validity and construct-related validity of the Woman's Health Care Minimum Data Set were explored through comparison with the medical record and through the testing of plausible hypotheses. The Woman's Health Care Minimum Data Set has the potential to be an important instrument in documenting and understanding the evolving nature of the practice of primary women's health care by midwives and other women's health care providers.


Subject(s)
Clinical Competence , Education, Nursing, Graduate/methods , Midwifery/education , Nurse Midwives/education , Nursing Assessment/methods , Humans , Midwifery/standards , Nurse Midwives/standards , Nurse-Patient Relations , Nursing Assessment/standards , Organizational Innovation , Pennsylvania , Pilot Projects , Quality Indicators, Health Care , Women's Health Services/organization & administration
13.
J Midwifery Womens Health ; 51(3): 152-8, 2006.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16647667

ABSTRACT

Subclinical hypothyroidism and/or the presence of thyroid peroxidase antibodies (TPOAb) may be associated with subfertility, infertility, spontaneous abortion, placental abruption, preterm delivery, gestational hypertension, preeclampsia, postpartum thyroid dysfunction, depression (including postpartum depression), and impaired cognitive and psychomotor child development. In November 2002, the American Association of Clinical Endocrinologists (AACE) released new guidelines for clinical practice for the diagnosis and treatment of hyperthyroidism and hypothyroidism, which includes a new thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) reference range of 0.3 to 3.0 mIU/L. Recently, the AACE recommended screening all women considering conception and/or all gravid women in the first trimester for thyroid dysfunction. However, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) and the United States Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) have not endorsed these recommendations. This article reviews the evidence regarding screening women during pregnancy for subclinical hypothyroidism and/or the presence of thyroid peroxidase antibodies.


Subject(s)
Hypothyroidism/diagnosis , Pregnancy Complications/diagnosis , Female , Humans , Hypothyroidism/blood , Hypothyroidism/drug therapy , Hypothyroidism/physiopathology , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications/blood , Pregnancy Complications/drug therapy , Pregnancy Complications/physiopathology , Reference Values , Risk Factors , Sensitivity and Specificity , Thyrotropin/blood , Thyroxine/therapeutic use
14.
J Midwifery Womens Health ; 50(2): 122-8, 2005.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15749298

ABSTRACT

A Delphi survey was conducted with midwife scholars to determine the top 10 midwifery studies worthy of recognition in 2005, the 50th anniversary of the American College of Nurse-Midwives (ACNM). This survey was undertaken by students of Philadelphia University's Graduate Midwifery Program as a service-learning project on behalf of the ACNM Division of Research. Selected midwife scholars participated in 2 or 3 rounds of response and feedback to achieve consensus about research deemed historically or currently important to midwifery practice. The top 10 studies, as determined by the 19 participating midwife scholars, are presented here. These results are offered as reflection on research that has helped to shape and define the discipline of midwifery in the United States.


Subject(s)
Delphi Technique , Midwifery , Nursing Research , Education, Nursing, Graduate , Health Care Surveys , Humans , Midwifery/education , Pennsylvania , United States
15.
J Midwifery Womens Health ; 48(6): 444-8, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14660950

ABSTRACT

Service learning is learning acquired through experiential education that deliberately links service to others with the goal of achieving specific academic objectives. Service learning is an educational innovation that encompasses a wide range of activities and pedagogies while maintaining a commitment to principles of service. Although midwifery is a profession rooted in service to women and their families, scant attention has been paid to the purposeful inclusion of service-learning experiences in midwifery curricula. This article describes service learning and discusses practical applications in midwifery education.


Subject(s)
Altruism , Community Health Nursing/education , Education, Distance/methods , Midwifery/education , Nurse Midwives/education , Women's Health , Competency-Based Education , Education, Nursing , Female , Humans , Models, Educational , Organizational Innovation , Pregnancy , Problem-Based Learning , Teaching/methods , United States
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