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1.
Women Birth ; 37(2): 288-295, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37940475

ABSTRACT

PROBLEM: Despite 10 years of prescribing scheduled medicines by Endorsed Midwives, little is known about prescribing practices. BACKGROUND: Endorsed Midwives can prescribe scheduled medicines and have access to Medicare rebates to support service provision. Endorsed Midwives have the potential to improve access to medications for women, however, are met with barriers, including inconsistencies in state and national legislation. AIM: To search for what is published regarding Endorsed Midwife prescribing of scheduled medicines in Australia, report on the literature, synthesise the findings and discuss the results. METHODS: A scoping review utilising the Joanna Brigg's Institute methodology. A search of CINAHL, PubMed, Science Direct and Medline databases was conducted. Seven peer-reviewed articles were identified; three discussion papers, one literature review and three research papers, published between 2016 and 2023 in English. Qualitative content analysis was used to identify topic areas. FINDINGS: Four topic areas were identified: 1) Endorsed Midwives increase women's access to prescribed medications; 2) the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme is restrictive and diminishes midwifery prescribing; 3) medication prescribing depends on internal and external structures; 4) professional relationships support prescribing. DISCUSSION: The authority to prescribe augments Endorsed Midwives' practice, improves timely access to medications and enhances role satisfaction. The effective use of midwifery prescribing is hampered by barriers such as the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme, inappropriate medication formularies, and poorly designed health service policy. CONCLUSION: To fully utilise Endorsed Midwife prescribing in all settings of maternity care, further work is required to develop education, remove barriers, and demonstrate the safety and effectiveness of midwifery prescribing.


Subject(s)
Maternal Health Services , Midwifery , Nurse Midwives , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Australia , Midwifery/methods , National Health Programs , Pharmaceutical Preparations , Qualitative Research
2.
Women Birth ; 37(2): 278-287, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38142159

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Just over 300,000 women give birth in Australia each year. It is important for health care providers, managers, and policy makers know what women want from their care so services can be provided appropriately. This review is a part of the Midwifery Futures Project, which aims to prepare the midwifery workforce to best address the needs of women. The aim of this review was to describe and analyse current literature on the maternity care needs of women in Australia. METHODS: A scoping review methodology was used, guided by the Joanna Briggs Institute framework. A systematic search of the literature identified 9023 studies, and 59 met inclusion criteria: being peer-reviewed research focusing on maternity care needs, conducted in Australian populations, from 2012 to 2023. The studies were analysed using inductive content analysis. RESULTS: Four themes were developed: Continuity of care, being seen and heard, being safe, and being enabled. Continuity of care, especially a desire for midwifery continuity of care, was the central theme, as it was a tool supporting women to be seen and heard, safe, and enabled. CONCLUSION: This review highlights that women in Australia consistently want access to midwifery continuity of care as an enabler for addressing their maternity care needs. Transforming Australian maternity care policy and service provision towards continuity would better meet women's needs.


Subject(s)
Maternal Health Services , Midwifery , Obstetrics , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Australia
3.
Women Birth ; 36(1): 17-29, 2023 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35430186

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: In 2019 the Australian government released a guiding document for maternity care: Woman-centred care strategic directions for Australian maternity services (WCC Strategy), with mixed responses from providers and consumers. The aims of this paper were to: examine reasons behind reported dissatisfaction, and compare the WCC Strategy against similar international strategies/plans. The four guiding values in the WCC strategy: safety, respect, choice, and access were used to facilitate comparisons and provide recommendations to governments/health services enacting the plan. METHODS: Maternity plans published in English from comparable high-income countries were reviewed. FINDINGS: Eight maternity strategies/plans from 2011 to 2021 were included. There is an admirable focus in the WCC Strategy on respectful care, postnatal care, and culturally appropriate maternity models. Significant gaps in support for continuity of midwifery care and place of birth options were notable, despite robust evidence supporting both. In addition, clarity around women's right to make decisions about their care was lacking or contradictory in the majority of the strategies/plans. Addressing hierarchical, structure-based obstacles to regulation, policy, planning, service delivery models and funding mechanisms may be necessary to overcome concerns and barriers to implementation. We observed that countries where midwifery is more strongly embedded and autonomous, have guidelines recommending greater contributions from midwives. CONCLUSION: Maternity strategy/plans should be based on the best available evidence, with consistent and complementary recommendations. Within this framework, priority should be given to women's preferences and choices, rather than the interests of organisations and individuals.


Subject(s)
Maternal Health Services , Midwifery , Obstetrics , Female , Pregnancy , Humans , Australia , Parturition
4.
Women Birth ; 36(3): 281-289, 2023 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36127282

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: International guidelines recommend intrapartum cardiotocograph (CTG) monitoring for women at risk for poor perinatal outcome. Research has not previously addressed how midwives and obstetricians enable or hinder women's decision-making regarding intrapartum fetal monitoring and how this work is structured by external organising factors. AIM: To examine impacts of policy and research texts on midwives' and obstetricians' work with labouring women related to intrapartum fetal monitoring decision-making. METHODS: We used a critical feminist qualitative methodology known as Institutional Ethnography (IE). The research was conducted in an Australian tertiary maternity service. Data collection included interviews, observation, and texts relating to midwives' and obstetricians' work with the fetal monitoring system. Textual mapping was used to explain how midwives' and obstetricians' work was organised to happen the way it was. FINDINGS: CTG monitoring was initiated predominantly by midwives applying mandatory policy. Midwives described reluctance to inform labouring women that they had a choice of fetal monitoring method. Discursive approaches used in a national fetal surveillance guideline, a Cochrane systematic review, and the largest randomised controlled trial regarding CTG monitoring in labour generated and reproduced assumptions that clinicians, not labouring women, were the appropriate decision-maker regarding fetal monitoring in labour. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: Guidelines structured midwives' and obstetricians' work in a manner that undermined women's participation in decisions about fetal monitoring method. Intrapartum fetal monitoring guidelines should be critically reviewed to ensure they encourage and enable midwives and obstetricians to support women to make decisions about intrapartum care.


Subject(s)
Labor, Obstetric , Midwifery , Pregnancy , Female , Humans , Australia , Midwifery/methods , Fetal Monitoring/methods , Anthropology, Cultural
5.
Women Birth ; 35(2): e188-e197, 2022 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34039518

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The capacity for midwifery to improve maternity care is under-utilised. Midwives have expressed limits on their autonomy to provide quality care in relation to intrapartum fetal heart rate monitoring. AIM: To explore how the work of midwives and obstetricians was textually structured by policy documents related to intrapartum fetal heart rate monitoring. METHODS: Institutional Ethnography, a critical qualitative approach was used. Data were collected in an Australian hospital with a central fetal monitoring system. Midwives (n=34) and obstetricians (n=16) with experience working with the central fetal monitoring system were interviewed and observed. Policy documents were collected and analysed. FINDINGS: Midwives' work was strongly structured by policy documents that required escalation of care for any CTG abnormality. Prior to being able to escalate care, midwives were often interrupted by other clinicians uninvited entry into the room in response to the CTG seen at the central monitoring station. While the same collection of documents guided the work of both obstetricians and midwives, they generated the expectation that midwives must perform certain tasks while obstetricians may perform others. Midwifery work was textually invisible. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION: Our findings provide a concrete example of the way policy documents both reflect and generate power imbalances in maternity care. Obstetric ways of knowing and doing are reinforced within these documents and continue to diminish the visibility and autonomy of midwifery. Midwifery organisations are well placed to co-lead policy development and reform in collaboration with maternity consumer and obstetric organisations.


Subject(s)
Maternal Health Services , Midwifery , Nurse Midwives , Anthropology, Cultural , Australia , Female , Fetal Monitoring , Humans , Policy , Pregnancy , Qualitative Research
6.
Women Birth ; 35(1): e1-e9, 2022 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33485817

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: A care bundle to reduce severe perineal trauma (the bundle) was introduced in 28 Australian maternity hospitals in 2018. The bundle includes five components of which only one - warm perineal compresses - has highest level evidence. There is scant published research about the impact of implementation of perineal bundles. QUESTION: How does a perineal care bundle impact midwifery practice in Australian maternity hospitals? METHODS: Purposively sampled midwives who worked in hospitals where the bundle had been implemented. Interested midwives were recruited to participate in one-to-one, semi-structured interviews. The researchers conducted critical, reflexive thematic analysis informed by Foucauldian concepts of power. FINDINGS: We interviewed 12 midwives from five hospitals in one state of Australia. Participants varied by age, clinical role, experience, and education. Three themes were generated: 1) bundle design and implementation 2) changing midwifery practice: obedience, subversion, and compliance; and 3) obstetric dominance and midwifery submission. DISCUSSION: The bundle exemplifies tensions between obstetric and midwifery constructs of safety in normal birth. Participants' responses appear consistent with oppressed group behaviour previously reported in nurses and midwives. Women expect midwives to facilitate maternal autonomy yet decision-making in maternity care is commonly geared towards obtaining consent. In our study midwives encouraged women to consent or decline depending on their personal preferences. CONCLUSION: The introduction of the perineal bundle acts as an exemplar of obstetric dominance in Australian maternity care. We recommend midwives advocate autonomy - women's and their own - by using clinical judgement, evidence, and woman-centred care.


Subject(s)
Maternal Health Services , Midwifery , Patient Care Bundles , Australia , Female , Hospitals, Maternity , Humans , Pregnancy , Qualitative Research
7.
Women Birth ; 35(2): 193-200, 2022 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34092530

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Central fetal monitoring systems transmit cardiotocograph data to a central site in a maternity service. Despite a paucity of evidence of safety, the installation of central fetal monitoring systems is common. AIM: This qualitative research sought to explore whether, and how, clinicians modified their clinical safety related behaviours following the introduction of a central monitoring system. METHODS: An Institutional Ethnographic enquiry was conducted at an Australian hospital where a central fetal monitoring system had been installed in 2016. Informants (n=50) were midwifery and obstetric staff. Data collection consisted of interviews and observations that were analysed to understand whether and how clinicians modified their clinical safety related behaviours. FINDINGS: The introduction of the central monitoring system was associated with clinical decision making without complete clinical information. Midwives' work was disrupted. Higher levels of anxiety were described for midwives and birthing women. Midwives reported higher rates of intervention in response to the visibility of the cardiotocograph at the central monitoring station. Midwives described a shift in focus away from the birthing woman towards documenting in the central monitoring system. DISCUSSION: The introduction of central fetal monitoring prompted new behaviours among midwifery and obstetric staff that may potentially undermine clinical safety. CONCLUSION: This research raises concerns that central fetal monitoring systems may not promote safe intrapartum care. We argue that research examining the safety of central fetal monitoring systems is required.


Subject(s)
Midwifery , Nurse Midwives , Anthropology, Cultural , Australia , Female , Fetal Monitoring , Humans , Pregnancy , Qualitative Research
8.
Midwifery ; 102: 103074, 2021 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34218022

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Technologies for fetal heart rate monitoring have been widely introduced despite evidence of no improvement in perinatal outcomes. A significant body of research has raised concerns that healthcare information technologies can have unintended consequences. We sought to describe an unintended consequence of central fetal monitoring technology. DESIGN: The research was conducted as an Institutional Ethnography. Data generated from interviews, focus groups, and observations were analysed to generate an account of midwives' experiences with the central fetal monitoring system. SETTING: The birthing unit of one Australian maternity service with a central fetal monitoring system. INFORMANTS: 34 midwives and midwifery students who worked with the central fetal monitoring system. FINDINGS: Midwives described a disruptive social event they named being K2ed. Clinicians responded to perceived cardiotocograph abnormalities by entering the birth room despite the midwife not having requested assistance. Being K2ed disrupted midwives' clinical work and generated anxiety. Clinical communication was undermined, and midwives altered their clinical practice. Midwives performed additional documentation work to attempt to avoid being K2ed. KEY CONCLUSIONS: This is the first report of an unintended consequence relating to central fetal monitoring, demonstrating how central fetal monitoring technology potentially undermines safety by impacting on clinical and relational processes and outcomes in maternity care. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Current evidence does not support implementation or ongoing use of central fetal monitoring systems. Further research is needed to inform scaling down central fetal monitoring systems in a safe and supported way.


Subject(s)
Maternal Health Services , Midwifery , Nurse Midwives , Australia , Female , Fetal Monitoring , Humans , Pregnancy , Prenatal Care , Qualitative Research
9.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ; 21(1): 409, 2021 May 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34051749

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Being born small for gestational age is a strong predictor of the short- and long-term health of the neonate, child, and adult. Variation in the rates of small for gestational age have been identified across population groups in high income countries, including Australia. Understanding the factors contributing to this variation may assist clinicians to reduce the morbidity and mortality associated with being born small. Victoria, in addition to New South Wales, accounts for the largest proportion of net overseas migration and births in Australia. The aim of this research was to analyse how migration was associated with small for gestational age in Victoria. METHODS: This was a cross sectional population health study of singleton births in Victoria from 2009 to 2018 (n = 708,475). The prevalence of being born small for gestational age (SGA; <10th centile) was determined for maternal region of origin groups. Multivariate logistic regression analysis was used to analyse the association between maternal region of origin and SGA. RESULTS: Maternal region of origin was an independent risk factor for SGA in Victoria (p < .001), with a prevalence of SGA for migrant women of 11.3% (n = 27,815) and 7.3% for Australian born women (n = 33,749). Women from the Americas (aOR1.24, 95%CI:1.14 to 1.36), North Africa, North East Africa, and the Middle East (aOR1.57, 95%CI:1.52 to 1.63); Southern Central Asia (aOR2.58, 95%CI:2.50 to 2.66); South East Asia (aOR2.02, 95%CI: 1.95 to 2.01); and sub-Saharan Africa (aOR1.80, 95%CI:1.69 to 1.92) were more likely to birth an SGA child in comparison to women born in Australia. CONCLUSIONS: Victorian woman's region of origin was an independent risk factor for SGA. Variation in the rates of SGA between maternal regions of origin suggests additional factors such as a woman's pre-migration exposures, the context of the migration journey, settlement conditions and social environment post migration might impact the potential for SGA. These findings highlight the importance of intergenerational improvements to the wellbeing of migrant women and their children. Further research to identify modifiable elements that contribute to birthweight differences across population groups would help enable appropriate healthcare responses aimed at reducing the rate of being SGA.


Subject(s)
Emigrants and Immigrants , Infant, Small for Gestational Age , Pregnancy Complications/epidemiology , Prenatal Care , Adult , Africa/ethnology , Asia/ethnology , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications/diet therapy , Pregnancy Complications/etiology , Risk Factors , Victoria/epidemiology
10.
Midwifery ; 99: 103014, 2021 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33932706

ABSTRACT

Ethnography is a useful research method for maternity care research, because it can identify elements of actual practice that may be missed using non-observational research. However, because of the relative creative freedom of writing ethnography, it can be difficult for novice researchers, because there is no particular set of steps to follow. Much of the work of an ethnography is actually just watching, thinking and writing. In this paper we discuss our three individual doctoral research projects- all variations of critical ethnography-in order to present some of the creative variety of ethnography in maternity care research and to promote discussion within this field about how to maintain robust ethnographic research while keeping hold of its creative aspects. Attempts to standardise ethnographic research have the potential to curtail a very flexible methodology and constrain the knowledge generating work of the researcher. We encourage fellow maternity researchers to contribute to literature on ethnographic methodology in order to expand and refine use of this methodology in maternity care settings.


Subject(s)
Maternal Health Services , Obstetrics , Anthropology, Cultural , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Research Design , Writing
11.
Women Birth ; 33(5): 411-418, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31668871

ABSTRACT

PROBLEM: Caesarean section rates have risen in high-income countries. One of the potential drivers for this is the widespread use of CTG monitoring. BACKGROUND: Intrapartum cardiotocograph monitoring is considered to be indicated for women at risk for poor perinatal outcome. AIM: This systematic literature review with meta-analysis examined randomised controlled trials and non-experimental research to determine whether cardiotocograph monitoring rather than intermittent auscultation during labour was associated with changes in perinatal mortality or cerebral palsy rates for high-risk women. METHODS: A systematic search for research published up to 2019 was conducted using PubMed, CINAHL, Cochrane, and Web of Science databases. Non-experimental and randomised controlled trial research in populations of women at risk which compared intrapartum cardiotocography with intermittent auscultation and reported on stillbirth, neonatal mortality, perinatal mortality and/or cerebral palsy were included. Relative risks were calculated from extracted data, and meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials was undertaken. FINDINGS: Nine randomised controlled trials and 26 non-experimental studies were included. Meta-analysis of pooled data from RCTs in mixed- and high-risk populations found no statistically significant differences in perinatal mortality rates. The majority of non-experimental research was at critical risk of bias and should not be relied on to inform practice. Cardiotocograph monitoring during preterm labour was associated with a higher incidence of cerebral palsy. DISCUSSION: Research evidence failed to demonstrate perinatal benefits from intrapartum cardiotocograph monitoring for women at risk for poor perinatal outcome. CONCLUSION: There is an urgent need for well-designed research to consider whether intrapartum cardiotocograph monitoring provides benefits.


Subject(s)
Auscultation , Cardiotocography/methods , Fetal Monitoring/methods , Perinatal Mortality , Stillbirth/epidemiology , Cerebral Palsy/epidemiology , Cesarean Section , Female , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Labor, Obstetric , Parturition , Pregnancy
12.
Aust Prescr ; 39(6): 215-218, 2016 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27990050
13.
Women Birth ; 29(5): 436-442, 2016 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26964846

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Midwifery prescribing was introduced in Australia in 2010 and is available to those notated as Medicare Eligible. Only 59% of Medicare Eligible midwives are endorsed prescribers. AIM: To explore and describe Australian midwives views of prescribing including the barriers and enablers to prescribing. METHODS: Online survey. Eligible participants were Australian midwives who had completed an educational programme required for endorsement as a midwifery prescriber (n=131). Descriptive statistics and content analysis were used to analyse the data set. RESULTS: Sixty-six midwives entered data (50% response rate). Twelve midwives (18%) had commenced prescribing. Prescribers agreed that being able to prescribe enhanced women's access to medicines and role satisfaction. The most common barriers to initiating prescribing were regulatory issues and processes, and no pathway to support midwifery prescribing in the public sector. The enabling factors most commonly reported were supportive relationships, education and personal factors such as motivation, knowledge and confidence. CONCLUSION: Prescribing was viewed positively by midwives, but only a small proportion of suitably educated midwives were able to translate this into prescribing. Prolonged and complicated registration processes, restrictive drug formularies, and a lack of prescribing roles for public sector midwives were clear barriers. Supportive professional relationships, quality education and personal motivation and confidence assisted midwives in overcoming these barriers. Offering mentoring may help midwives to move into prescribing practice and use it in a manner that best meets the health needs of women and infants in midwifery care.


Subject(s)
Drug Prescriptions/statistics & numerical data , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Midwifery/education , Professional Competence , Adult , Attitude of Health Personnel , Australia , Delivery of Health Care/standards , Female , Humans , Infant , Midwifery/statistics & numerical data , Pregnancy , Surveys and Questionnaires
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