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1.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38849137

ABSTRACT

Aim: The aim of the study is to explore perceived reality and subjective importance of shared decision-making (SDM) during antenatal, intrapartum, and/or postpartum care, provided by the midwife and/or obstetrician. Methods: A cross- sectional study was conducted among women in Flanders, Belgium. SDM was measured with the Observing PatienT InvOlvemeNt scale. Tests examined the differences between perceived reality and subjective importance of SDM. A multivariate generalized linear model tested the main and interaction effects between SDM and the maternity care providers and the perinatal care periods. Bonferroni post hoc tests examined further significance. Results: A total of 1,216 pregnant and postpartum participants completed 1,987 self-reports of perceived reality and subjective importance of SDM. The community midwives' SDM was evaluated 924/1,987 times, the hospital midwives' SDM 309/1,987 times, and the obstetricians' SDM 754/1,987 times. Perceived reality and subjective importance of SDM showed significant differences between care professionals (p < .001; p < .001), explained by the differences between community and hospital midwives' SDM (p < .001, d85; p < .001; d28) and between community midwives and obstetricians' SDM (p < .001, d72; p < .001; d31). Conclusions: The findings indicate optimizing the decision-making process during perinatal care by aligning subjective importance and perceived reality of SDM throughout the perinatal care episodes. Community midwives seem to be benchmarkers of shared decision-making during perinatal care.

2.
Comput Inform Nurs ; 2024 May 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38701038

ABSTRACT

This study aimed to determine what childbearing women want when using virtual reality as an intrapartum pain management method. Researchers performed a qualitative exploratory study using content analysis. Two focus groups were organized including pregnant women anticipating a vaginal birth and women who recently had given birth, no longer than 6 months ago. The focus groups included a 30-minute virtual reality demo. In total, 10 women participated. Five themes emerged: (1) "try, test and explore": the need to receive information and to get acquainted with virtual reality during the antenatal period; (2) "variety and diversity in physical and digital options": the preference for a variety in virtual content and view virtual reality as a complementary method to methods for intrapartum pain management; (3) "distraction versus focus": virtual reality as a method to distract from pain, from the clinical context or to help them focus; (4) "comfort both physical and digital": measures to ensure a comfortable physical and virtual experience; and (5) "birthing partner": the potential need to include partners. This study is an essential step informing the development, implementation, and research of labor-specific virtual reality and informing antenatal healthcare providers when offering women virtual reality as intrapartum pain management.

3.
Scand J Caring Sci ; 38(2): 461-475, 2024 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38450770

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To reach consensus between care providers and childbearing women about the midwife's relevant and appropriate domains and elements to support transition to motherhood. METHODS: A modified web-based Delphi study was conducted in Flanders (Belgium). After performing a systematic literature review, searching the grey literature and an online poll, a set of 79 items was generated. In two rounds, the items were presented to an expert panel of (1) care providers from various disciplines providing services to childbearing women and (2) to pregnant women and postpartum women up to 1-year postpartum. Consensus was defined when 70% or more of the experts scored ≥6, 5% or less scored ≤3, and a standard deviation of ≤1.1. FINDINGS: In the first Delphi round, 91 experts reached consensus on 24 items. Seventeen round one items that met one or two consensus objectives were included in round two and were scored by 64 panel experts, reaching consensus on three additional items. The final 27 items covered seven domains: attributes, liaison, management of care from a woman-centred perspective, management of care from the midwife's focus, informational support, relational support, and the midwife's competencies. CONCLUSION: The shared understanding between childbearing women and care providers shows that the midwife's transitional support is multifaceted. Our findings offer midwives a standard of care, criteria, guidance, and advice on how they can support childbearing women during transition to motherhood, beyond the existing recommendations and current provision of transitional care.


Subject(s)
Delphi Technique , Humans , Female , Pregnancy , Adult , Midwifery , Belgium , Mothers/psychology , Health Personnel/psychology
4.
Midwifery ; 130: 103912, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38154428

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Positive benchmarking can serve as a catalyst for maternity care improvement. AIM: To retrospectively benchmark Flemish maternity care providers' qualities, based on women's positive care experiences, and to explore which attributes of the different care providers contribute to these experiences. METHODS: A sequential, two-phased mixed-methods study benchmarking the qualities of the community midwife, the hospital midwife, and the obstetrician. An online questionnaire was used to collect the data among pregnant and postpartum women, who rated their care experiences with the various care providers using the Net Promoter Score. Non-parametric and post hoc tests established the differences between types of clinicians and between antenatal, intrapartum, and postpartum Net Promoter Score mean scores. Content analysis was used to construct a final pool of keywords representing attributes of care professionals, accumulated from the promoters' free text responses. Ranks were assigned to each keyword based on its frequency. FINDINGS: A total of 2385 Net Promoter Scale scores and 1856 free-text responses of 1587 responders were included. The community midwife received the overall highest NPS scores (p < .001). The promoters (n = 1015) assigned community midwives the highest NPS scores (9.67), followed by obstetricians (9.57) and hospital-based midwives (9.51). The distinct benchmarking attributes of community midwives were availability (p < .001), supportiveness (p = .04) and personalised care (p < .001). Being honest (p < .001), empathic (p < .001) and inexhaustible (p = .04) benchmarked hospital midwives. Calmness (p < .001), a no-nonsense approach (p < .001), being humane (p = .01) and comforting (p = .02) benchmarked obstetricians. DISCUSSION/CONCLUSION: The findings indicate that all care providers are highly valued, but community midwives are ranked the highest. The distinct differences between the care professionals can serve as exemplary performance for professional development and shape the profiles of maternity care professionals.


Subject(s)
Maternal Health Services , Midwifery , Obstetrics , Pregnancy , Female , Humans , Retrospective Studies , Obstetrics/methods , Midwifery/methods , Parturition
5.
Sex Reprod Healthc ; 36: 100856, 2023 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37229926

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Little is known about the full scope of emotional wellbeing of mothers up to one year postpartum, to adequately support women during transition to motherhood. Reduced emotional wellbeing (REW) affects women's adaption to the changes and challenges in becoming a mother. We aimed to increase the knowledge and understanding of mothers' emotional wellbeing and the influencing factors. METHODS: This cross-sectional study includes 385 Flemish mothers up to one year postpartum. Online data were collected with the General Health Questionnaire-12, Postpartum Bonding Questionnaire, Personal Well-Being Index-Adult, The Basic Psychological Needs Scale, Sense of Coherence-13 and Coping Operations Preference Enquiry. RESULTS: A total of 63.9% of the participants reported REW. Mothers with REW more often had (a history of) psychological problems compared to mothers with healthy emotional wellbeing (p = 0.007). Multiple linear regression analysis showed negative associations between emotional wellbeing and satisfaction (p = 0.002; p < 0.001), comprehensibility (p = 0.013) and positive associations between emotional wellbeing and bonding (p < 0.001), manageability (p = 0.033), problem solving (p = 0.030) and avoidance (p = 0,011) - with an explained variance of 55.5%. LIMITATIONS: Some limitations of our study are the GHQ-12 cut-off value, the nature and implication of (a history of) psychological problems and the self-selected population. CONCLUSION: It would be of worth for midwives to discuss with mothers (to be) what to expect. This - to support mothers in making sense of their life as a mother and how various factors might influence their emotional wellbeing. The high prevalence of REW is worrying, but needs to be interpreted with caution.


Subject(s)
Depression, Postpartum , Emotions , Adult , Female , Humans , Cross-Sectional Studies , Postpartum Period/psychology , Mothers/psychology , Anxiety/psychology , Depression, Postpartum/epidemiology
6.
Midwifery ; 105: 103213, 2022 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34902679

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: In this study we aimed to reveal midwives' distinct perspectives about midwifery support of women in their transition process during the continuum from pregnancy to one-year postpartum. DESIGN: A Q-methodology study, a mixed quantitative-qualitative approach, was conducted. Participants (P-set) rank-ordered 36 statements (Q-set) about how midwives provide support during the woman's transition to motherhood, followed by interviews to motivate their ranking. To extract the perspectives/factors on support during this transition process, centroid by-person factor analysis and varimax rotation was used. The transcripts of the interviews were interpreted per factor. SETTING: Independent (self-employed) and employed, community and hospital-based practising midwives in Flanders, Belgium. PARTICIPANTS: 83 practicing midwives participated, selected on: variation in practice setting, years of experience, views on the woman's domestic role in family life, and motherhood status. FINDINGS: Two distinct perspectives (factors) on supporting women in transition to motherhood emerged. The job-focused midwife acts according to evidence, knowledge and guidelines and adheres to the scope and tasks within the professional profile (Factor 1). The woman-focused midwife acts within a relationship of trust emphasizing the one-on-one connection while supporting transition to motherhood and the woman's needs (Factor 2). Both factors showed an explained total variance of 59% of the Q-set. KEY CONCLUSIONS: Both the job-focused midwife and the woman-focused midwife represent distinct perspectives about the midwife's execution of supporting transition to motherhood, including salotugenic elements. This provides an understanding of midwives' thoughts and experiences about why and how support is given. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: More awareness about the subjective distinct ways of thinking about supporting transition to motherhood should be integrated in practice, midwifery education and professional development.


Subject(s)
Midwifery , Nurse Midwives , Belgium , Female , Humans , Pregnancy
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