{"title":"Women’s traumatic childbirth experiences: Reflections and implications for practice","authors":"F. Yvonne","doi":"10.33118/OAJ.PREG.2019.01.001","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Objective: This study aims to explore women’s traumatic childbirth experiences in order to make maternity care professionals more aware of women’s intrapartum care needs to prevent traumatic experiences.\n\nMethods: A qualitative exploratory study with a constant comparison/ grounded theory design was performed. Thirty-six interviews were conducted with women who had given birth in a Dutch birth setting.\n\nFindings: Four themes, playing a profound role in the occurrence of traumatic birth experiences, emerged:\n\n1 Midwife-LED care – Maternity care professionals’ unilateral decision making during intrapartum care.\n\n2. Alienation – Women’s experiences of feeling distant and estranged from the childbirth event and the experience.\n\n3. Situatedness – The difference of the impact of interventions in situations when complications or emergencies are present in contrast to when interventions are performed without an emergency reason.\n\n4. Discrepancies - Paradoxes between expectations (ought self) and reality (actual self) - on an interpersonal (woman) and intrapersonal (woman-midwife) level.\n\nImplications for practice: Intrapartum care needs to include informed-consent and shared-decision making. Practitioners need to continuously evaluate if the woman is consistently part of her own childbearing process. Practitioners need to provide personalised care, make an effort to explain (emergency) situations, be conscious of their non-verbal communication and maintain an ongoing dialogue with the woman.\n\nConclusion: Intrapartum care can be adapted, adopting a woman-centred approach, in order to prevent women’s traumatic childbirth experiences. This study can serve as a valuable assistance for maternity services, midwifery practice, research and for developing guidance in the field of midwifery practitioners’ education.\n\nKeywords: Traumatic birth experience, Maternity care, Intrapartum care, Informed-consent, Shared-decision making, Woman-centred care, Qualitative research.","PeriodicalId":93345,"journal":{"name":"OA journal of pregnancy and child care","volume":"65 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-11-02","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"OA journal of pregnancy and child care","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.33118/OAJ.PREG.2019.01.001","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Objective: This study aims to explore women’s traumatic childbirth experiences in order to make maternity care professionals more aware of women’s intrapartum care needs to prevent traumatic experiences.
Methods: A qualitative exploratory study with a constant comparison/ grounded theory design was performed. Thirty-six interviews were conducted with women who had given birth in a Dutch birth setting.
Findings: Four themes, playing a profound role in the occurrence of traumatic birth experiences, emerged:
1 Midwife-LED care – Maternity care professionals’ unilateral decision making during intrapartum care.
2. Alienation – Women’s experiences of feeling distant and estranged from the childbirth event and the experience.
3. Situatedness – The difference of the impact of interventions in situations when complications or emergencies are present in contrast to when interventions are performed without an emergency reason.
4. Discrepancies - Paradoxes between expectations (ought self) and reality (actual self) - on an interpersonal (woman) and intrapersonal (woman-midwife) level.
Implications for practice: Intrapartum care needs to include informed-consent and shared-decision making. Practitioners need to continuously evaluate if the woman is consistently part of her own childbearing process. Practitioners need to provide personalised care, make an effort to explain (emergency) situations, be conscious of their non-verbal communication and maintain an ongoing dialogue with the woman.
Conclusion: Intrapartum care can be adapted, adopting a woman-centred approach, in order to prevent women’s traumatic childbirth experiences. This study can serve as a valuable assistance for maternity services, midwifery practice, research and for developing guidance in the field of midwifery practitioners’ education.
Keywords: Traumatic birth experience, Maternity care, Intrapartum care, Informed-consent, Shared-decision making, Woman-centred care, Qualitative research.