保留高灵敏度分娩和分娩单位的助产护理模式:助产士在美国部落卫生系统工作的观点。

Anjali Madeira, Kimberly Fleming, Megan Webb, Heather Wheelock
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引用次数: 0

摘要

今天,近十分之九的注册护士助产士/注册助产士(CNMs/CMs)在医院接生。随着对医院助产护理的需求在过去的四分之一世纪中不断增加,CNM/CMs的实践范围已经扩大到包括对高危患者的护理。医院cnm /CMs面临着平衡支持生理性分娩与日益复杂的怀孕人口在医疗化生态系统中照顾的挑战。对患者风险的不同看法和独特的护理理念可能导致助产士和医生之间就最适合患者的护理计划进行复杂的讨论。本文分享了阿拉斯加土著部落卫生系统医院助产实践的经验和成功经验,并探讨了促进助产护理模式(MMOC)的策略。这个部落卫生系统的助产士经历了强有力的跨专业合作,并组织关注以患者为中心的基于关系的护理。跨专业合作被认为是在医院环境中保护MMOC的最关键因素之一。虽然彼此不同,但医疗和助产模式可以在高危患者的护理中互补,并且提供了“两只眼睛看”的土著概念,作为整合两种护理模式的方法,以实现对分娩人员及其家庭的最佳护理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Preserving the Midwifery Model of Care on a High Acuity Labor and Delivery Unit: Midwives' Perspectives Working in a US Tribal Health System.

Today nearly 9 out of 10 certified nurse-midwives/certified midwives (CNMs/CMs) attend births in hospitals. As the demand for hospital midwifery care has increased over the last quarter century, CNM/CMs' scope of practice has expanded to include care for high-risk patients. Hospital CNMs/CMs are faced with the challenge of balancing support for physiologic birth with an increasingly complex pregnant population cared for in a medicalized ecosystem. Varied perceptions of patient risk and unique philosophies of care can lead to complex discussions between midwives and physicians on the most appropriate care plan for patients. This article shares the experiences and successes of a hospital midwifery practice in the Alaska Native Tribal Health System and explores strategies for promoting the midwifery model of care (MMOC). Midwives in this Tribal Health System experience robust interprofessional collaboration and an organizational focus on patient-centered relationship-based care. Interprofessional collaboration is noted to be among the most critical elements for protecting a MMOC in a hospital setting. Although distinct from one another, the medical and midwifery models can be complementary in the care of high-risk patients, and the Indigenous concept of Two-Eyed Seeing is offered as an approach to integrating the 2 models of care to achieve optimal care for birthing people and their families.

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