Women’s views on the impact of operative delivery in the second stage of labour: Qualitative interview study
Women’s views on the impact of operative delivery in the second stage of labour: Qualitative interview study
Objective: To obtain the views of women on the impact of operative delivery in the second stage of labour.
Design: Qualitative interview study.
Setting: Two urban teaching hospitals in the United Kingdom.
Participants: Purposive sample of 27 women who had undergone operative delivery in the second stage of labour between January 2000 and January 2002.
Key themes: Preparation for birth, understandings of the indications for operative delivery, and explanation or debriefing after birth.
Results: The women felt unprepared for operative delivery and thought that their birth plan or antenatal classes had not catered adequately for this event. They emphasised the importance of maintaining an open mind about the management of labour. They had difficulty understanding the need for operative delivery despite a review by medical and midwifery staff before discharge. Operative delivery had a noticeable impact on women's views about future pregnancy and delivery.
Conclusions: Women consider postnatal debriefing and medical review important deficiencies in current care. Those who experienced operative delivery in the second stage of labour would welcome the opportunity to have a later review of their intrapartum care, physical recovery, and management of future pregnancies.
women's views, impact, delivery, second stage, labour, qualitative study
1-5
Murphy, D.J.
732d28cd-27d6-4153-b2aa-8b2d9996b9c9
Pope, C.
537319b8-553d-4ffd-a9da-7cd840e7a829
Frost, J.
6a4951f8-9b73-4b99-8024-35ba4bd191ed
Leibling, R.E.
77b34f22-7bae-4ec9-9480-b898c00c004b
November 2003
Murphy, D.J.
732d28cd-27d6-4153-b2aa-8b2d9996b9c9
Pope, C.
537319b8-553d-4ffd-a9da-7cd840e7a829
Frost, J.
6a4951f8-9b73-4b99-8024-35ba4bd191ed
Leibling, R.E.
77b34f22-7bae-4ec9-9480-b898c00c004b
Murphy, D.J., Pope, C., Frost, J. and Leibling, R.E.
(2003)
Women’s views on the impact of operative delivery in the second stage of labour: Qualitative interview study.
BMJ, 327 (1132), .
(doi:10.1136/bmj.327.7424.1132).
Abstract
Objective: To obtain the views of women on the impact of operative delivery in the second stage of labour.
Design: Qualitative interview study.
Setting: Two urban teaching hospitals in the United Kingdom.
Participants: Purposive sample of 27 women who had undergone operative delivery in the second stage of labour between January 2000 and January 2002.
Key themes: Preparation for birth, understandings of the indications for operative delivery, and explanation or debriefing after birth.
Results: The women felt unprepared for operative delivery and thought that their birth plan or antenatal classes had not catered adequately for this event. They emphasised the importance of maintaining an open mind about the management of labour. They had difficulty understanding the need for operative delivery despite a review by medical and midwifery staff before discharge. Operative delivery had a noticeable impact on women's views about future pregnancy and delivery.
Conclusions: Women consider postnatal debriefing and medical review important deficiencies in current care. Those who experienced operative delivery in the second stage of labour would welcome the opportunity to have a later review of their intrapartum care, physical recovery, and management of future pregnancies.
Text
Pope,_C_et_al_-_Women's_views_labour_-_bmj_2003.pdf
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More information
Published date: November 2003
Additional Information:
Related Article: Women feel unprepared for operative deliveries - BMJ 2003 327: 0.
Keywords:
women's views, impact, delivery, second stage, labour, qualitative study
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 17378
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/17378
ISSN: 0959-8138
PURE UUID: 796e0cae-5a94-40a9-8907-6b39322b741d
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Date deposited: 02 Sep 2005
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:58
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Contributors
Author:
D.J. Murphy
Author:
C. Pope
Author:
J. Frost
Author:
R.E. Leibling
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