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Fairy tale midwifery ten years on: facilitating the transition to newly qualified midwife

Fairy tale midwifery ten years on: facilitating the transition to newly qualified midwife
Fairy tale midwifery ten years on: facilitating the transition to newly qualified midwife
The first article in this series, published in BJM Vol 27 No 10, identified that newly qualified midwives continue to experience reality shock on initiation of first post, despite preceptorship programmes that aim to ease transition from student to qualified practitioner. Mentors are important in facilitating student decisionmaking, criticality and reflective practice, and share such roles as teaching, support and role modelling with preceptors. Although transition begins at the inception of midwifery training, there is a paucity of research exploring the role of mentors in preparing students for autonomous practice. The recent shift to replace mentors with practice supervisors and assessors provides an opportunity to consider strategies to better prepare student midwives for autonomous practice and mitigate against fairy tale midwifery.
0969-4900
716-723
Ashforth, Kate
7eeef628-6375-4320-8da8-221e87108236
Kitson-Reynolds, Ellen
28b0a1aa-6f3c-4fed-bf0a-456fe5f5ca73
Ashforth, Kate
7eeef628-6375-4320-8da8-221e87108236
Kitson-Reynolds, Ellen
28b0a1aa-6f3c-4fed-bf0a-456fe5f5ca73

Ashforth, Kate and Kitson-Reynolds, Ellen (2019) Fairy tale midwifery ten years on: facilitating the transition to newly qualified midwife. British Journal of Midwifery, 27 (12), 716-723. (doi:10.12968/bjom.2019.27.12.782).

Record type: Review

Abstract

The first article in this series, published in BJM Vol 27 No 10, identified that newly qualified midwives continue to experience reality shock on initiation of first post, despite preceptorship programmes that aim to ease transition from student to qualified practitioner. Mentors are important in facilitating student decisionmaking, criticality and reflective practice, and share such roles as teaching, support and role modelling with preceptors. Although transition begins at the inception of midwifery training, there is a paucity of research exploring the role of mentors in preparing students for autonomous practice. The recent shift to replace mentors with practice supervisors and assessors provides an opportunity to consider strategies to better prepare student midwives for autonomous practice and mitigate against fairy tale midwifery.

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Accepted/In Press date: 12 November 2019
Published date: 4 December 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 436606
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/436606
ISSN: 0969-4900
PURE UUID: f340571b-c82c-45d1-bd84-0825f8edf119
ORCID for Ellen Kitson-Reynolds: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8099-883X

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Date deposited: 18 Dec 2019 17:30
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:59

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Author: Kate Ashforth

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