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☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Editorial Board

— Febrero 1st 2020 at 01:00
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

The role and outcomes of music listening for women in childbirth: An integrative review

Por: Tríona McCaffrey · Pui Sze Cheung · Maebh Barry · Pattie Punch · Liz Dore — Enero 7th 2020 at 01:00
To synthesise primary research on the role and use of music listening for women in childbirth.
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Women's information needs, decision-making and experiences of membrane sweeping to promote spontaneous labour

Por: Julie Roberts · Kerry Evans · Helen Spiby · Catrin Evans · Phoebe Pallotti · Jeanette Eldridge — Enero 5th 2020 at 01:00
UK policy currently recommends membrane sweeping to avoid prolonged pregnancy and reduce the need for formal induction. Guidance from the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE, 2008) on induction of labour recommends that at 40- and 41-week antenatal visits, nulliparous women should be offered membrane sweeping prior to formal induction and additional membrane sweeping may be offered if labour does not start spontaneously. Updates to the guideline are expected in July 2020. NICE Quality Standard [QS22] (NICE, 2016) for antenatal care additionally recommends that women having their second or later baby are offered membrane sweeping.
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

The lived experience of women with a high-risk pregnancy: A phenomenology investigation

Pregnancy is a time of transformation, hope, expectation, and worry for women and their families – none more so than when the pregnancy is at-risk. The objective of this study was to describe the lived experience of women during high-risk pregnancy.
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

An antenatal wish list: A qualitative systematic review and thematic synthesis of UK dietary advice for weight management and food borne illness

Por: Jessica Stockton · Lucie Nield — Diciembre 30th 2019 at 01:00
To understand UK women's experiences of antenatal dietary advice for risk of food borne illness and weight gain.
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Patterns of delivery assistance among adolescent mothers in Nigeria

Por: Christiana A. Alex-Ojei · Clifford O. Odimegwu · Joshua O. Akinyemi — Diciembre 28th 2019 at 01:00
This study examined the sociodemographic and sociocultural factors associated with the pattern of birth assistance used among adolescent mothers aged 15–19 in Nigeria.
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Evaluation of women's worries in different strategies for the prevention of early onset group B streptococcal disease in neonates

: Early onset group B streptococcal (EOGBS) disease is an important cause of neonatal morbidity and mortality. EOGBS preventive strategies aim to reduce the risk of neonatal complications. Two new strategies to prevent EOGBS were implemented in two regions in the Netherlands: a risk-based and a combination strategy and were compared to the Dutch strategy in a third region. Little is known how women feel about preventive EOGBS strategies, the consequences for management during labour, side effects such as harm caused by over prescribing of antibiotics or anxiety caused by screening.
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Exploring the validity of allostatic load in pregnant women

Por: Yang Li · Vanessa K. Dalton · Shawna J. Lee · Marie-Anne S. Rosemberg · Julia S. Seng — Diciembre 28th 2019 at 01:00
The theory of allostatic load has gained momentum in perinatal research to understand the biological pathways of the impact of maternal chronic stress on adverse perinatal outcomes. However, due to physiological changes of pregnancy, including large variations across gestation, the extent to which allostatic load measured in pregnancy is valid has not been queried in depth.
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Breastfeeding support in low and middle-income countries: Secondary analysis of national survey data

Por: Kimberly Peven · Edward Purssell · Cath Taylor · Debra Bick · Velma K. Lopez — Diciembre 10th 2019 at 01:00
Early initiation of breastfeeding and exclusive breastfeeding can reduce infant mortality. Breastfeeding support interventions such as counselling may improve adherence to recommended practices. However, it is not known if these interventions work at the population level.
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Dimensions in women's experience of the perinatal period

Por: Maaike Vogels-Broeke · Raymond de Vries · Marianne Nieuwenhuijze — Diciembre 10th 2019 at 01:00
A positive experience of the perinatal period is significant for women in midwifery care. The literature on women's experiences of the care in this period is extensive. However, a clear overview of the dimensions important for women's experiences is lacking. Consequently, care providers and researchers may ignore aspects significant to women's experience. In this short communication, we present a framework identifying the dimensions relevant for women's experiences of the perinatal period.
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Conceptualising women's perinatal well-being: A systematic review of theoretical discussions

Por: Franziska Wadephul · Lesley Glover · Julie Jomeen — Diciembre 3rd 2019 at 01:00
Over the last two decades there has been an increasing interest in well-being as a focus of policy, practice and research. There is general agreement that well-being takes a more holistic approach and focuses not simply on the absence of illness. In its constitution, the World Health Organisation defines health as ‘a state of complete physical, mental and social well-being and not merely the absence of disease or infirmity’. However, the concept of well-being still remains poorly defined and frequently appears to be used at a superficial level as ‘health and well-being’ to cover a wide range of concepts.
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Barriers and facilitators in antenatal settings to screening and referral of pregnant women who use alcohol or other drugs: A qualitative study of midwives’ experience

Screening pregnant women for substance use is highly recommended in antenatal care settings. Although midwives provide routine screening for substance use and referral for treatment in pregnancy, little is known about the barriers and facilitators they experience.
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

The association between breastfeeding and attachment: A systematic review

Por: Katja Linde · Franziska Lehnig · Michaela Nagl · Anette Kersting — Noviembre 30th 2019 at 01:00
Breastfeeding has multiple positive outcomes on child health, including benefits for the immune system, protection against sudden infant death, and prevention of early infections, diseases and obesity (Dieterich et al., 2013; Duijts et al., 2009; Hoddinott et al., 2008; Xanthou, 1998). The World Health Organization therefore recommends exclusive breastfeeding for the first six months of life (World Health Organization, 2011). While the majority of research has focused on the physiological benefits of breastfeeding, potential psychological benefits have been studied less often (Else-Quest et al., 2003; Schmied et al., 2001).
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Health professionals’ views of newborn pulse oximetry screening in a midwifery-led maternity setting. “It's a good thing to do, but fund it!”

Congenital heart defects in infants are the commonest congenital abnormality but even critical lesions can be difficult to identify clinically in the first days after birth during the period of physiological transition and while the ductus arteriosus remains patent (Wren et al., 2008). Accordingly, clinical assessment of newborns with congenital heart disease (CHD) within the first 24 h often yields normal findings (Abu-Harb et al., 1994; Saxena et al., 2015). Failure to make an early diagnosis of critical CHD leads to clinical compromise prior to infants receiving major surgery and is associated with increased infant mortality (Eckersley et al., 2016; Franklin et al., 2002).
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Impact of parenting resources on breastfeeding, parenting confidence and relationships

Por: Nicola Crossland · Gill Thomson · Victoria Hall Moran — Noviembre 28th 2019 at 01:00
Women's contact with health services during pregnancy and the postnatal period offer important opportunities to promote and support maternal wellbeing, breastfeeding and positive parenting practices. Breastfeeding supports the short and long-term health of both baby and mother (Victora et al., 2016). However, the decision to breastfeed is influenced by multiple complex factors at the individual, family, health system, and societal level (Dyson et al., 2009). Several studies have identified breastfeeding self-efficacy, defined as a mother's confidence in her ability to breastfeed her new infant, as an important factor in breastfeeding outcomes including duration and exclusivity (Blyth et al., 2008; Dennis, 2006).
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Neonatal outcomes and its association among gestational diabetes mellitus with and without depression, anxiety and stress symptoms in Malaysia: A cross-sectional study

Prevalence of depression, anxiety and stress symptoms in gestational diabetes mellitus ranges from 10.2% to 39.9% based on previous studies in Malaysia. Presence of depression, anxiety or stress in pregnancy may increase the risk of neonatal morbidity and mortality. The aim of this study was to determine the prevalence of neonatal outcomes and its association among mothers with gestational diabetes mellitus with and without the presence of depression, anxiety and stress symptoms in Malaysia.
☐ ☆ ✇ Midwifery

Shared decision aids in pregnancy care: A scoping review

Por: Kate Kennedy · Pamela Adelson · Julie Fleet · Mary Steen · Lois McKellar · Marion Eckert · Micah D J Peters — Noviembre 23rd 2019 at 01:00
Decision aids (DAs), also known as client-centred decision tools (Vlemmix et al., 2013; Joseph-Williams et al., 2017; Stacey et al., 2017), clinical decision-making tools (Trevana et al., 2014), patient decision aids (Sepucha et al., 2018), shared decision-making tools (Elwyn et al., 2010), and decision support technologies (Elwyn et al., 2009), are interventions that support health consumers by making their decisions explicit, providing information about options and associated benefits/harms, and helping to clarify congruence between decisions and personal values (Stacey et al., 2017).
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