Can maternity care move beyond risk? Implications for midwifery as a profession
Author(s) -
Sandra Healy,
Eileen Humphreys,
Catriona Kennedy
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
british journal of midwifery
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.216
H-Index - 21
eISSN - 2052-4307
pISSN - 0969-4900
DOI - 10.12968/bjom.2016.24.3.203
Subject(s) - nursing , maternity care , psychosocial , perception , medicine , obstetrics , health care , psychology , political science , psychiatry , law , neuroscience
Maternal and infant mortality rates are reassuringly low in developed countries. Despite this, birth is increasingly seen as risky by women, health professionals and society in general. In wider society, women are subjected to a litany of risks regarding birth, including sensationalising negative incidents by the media. Within maternity care, both structural and operational factors contribute to heightened risk perceptions. Women are processed through a system where risk-management strategies can take precedence over individualised care as health professionals attempt to protect themselves from implication in adverse outcomes and litigation. This results in increasingly interventionist care, depriving women of psychosocial safety in the birth process. Midwifery, as a profession promoting trust in normal birth, is threatened by this dominant medical model of maternity care and interventionist birth practices. Midwives need to act to reclaim their role in promoting normal birth, while balancing consideratio...
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