scholarly journals Experience of women in the transfer from planned home birth to hospital

Rev Rene ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 21 ◽  
pp. e43948
Author(s):  
Marina Fabricio Ribeiro Pereira ◽  
Suéllen de Sousa Rodrigues ◽  
Mariana de Sousa Dantas Rodrigues ◽  
Wilma Ferreira Guedes Rodrigues ◽  
Morganna Guedes Batista ◽  
...  

Objective: to describe the experiences of women in the transfer from planned home birth to the hospital. Methods: qualitative research, subsidized by Thematic Oral History, in which six women participated, attended by the home birth team and transferred to a maternity ward, during the parturition process. The semi-structured interview script with oral history generated five categories. Results: five thematic categories emerged: Motivating factors for choosing planned home birth; Positive experiences on intrapartum care in the home environment; Indications of hospital transfer; Feelings experienced during and after hospital transfer; Obstetric violence during hospitalization. Conclusion: the motivations for choosing planned home birth favored the positive experience of the parturition process, while hospitalization reflected obstetric violence.

MUSAS ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Teresa Mª Martínez-Mollá ◽  
José Siles ◽  
Mª del Carmen Solano

Objectives This study aims to identify the reasons why couples prefer home over hospital birth. Methodology The methodology is an ethnographic qualitative research design carried out in the Alicante Province between 2009 and 2014. Eleven couples that had had at least one planned home birth took part in the study. Twenty-one in-depth interviews and two life stories were carried out and five written records were obtained. For the analysis of the results, we relied on ethnography, the structural-dialectic model, and the software package ATLAS-ti v6.2. Results Three categories were identified: values, beliefs, and wishes. Among the values, it was highlighted that the participants were socially committed and critical with the system. The men were protective, respectful and participative, while the women were highly empowered, confident in their intuition and their capacity to give birth. They believe that delivery is a natural process that usually proceeds normally, a family act and a meaningful moment. Concerning home birth, they consider that there is less risk, their wishes are respected, and the father has a bigger role, contrary to what happens in a hospital birth. Participants wished to continue the tradition and for their rights to be respected and avoiding obstetric violence. Conclusions With their decision, these couples manifested their disagreement with some beliefs rooted in society and thus they refused hospital birth. When comparing the attention received both at home and at the hospital, they chose home birth to avoid obstetric violence and to have their beliefs and values respected.


Author(s):  
Trinidad M. Galera-Barbero ◽  
Gabriel Aguilera-Manrique

Previous studies have shown that planned home birth in low-risk pregnancies is a generally safe option. However nowadays, only 0.5 percent of deliveries have been at home in Spain. This study sought to understand the characteristics of planned home births with qualified healthcare professionals in low-risk pregnancies and their results on maternal and neonatal health in the Balearic Islands. The study followed a retrospective descriptive design to investigate planned home births from 1989 to 2019 (n = 820). Sociodemographic data of women, healthcare professional intervention rates, and maternal/fetal morbidity/mortality results were collected. Statistical analysis of the results was performed using the IBM SPSS Version 25 software package. The results indicated that women with low-risk pregnancies who planned home births with a qualified midwife had a higher probability of spontaneous vaginal birth delivery and positive maternal health results. Furthermore, the risk of hospital transfer was low (10.7%) and the rate of prolonged breastfeeding (>1 year) was extremely high (99%). Moreover, the study showed that planned home births can be generally associated with fetal well-being. The conclusions and implications of this study are that planned home births in low-risk pregnancies attended by qualified midwives in the Balearic Islands achieve positive results in both maternal and newborn health, as well as low rates of obstetric intervention.


2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 103-119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deborah Fox ◽  
Athena Sheehan ◽  
Caroline Homer

Recent evidence supports the safety of planned home birth for low-risk women when professional midwifery care and adequate collaborative arrangements for referral and transfer are in place. The purpose of this article is to synthesize the qualitative literature on the experiences of women planning a home birth, who are subsequently transferred from home to hospital. A metasynthesis approach was selected because it aims to create a rich understanding of women’s experiences of transfer by synthesizing and interpreting qualitative data. Three categories were synthesized: “communication, connection, and continuity,” “making the transition,” and “making sense of events.” Quality and clarity of communication, feeling connected to the backup hospital, and continuity of midwifery carer helps make the transfer process as seamless as possible for women. Arriving at the hospital is a time of vulnerability and fear, and retaining the care of a known midwife is reassuring. New caregivers must also be sensitive to women’s need to be reassured and accepted. The reasons for transfer need to be clearly communicated both at the time of transfer and in more detail during the postpartum period. Women need to talk through their experience and to acknowledge their feelings of disappointment in order to move forward in the next phase of their lives. Continuity of carer enables this to be done by a known caregiver in a sensitive and individualized manner. Further qualitative research to examine home birth transfer issues, specifically in the Australian context, is currently being planned as part of the Birthplace in Australia project.


2019 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Carolina De Lima ◽  
Tatiane Herreira Trigueiro

Aim: understand the resilience process of women who had the planned home birth transferred to the hospital. Method: this is an exploratory study that uses a qualitative approach performed with ten women who planned home birth, but who, for some reason, had to be transferred to the hospital. The data collection was performed through semi-structured interviews, analyzed by content analysis of the thematic type. Results: it was found that all the interviewees experienced the trauma due to the hospital transfer, but only one reached the final stage of the resilience process, the adaptation. Conclusion: the participation of obstetrical nurses in this process is fundamental, since it can help these women to find factors that can develop the process of resilience through dialogue, understanding, openness and acceptance. This will make it possible to understand the other in its totality, and to capture their pains and insecurities through a humanized relationship


2011 ◽  
Vol 118 (2, Part 1) ◽  
pp. 357 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicholas S. Fogelson ◽  
Stuart Fischbein

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marc Cruellas ◽  
Fina Martinez Soler ◽  
Avelina Tortosa ◽  
Pepita Gimenez-Bonafe

Abstract Background: Home birth is still considered an unusual situation on most developed countries, where it accounts between 0.2 and 25 percent of all births depending of the country. However, the safety of the process and whether it should be offered as a choice makes it a controversial topic with strong opinions on both sides. This review aims to describe the situation of home birth in several developed countries and debate its safety and mothers’ satisfaction, by reviewing studies that compare home vs. hospital births.Methods: A systematic research has been done using different search engines to find publications that portray the current situation on this topic. Protocols and historical facts were selected using no filters, while publications reporting maternal and birth outcomes, as well as levels of satisfaction, were selected using filters that limited the search to articles that had been published in the last 10 years. A total of 45 articles were selected and reviewed.Results: Home birth in each country depends on many factors, including historical and cultural. Some countries have either developed good practice guidelines or included home birth on the already existing ones, while some other countries still do not recognize it as a safe option. While most studies do not show significant differences on neonatal mortality APGAR score and intensive care admissions, they do describe slightly better maternal outcomes on home birth due to lower interventionism. Studies also show that between 13 and 29 percent of home births require transferring the woman or the fetus to the hospital. Satisfaction levels also appear to be higher in women who had a planned home birth.Conclusions: Home birth appears to be a safe choice for women with low risk pregnancies, due to a lower rate of interventionism. However, safety depends on many factors, from professional accreditation, to the presence of protocols and good practice guidelines. Satisfaction also appears to be higher on women who had a planned home birth, although it depends on personal considerations and circumstances.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Saraswathi Vedam ◽  
Kathrin Stoll ◽  
Laura Schummers ◽  
Nichole Fairbrother ◽  
Michael C Klein ◽  
...  

Background Available birth settings have diversified in Canada since the integration of regulated midwifery. Midwives are required to offer eligible women choice of birth place; and 25-30% of midwifery clients plan home births. Canadian provincial health ministries have instituted reimbursement schema and regulatory guidelines to ensure access to midwives in all settings. Evidence from well-designed Canadian cohort studies demonstrate the safety and efficacy of midwife-attended home birth. However, national rates of planned home birth remain low, and many maternity providers do not support choice of birth place. Methods In this national, mixed-methods study, our team administered a cross-sectional survey, and developed a 17 item Provider Attitudes to Planned Home Birth Scale (PAPHB-m) to assess attitudes towards home birth among maternity providers. We entered care provider type into a linear regression model, with the PAPHB-m score as the outcome variable. Using Students’ t tests and ANOVA for categorical variables and correlational analysis (Pearson’s r) for continuous variables, we conducted provider-specific bivariate analyses of all socio-demographic, education, and practice variables (n=90) that were in both the midwife and physician surveys. Results Median favourability scores on the PAPHB–m scale were very low among obstetricians (33.0), moderately low for family physicians (38.0) and very high for midwives (80.0), and 84% of the variance in attitudes could be accounted for by care provider type. Amount of exposure to planned home birth during midwifery or medical education and practice was significantly associated with favourability scores. Concerns about perinatal loss and lawsuits, discomfort with inter-professional consultations, and preference for the familiarity of the hospital correlated with less favourable attitudes to home birth. Among all providers, favourability scores were linked to beliefs about the evidence on safety of home birth, and confidence in their own ability to manage obstetric emergencies at a home birth. Conclusions Increasing the knowledge base among all maternity providers about planned home birth may increase favourability. Key learning competencies include criteria for birth site selection, management of obstetric emergencies at planned home births, critical appraisal of literature on safety of home birth, and inter-professional communication and collaboration when women are transferred from home to hospital.


2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lijie Ren ◽  
Cancan Song ◽  
Chunling Xia ◽  
Nan Wang ◽  
Yan Yang ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Qualitative research can reflect the actual thoughts and experience of research subjects and can be used to explore the experiences of women presenting with twin-to-twin transfusion syndrome (TTTS) to facilitate the provision of targeted psychological support. Methods A semi-structured interview method was used to assess the pregnancy and parenting experiences of women with TTTS. Colaizzi method was used for data analysis. Results Eighteen women participated in the study. We found that women with TTTS during pregnancy experienced persistent worry about their children’s health from the disease diagnosis to the subsequent parenting processes, even in case of minor changes in their children’s health. The lack of an efficient referral process and health information increased their uncertainty about their children’s health. Conclusion In addition to the children’s health, other difficulties encountered during pregnancy and parenting may aggravate the pressure. Clinicians in the first-visit hospital and foetal medicine centre should improve the referral process and establish a follow-up system to provide women with health information and psychological support.


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