Journal Article10.1007/978-3-031-95827-4_6
Humanising Relationships
Elizabeth Newnham,Yvonne J Kuipers,Zoe Bradfield,Elizabeth Newnham,Yvonne J Kuipers,Zoe Bradfield +5 more
- 01 Jan 2025
pp 77-88
About: The article was published on 01 Jan 2025.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
References
What matters to women during childbirth: A systematic qualitative review.
TL;DR: Maternity care should be designed to fulfil or exceed womens’ personal and socio-cultural beliefs and expectations, and most healthy childbearing women want a positive birth experience.
What matters to women: a systematic scoping review to identify the processes and outcomes of antenatal care provision that are important to healthy pregnant women.
TL;DR: Identifying outcomes that matter to pregnant women could inform service design and improve uptake and effectiveness of antenatal care around the world.
224
What women value in the midwifery continuity of care model: A systematic review with meta-synthesis
TL;DR: The midwife-woman relationship is the vehicle through which personalised care, trust and empowerment are achieved in the continuity of midwifery model of care.
195
Emotion work and boundary maintenance in hospital-based midwifery.
TL;DR: These findings contribute to the understanding of inter-collegial conflict in UK midwifery, providing insights into workplace harassment and low staff morale, which are likely to exacerbate workforce attrition.
192
'She sort of shines': midwives' accounts of 'good' midwifery and 'good' leadership.
Sheena Byrom,Soo Downe +1 more
TL;DR: This study suggests that the ability to act knowledgeably, safely and competently was seen as a basic requirement for both clinical midwives and midwife leaders and could form the basis for hypothesis generation for larger scale work in this area in future.
92