![]() | Vol. 33, n° 1 March 2023 | Vol. 33, n° 2 juin 2023 | Vol. 33, n° 3 septembre 2023 | Vol. 34, n° 2 juin 2024 | Vol. 34, n° 4 décembre 2024 | Vol. 35, n° 1 mars 2025 | ![]() |
Titre : | Midirs. Midwifery Digest, Vol. 34, n° 2. - juin 2024 |
Type de document : | Bulletin |
Paru le : | 01/06/2024 |
Dépouillements
Ajouter le résultat dans votre panier
Article : texte imprimé
Robert Moore
| 2024
Maternity support workers (MSWs) provide invaluable services in maternity care and are undergoing a transformational period with the implementation of Health Education England (HEE)'s framework (2019a). With more MSWs now encouraged into higher education in pursuit of this development, it is important that they are educationally supported in accessing ...

Article : texte imprimé
Dominique Mylod
| 2024
Research in maternity care is a key element towards improving outcomes for mothers and babies. Evidence to challenge and develop clinical practice and explore the experiences, attitudes and knowledge of families and practitioners is a powerful tool to drive change in a complex and pressured environment. There is consensus that ...

Article : texte imprimé
Dalvir Kandola ;
Debi Bhattacharya ;
Alison Harte
| 2024
In England and Wales, 18.3 per cent of the population identify themselves as 'non-White' (Office for National Statistics (ONS) 2021). With non-White women being two to four times more likely to die in the childbearing continuum (Knight et al 2023), it is crucial to ensure that methods that seek to understand women's experiences ...

Article : texte imprimé
Sarah Morton ;
Anne Mills ;
Ann Hemingway
| 2024
Within the strategic plan for research (NHS England 2023) the Chief Midwifery Officer (CMO) for England has set out a vision for maternity services to provide more personalised care for women and their families. Midwives who are keen to capture the essence and sense making of lived experiences of those involved ...

Article : texte imprimé
Faith Worrall
| 2024
Language used in maternity practice is important and can have a profound impact on the experiences of women and birthing people. Language can be harmful, disempowering, misogynistic and can negatively impact women's and birthing people's experience of care. Re:Birth (Royal College of Midwives (RCM) 2022) provided maternity services with recommended, ...

Article : texte imprimé
Nic Ferguson
| 2024
It is the intention of the author to highlight disparities faced by the LGBTQ+ community in maternity settings. The author takes an additive approach to language used in health care settings, research, guidance and policy, in order to improve access and reduce barriers for the LGBTQ+ community, using the terms ...

Article : texte imprimé
Helena Nash
| 2024
Objective: This narrative literature review aims to provide a critical appraisal and synthesis of the literature surrounding the benefits and challenges of implementing newborn and infant physical examination (NIPE) training into pre-registration midwifery education.
Methods: Because of the broad aim of the review, a narrative approach was chosen by the ...

Article : texte imprimé
Maeve O'Connell
| 2024
I had heard of the work of Ibu Robin Lim and the Bumi Sehat Foundation and felt curious to know more about midwifery at this birth centre in Bali, Indonesia. I had no idea of the profound effect visiting the birth centre would have on me as a midwife, as ...

Article : texte imprimé
Charlotte Woolsey
| 2024
While some nausea and vomiting in pregnancy (NVP) is considered normal — impacting around 70 per cent of all women — hyperemesis gravidarum (HG) is at the severe end of the spectrum, affecting between 0.3—3.6 per cent (Einarson et al 2013).
The impact of HG on a woman's physical and mental health — as well as ...

Article : texte imprimé
Alexandra Jasper ;
Gemma K. Ford
| 2024
Background: Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is a reproductive disorder that has long been associated with menstrual cycle abnormalities, hirsutism and infertility. Because of the complexity of PCOS, the aetiology remains unclear, with complex pathophysiology presenting as various phenotypes of this disorder. PCOS at present is currently linked only with an ...

Article : texte imprimé
Helen Parsons ;
Helen Egan ;
Kathrina Connabeer ;
Michael Mantzios
| 2024
Pregnancy can be an ideal time for lifestyle changes because women may be more focused on their health and more motivated to make changes to their lifestyles (Hillier & Olander 2017). As a result' pregnancy has been described as a particularly powerful 'teachable moment' for health behaviour change (Phelan 2010), when women have ...

Article : texte imprimé
Kristie Fisher ;
Katie Marino
| 2024
Currently it is acknowledged that for low-risk pregnancies, physical activity (PA) is both safe and advantageous (American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) 2020). From a professional stance, a proposal of a safe group exercise session of moderate intensity for low-risk pregnant women has been created. In doing this, the current ...

Article : texte imprimé
Jane Coyne ;
Fran Frankland
| 2024
National ambitions seek to reduce smoking rates in pregnancy to less than five per cent by 2030 (Balogun & Harker 2023), while increasing the choice and personalisation of services that women and their families are offered. The recently published Chief Medical Office Report for 2018 (Davies 2018) also commits to halve smoking-in-pregnancy inequalities experienced across ...

Article : texte imprimé
Natalie Boxall
| 2024
Sherwood Forest Hospitals (SFH) is currently the only trust running a midwife-led frenulotomy clinic in the East Midlands. The service — which started in 2013 — offers weekly assessment appointments to local women and birthing parents, and accepts referrals from neighbouring trusts. Feedback from women and birthing parents who have accessed care have ...
Exemplaires(1)
Localisation | Section | Support | Cote de rangement | Statut | Disponibilité |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bibliothèque Paramédicale | Périodiques | Périodique | MID.DIG. 24-2 | Empruntable | Disponible |