2014
DOI: 10.1016/j.nepr.2014.01.014
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“Continuity of care” experiences in midwifery education: Perspectives from diverse stakeholders

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Cited by 28 publications
(18 citation statements)
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References 18 publications
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“…Mothers surveyed in the targeted studies expected that care providers be patient, empathetic, supportive, encouraging, friendly, skilled, respectful, non-judgmental, and professionally up-to-date (9,15,18,25). The women expected to receive comprehensive, affordable, unique, flexible, convenient, and predictable services (14,17,28,32).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Mothers surveyed in the targeted studies expected that care providers be patient, empathetic, supportive, encouraging, friendly, skilled, respectful, non-judgmental, and professionally up-to-date (9,15,18,25). The women expected to receive comprehensive, affordable, unique, flexible, convenient, and predictable services (14,17,28,32).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Apparently, it makes sense to keep the focus on women's individual needs. As most studies stress continuous midwifery led-care must be woman-centered to empower them and to help them to participate in decision making (16,17,25,28). A Student midwife said:…”
Section: Individuality Of Carementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…There were several exceptional papers (Borrelli et al, 2016;Giarratano, 2003;Maputle & Hiss, 2010). One paper (Browne, et al, 2014) achieved only two out of ten items on the appraisal tool, However, given the paucity of studies which research woman-centred care in education, it was decided to include this study in the review. No studies were excluded based on quality appraisal.…”
Section: Quality Of Papers Includedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Across the studies the promotion of physiological normal birth was closely linked to the provision of woman-centred care (Ahlund et al, 2017;Browne et al, 2014;Daemers et al, 2017;Davis & Walker, 2010;Homer et al, 2009;Hunter et al, 2017;Iida et al, 2012;Saftner et al, 2017;Thompson et al, 2016). Daemers et al (2017) conducted in-depth interviews with Dutch, primarycare midwives (n=11).…”
Section: Protecting Normal Birthmentioning
confidence: 99%