2018
DOI: 10.12784/nzcomjnl54.2018.8.58-62
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Developing confidence in competence: My experience of the Midwifery First Year of Practice programme

Abstract: Competence comes in various forms and is identified as a core component of professional clinicians (Hodges & Lingard, 2012), with maintaining competence identified as a vital characteristic of the professional midwife (Calvert, Smythe, & McKenzie-Green, 2017). The Midwifery Council of New Zealand (2005) defines competence as, "the ongoing capacity to integrate knowledge, skills, understanding, attitudes, and values within the professional framework of the Midwifery Scope of Practice" (p.6). Within midwifery th… Show more

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“…Each new graduate midwife receives 12 months of mentorship from a mentor midwife of their choice, which involves 40-56 contact hours and at least 12 faceto-face mentoring sessions. The MFYP programme as a whole has been shown to have a positive impact on new graduates' confidence in the first year of practice, with mentees identifying mentoring as important to their professional development (Chapman, 2018;Pairman et al, 2016). Participation in the programme has also been linked to an increase in retention beyond the first year (Dixon et al, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Each new graduate midwife receives 12 months of mentorship from a mentor midwife of their choice, which involves 40-56 contact hours and at least 12 faceto-face mentoring sessions. The MFYP programme as a whole has been shown to have a positive impact on new graduates' confidence in the first year of practice, with mentees identifying mentoring as important to their professional development (Chapman, 2018;Pairman et al, 2016). Participation in the programme has also been linked to an increase in retention beyond the first year (Dixon et al, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%