Support provided by midwives to women during labour in a public hospital, Limpopo Province, South Africa: a participant observation study

Abstract Background Physical presence during labour offer women opportunity of having positive childbirth experiences as well as childbirth outcomes. The study aimed to determine what support provided by midwives during intrapartum care at a public hospital in Limpopo Province. The study was conduct...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Maria S. Maputle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-06-01
Series:BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12884-018-1860-8
id doaj-0fc3d9a26f104161b442100605822038
record_format Article
spelling doaj-0fc3d9a26f104161b4421006058220382020-11-24T22:06:51ZengBMCBMC Pregnancy and Childbirth1471-23932018-06-0118111110.1186/s12884-018-1860-8Support provided by midwives to women during labour in a public hospital, Limpopo Province, South Africa: a participant observation studyMaria S. Maputle0Department of Advanced Nursing, University of VendaAbstract Background Physical presence during labour offer women opportunity of having positive childbirth experiences as well as childbirth outcomes. The study aimed to determine what support provided by midwives during intrapartum care at a public hospital in Limpopo Province. The study was conducted at a tertiary hospital in Limpopo Province. Methods A participant observation approach was used to achieve the objectives of the study. The population comprised of all women who were admitted with labour and for delivery and midwives who were providing midwifery care in the obstetric unit of a tertiary public hospital in Limpopo Province. Non-probability, purposive and convenience sampling were used to sample 24 women and 12 midwives. Data were collected through participant observations which included unstructured conversations with the use of observational guide, field notes of all events and conversations that occurred when women interact with midwives were recorded verbatim and a Visual Analog Scale to complement the observations. Data were analysed qualitatively but were presented in the tables and bar graphs. Results Five themes emerged as support provided by midwives during labour, namely; communication between women and midwives, informational support, emotional support activities, interpretation of the experienced labour pain and supportive care activities during labour. Conclusion The communication between woman and midwife was occurring as part of midwifery care and very limited for empowering. The information sharing focused on the assistive actions rather than on the activities that would promote mothers’ participation. The emotional support activities indicated lack of respect and disregard cultural preferences and this contributed to inability to exercise choices in decision-making. The study recommended the implementation of Batho Pele principles in order to provide woman-centred care during labour.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12884-018-1860-8Support offeredLabour painsCommunication between women and midwivesInformational supportEmotional supportPhysical comforting measures
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria S. Maputle
spellingShingle Maria S. Maputle
Support provided by midwives to women during labour in a public hospital, Limpopo Province, South Africa: a participant observation study
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Support offered
Labour pains
Communication between women and midwives
Informational support
Emotional support
Physical comforting measures
author_facet Maria S. Maputle
author_sort Maria S. Maputle
title Support provided by midwives to women during labour in a public hospital, Limpopo Province, South Africa: a participant observation study
title_short Support provided by midwives to women during labour in a public hospital, Limpopo Province, South Africa: a participant observation study
title_full Support provided by midwives to women during labour in a public hospital, Limpopo Province, South Africa: a participant observation study
title_fullStr Support provided by midwives to women during labour in a public hospital, Limpopo Province, South Africa: a participant observation study
title_full_unstemmed Support provided by midwives to women during labour in a public hospital, Limpopo Province, South Africa: a participant observation study
title_sort support provided by midwives to women during labour in a public hospital, limpopo province, south africa: a participant observation study
publisher BMC
series BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
issn 1471-2393
publishDate 2018-06-01
description Abstract Background Physical presence during labour offer women opportunity of having positive childbirth experiences as well as childbirth outcomes. The study aimed to determine what support provided by midwives during intrapartum care at a public hospital in Limpopo Province. The study was conducted at a tertiary hospital in Limpopo Province. Methods A participant observation approach was used to achieve the objectives of the study. The population comprised of all women who were admitted with labour and for delivery and midwives who were providing midwifery care in the obstetric unit of a tertiary public hospital in Limpopo Province. Non-probability, purposive and convenience sampling were used to sample 24 women and 12 midwives. Data were collected through participant observations which included unstructured conversations with the use of observational guide, field notes of all events and conversations that occurred when women interact with midwives were recorded verbatim and a Visual Analog Scale to complement the observations. Data were analysed qualitatively but were presented in the tables and bar graphs. Results Five themes emerged as support provided by midwives during labour, namely; communication between women and midwives, informational support, emotional support activities, interpretation of the experienced labour pain and supportive care activities during labour. Conclusion The communication between woman and midwife was occurring as part of midwifery care and very limited for empowering. The information sharing focused on the assistive actions rather than on the activities that would promote mothers’ participation. The emotional support activities indicated lack of respect and disregard cultural preferences and this contributed to inability to exercise choices in decision-making. The study recommended the implementation of Batho Pele principles in order to provide woman-centred care during labour.
topic Support offered
Labour pains
Communication between women and midwives
Informational support
Emotional support
Physical comforting measures
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12884-018-1860-8
work_keys_str_mv AT mariasmaputle supportprovidedbymidwivestowomenduringlabourinapublichospitallimpopoprovincesouthafricaaparticipantobservationstudy
_version_ 1725821370767507456