Views on spousal support during delivery: a Turkey experience

Abstract Background Spousal support is important during delivery since it satisfies the women and their spouses. Thus both women and their spouses should be included, where appropriate, in research on labour and birth. This descriptive study aimed to determine Turkish women’s and their spouses’ view...

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Main Authors: Sermin Timur Taşhan, Yıldız Duru
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-05-01
Series:BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12884-018-1779-0
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spelling doaj-e3587a84bcbb4f49924595b946e7dc162020-11-25T02:33:51ZengBMCBMC Pregnancy and Childbirth1471-23932018-05-011811610.1186/s12884-018-1779-0Views on spousal support during delivery: a Turkey experienceSermin Timur Taşhan0Yıldız Duru1Nursing of Faculty. Department of Women Health and Diseases Nursing, Campus, Inonu UniversityWomen Health Nurse, Elazığ Mental Health and Illness HospitalAbstract Background Spousal support is important during delivery since it satisfies the women and their spouses. Thus both women and their spouses should be included, where appropriate, in research on labour and birth. This descriptive study aimed to determine Turkish women’s and their spouses’ views on spousal support during delivery. Methods The study population included women who stayed in the postpartum unit of a hospital and gave birth vaginally to their first child between the thirty-seventh and forty-second week of pregnancy. It also included their spouses. The study sample included 170 couples. The data were collected using introductory information forms administered to women and their spouses. The data were analyzed using percentages, averages, the chi-square test and logistic regression modeling. Results This study indicated that 67.6% of the women and 71.8% of women’s spouses were in favor of spousal support during delivery. It also suggested that the women with negative experiences of childbirth needed social support during delivery and demanded to receive more spousal support but could not receive this support from the healthcare personnel (p < 0.05). The logistic regression models revealed that the risk of demanding to receive spousal support during delivery was 9.4 times higher in the women who needed social support during delivery than those who do not. Conclusion This study demonstrated that women’s spouses wanted to be included in the delivery process more than the women wanted them to be, and the women who could not receive the necessary support needed more spousal support.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12884-018-1779-0DeliveryWomenwomen’s spousesSpousal supportSocial support
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sermin Timur Taşhan
Yıldız Duru
spellingShingle Sermin Timur Taşhan
Yıldız Duru
Views on spousal support during delivery: a Turkey experience
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
Delivery
Women
women’s spouses
Spousal support
Social support
author_facet Sermin Timur Taşhan
Yıldız Duru
author_sort Sermin Timur Taşhan
title Views on spousal support during delivery: a Turkey experience
title_short Views on spousal support during delivery: a Turkey experience
title_full Views on spousal support during delivery: a Turkey experience
title_fullStr Views on spousal support during delivery: a Turkey experience
title_full_unstemmed Views on spousal support during delivery: a Turkey experience
title_sort views on spousal support during delivery: a turkey experience
publisher BMC
series BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
issn 1471-2393
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Abstract Background Spousal support is important during delivery since it satisfies the women and their spouses. Thus both women and their spouses should be included, where appropriate, in research on labour and birth. This descriptive study aimed to determine Turkish women’s and their spouses’ views on spousal support during delivery. Methods The study population included women who stayed in the postpartum unit of a hospital and gave birth vaginally to their first child between the thirty-seventh and forty-second week of pregnancy. It also included their spouses. The study sample included 170 couples. The data were collected using introductory information forms administered to women and their spouses. The data were analyzed using percentages, averages, the chi-square test and logistic regression modeling. Results This study indicated that 67.6% of the women and 71.8% of women’s spouses were in favor of spousal support during delivery. It also suggested that the women with negative experiences of childbirth needed social support during delivery and demanded to receive more spousal support but could not receive this support from the healthcare personnel (p < 0.05). The logistic regression models revealed that the risk of demanding to receive spousal support during delivery was 9.4 times higher in the women who needed social support during delivery than those who do not. Conclusion This study demonstrated that women’s spouses wanted to be included in the delivery process more than the women wanted them to be, and the women who could not receive the necessary support needed more spousal support.
topic Delivery
Women
women’s spouses
Spousal support
Social support
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12884-018-1779-0
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