How Are Post-birth Reflective Conversations Experienced by Those Involved?
This hermeneutic phenomenological study seeks to uncover the lived experiences of post-birth reflective conversations as experienced by midwives and women. Fourteen Lead Maternity Care (LMC) midwives along with twenty women were interviewed in this study. All of the women apart from two, received co...
Main Author: | Waller, Nimisha (Author) |
---|---|
Other Authors: | Smythe, Liz (Contributor), Spence, Deb (Contributor) |
Format: | Others |
Published: |
Auckland University of Technology,
2019-11-12T23:43:03Z.
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Get fulltext |
Similar Items
-
Medicalisation of Birth in Transylvania in the Second Half of the 19th Century. A Subject to be Investigated
by: Luminiţa Dumănescu, et al.
Published: (2021-03-01) -
Factors Related to Management of non – Asphyxia Low Birth Weight Baby by Midwives in magelang District”s Public Health Centers – 2012
by: Tulus Puji Hastuti, et al.
Published: (2015-08-01) -
Why do women choose an unregulated birth worker to birth at home in Australia: a qualitative study
by: Elizabeth Christine Rigg, et al.
Published: (2017-03-01) -
“Talk to me, not at me”: obese women’s experiences of birth and their encounter with birth attendants—a qualitative study
by: Katrin Erna Thorbjörnsdottir, et al.
Published: (2020-01-01) -
Midwives' and Obstetricians' Experience of Place in Relation to Supporting Physiological Birth: A Hermeneutic Phenomenological Study
by: Mellor, Christine
Published: (2021)