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Experiences of midwives regarding practice breakdown in maternity units at a public hospital in KwaZulu-NatalMhlongo, Ndumiso Mbonisi January 2016 (has links)
Submitted in fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree in Masters of Technology in Nursing, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2016. / Introduction
Registered midwives are expected to practice their duties within the parameters of their scope of practice. Pregnant women have certain expectations about the midwife and their skills. If such expectations are not met, substandard care occurs. Such substandard care has a negative impact for both the pregnant woman and the Department of Health.
Aim of the study
The aim of this study was to explore and describe the experiences of midwives working in maternity units, concerning midwifery practice breakdown in maternity units at a public hospital in KZN.
Methodology
A qualitative research study that was exploratory, descriptive and contextual in nature was conducted. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 13 midwives. Data was transcribed verbatim then organised into codes.
Results
The study revealed that the majority of the participants faced practice breakdown almost daily and most of the midwifery practice breakdowns start during antenatal care visits. Midwives who attended to pregnant women during antenatal care did not follow set protocols and guidelines and this resulted in complications during delivery. Most midwives were emotionally stressed and did not wish to continue practicing midwifery. Midwives were of the opinion that the management did not care about their challenges and did nothing to resolve the challenges. / M
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(Re)-conceiving birthing spaces in India : exploring NGO promotion of institutional delivery in Rajasthan, IndiaPrice, Sara (Sara Nicole) 25 April 2012 (has links)
In India, globalized flows of bio-medical discourse, practices and technologies are
reshaping the field of reproductive healthcare, and the performance of childbirth more
specifically. These projects aim to produce institutional delivery rooms that are "safe and
modernized" by equating the utilization of westernized, obstetric techniques for
managing delivery with better birth outcomes. Yet, these projects often evoke dynamic
tensions between the imagined labor rooms NGOs seek to produce and the lived realties
of labor in a local context. In this thesis, I examine the ways NGOs market and
disseminate state and global discourses around safe, institutional delivers to local
communities through a case study of one NGO working in rural southern Rajasthan.
Drawing on data from participant observation and in-depth, semi-structured interviews
with NGO staff and skilled-birth attendants employed by community health centers, I
argue that at the interface of NGO, state, and global relations of power, a commodified
discourse in the form of Evidenced-based Delivery (EBD) practices is emerging. This
discourse is marketed through a political economy of hope that promotes EBDs as
essential for safe delivery. In this system, NGOs function as conduits for transmitting
idealized notions of the safe and modern delivery room, and thereby affect a shift in what
skilled-birth attendants and communities come to expect from their childbirth experiences
-- expectations that I argue are often difficult to meet given current training levels,
limited economic resources, and a diverse set of cultural values around childbirth. My
findings indicate that while Evidence-based Delivery practices may improve birth
outcomes in some contexts, in the delivery rooms of rural Rajasthan, they are functioning
essentially as technologies that capitalize on the political economy of hope by evoking
the medical imaginary. / Graduation date: 2012
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An analysis of policy measures in coping with the inflow of expectant mothers from mainland ChinaTang, Yiu-hang, Simon., 鄧耀鏗. January 2012 (has links)
published_or_final_version / Politics and Public Administration / Master / Master of Public Administration
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An evidence-based model for enhancing optimal midwifery practice environment in maternity units of public hospitals, Limpopo ProvinceThopola, Magdeline Kefilwe January 2016 (has links)
Thesis ( Ph.D. ( Nursing)) -- University of Limpopo, 2016 / The purpose of this study was to develop an evidence-based model for enhancing optimal midwifery practice environment in maternity units of public hospitals, Limpopo Province. A mixed method sequential explanatory design was adopted. The study was conducted in four phases, namely: quantitative, qualitative, model development and validation of the model.
Self-developed 4-point Likert scale questionnaires consisting of 81 item questions for learner midwives and 89 item questions for midwifery practitioners were administered. The questionnaires were pre-tested prior to being administered to the respondents of the main study. The sample size of midwifery practioners was 174 and that of the learner midwives was 163. Data collected from respondents were analyzed quantitatively using descriptive and inferential statistics. Tables, pie and bar graphs were drawn to present the results.
The results from the quantitative phase were utilized to formulate the interview guides that were used to explore the experiences of midwifery practitioners, experiences of learner midwives and perceptions of puerperal mothers. Phenomenological semi-structured individual interviews were conducted for midwifery practitioners (n=20), 3 Focus group discussions of learner midwives (n=18) and 3 focus group discussions of puerperal mothers (n=18) were held until data reached saturation. Data were analyzed qualitatively using Tesch’s open-coding method.
Themes and sub-themes were coded manually. Results that emerged from the corroboration, comparison and integration of quantitative and qualitative results revealed the existence a sub-optimal midwifery practice environment, sub-optimal midwifery experiential learning environment and provision of sub-optimal midwifery interventions in the public hospitals of Limpopo province. Development of an evidence-based model emanated from the findings of numeric quantitative data and qualitative narratives. The evidence-based information from the existing situation as seen from the world of participants brought about a gap of optimal midwifery practice environment. The ideal situation was designed in a way of addressing the gaps identified. Experts were given the validation tool to assess whether the model was clear, simple, understood and that it can be utilized by any discipline in future.
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Quality control of obstetric nursing records in a selected regional hospitalRampfumedzi, Dorothy Pelewe 30 June 2006 (has links)
Health Studies / M. A. (Health Studies)
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Quality control of obstetric nursing records in a selected regional hospitalRampfumedzi, Dorothy Pelewe 30 June 2006 (has links)
Health Studies / M. A. (Health Studies)
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Male partners's view of involvement in maternal health care services at Makhado B Local Area Clinics in Vhembe District of Limpopo ProvinceNesane, Kenneth 11 February 2016 (has links)
MCur / Department of Advanced Nursing Science
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Development of strategies to facilitate the referral system of high-risk pregnant women between public sections in Bojanala District, North West, South AfricaRasekele, Mapula Nelly January 2022 (has links)
Thesis (M. (Nursing)) -- University of Limpopo, 2022 / Background:
The referral system is an essential component of the
health system. The system meant to complement the Primary Health
Care (PHC) principle of treating patients close to their homes at the
lowest level of care with the needed expertise.
Aim of the study: The aim of the study is to develop the strategies that
will facilitate the referral system of high-risk pregnant women in between
public sectors in the Bojanala district, North West Province, South Africa.
Objectives of the study:
To explore the referral system of high-risk pregnant women
between public sectors within the Bojanala District, North West
Province, South Africa.
To develop strategies that will facilitate the referral system of high risk pregnant women in the Bojanala District, North West
Province, South Africa.
Methods:
The researcher first obtained permission from the University of
Limpopo Turfloop Research Ethics Committee (TREC), and further
requested permission from the North West Department of Health,
Bojanala District to conduct the study and was granted the permission.
Qualitative, exploratory and descriptive designs were used to explore the
referral system of high-risk pregnant women and to describe the
strategies to facilitate the referral system of high-risk pregnant women in
between public sectors in the Bojanala District, North West, South Africa.
Non-Probability Purposive sampling method was used to select the
midwives and obstetricians to participate in the study until data saturation
was reached. Data were collected through one-on-one interviews using
semi structured Interview Guide. The data were analysed using Tesch‘s
eight steps of data analysis.
Results:
The results of this study revealed that the participants are
knowledgeable about the referral system though they are many
challenges that they encounter when managing high-risk women and
having to refer them. They are aware of the current state of referral
system and made their own suggestions on how to improve the referral
system.
Recommendations: Recommendations were made to facilitate the
referral system of high-risk pregnant women in the North West Province,
Bojanala District. The Department of Health must prioritise the provision
of human and material resources to the district in order to achieve a
better referral system and reducing the maternal and neonatal mortality
as one of the millennium developmental goals.
Conclusion:
The referral system of high-risk pregnant women in the
Bojanala District still has some challenges that need the intervention of
the North West Department of Health to provide enough material and
human resources to the Maternity Section in order to improve current
status and to have an effective referral system
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Development of guidelines to improve client-centred childbirth services in GhanaAvortri, Gertrude Sika 11 1900 (has links)
This study was carried out as part of efforts to better understand the factors that impinge on childbirth service delivery and to develop guidelines to help improve the quality and safety of childbirth services in Ghana. The objectives were to: assess the factors that influence client-centredness; explore women’s and health professional’s views of and experiences with client-centred childbirth services; and develop guidelines to assist improve client-centred childbirth services in hospitals.
The fixed mixed methods design comprising both quantitative and qualitative methods was employed. Structured questionnaire and exit interviews were used to gather data from 754 women who delivered in the hospitals. Furthermore, in-depth interviews were used to examine the experiences of women, doctors and midwives. STATA MP Version 13 was used to analyse the data by generating frequencies, chi-square and binary logistic regression results. Qualitative data analysis was analysed through data reduction, data display and generation of themes and categories. The process of developing the guidelines comprised: drafting based on the findings of the study and additional literature review, and a number of reviews by senior health professionls to build consesnsus on the content.
With a response rate of 97.8%, the results indicated average performance. A number of the items examined under demographic characteristics, ante-natal, labour and postnatal care were significantly associated with the experience of excellent client-centred care. These included: number of weeks pregnant before delivery; health professional who assisted with delivery; mode of delivery; labour pain management; and length of stay after delivery. On the whole, the findings of the quantitative study were support by that of the structured interviews. Most of the themes from in-depth interviews with women were had to do with the relationship between health care provider and clients. Issues of support during childbirth; decision-making and informed choice; and continuity were raised. Themes deduced from the doctors’ and midwives’ interviews demonstrated a fair understanding of principles of client-centred care and delineated relational as well as client, health care worker and organisational factors that facilitate or limit effective implementation of client-centred care. The findings of the studies were used to develop guidelines to help improve services. It is recommended that the Ministry of Health, Ghana adopt the guidelines and provide the enabling environment for its effective implementation. / Health Studies / D. Litt. et Phil. (Health Studies)
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Development of guidelines to improve client-centred childbirth services in GhanaAvortri, Gertrude Sika 11 1900 (has links)
This study was carried out as part of efforts to better understand the factors that impinge on childbirth service delivery and to develop guidelines to help improve the quality and safety of childbirth services in Ghana. The objectives were to: assess the factors that influence client-centredness; explore women’s and health professional’s views of and experiences with client-centred childbirth services; and develop guidelines to assist improve client-centred childbirth services in hospitals.
The fixed mixed methods design comprising both quantitative and qualitative methods was employed. Structured questionnaire and exit interviews were used to gather data from 754 women who delivered in the hospitals. Furthermore, in-depth interviews were used to examine the experiences of women, doctors and midwives. STATA MP Version 13 was used to analyse the data by generating frequencies, chi-square and binary logistic regression results. Qualitative data analysis was analysed through data reduction, data display and generation of themes and categories. The process of developing the guidelines comprised: drafting based on the findings of the study and additional literature review, and a number of reviews by senior health professionls to build consesnsus on the content.
With a response rate of 97.8%, the results indicated average performance. A number of the items examined under demographic characteristics, ante-natal, labour and postnatal care were significantly associated with the experience of excellent client-centred care. These included: number of weeks pregnant before delivery; health professional who assisted with delivery; mode of delivery; labour pain management; and length of stay after delivery. On the whole, the findings of the quantitative study were support by that of the structured interviews. Most of the themes from in-depth interviews with women were had to do with the relationship between health care provider and clients. Issues of support during childbirth; decision-making and informed choice; and continuity were raised. Themes deduced from the doctors’ and midwives’ interviews demonstrated a fair understanding of principles of client-centred care and delineated relational as well as client, health care worker and organisational factors that facilitate or limit effective implementation of client-centred care. The findings of the studies were used to develop guidelines to help improve services. It is recommended that the Ministry of Health, Ghana adopt the guidelines and provide the enabling environment for its effective implementation. / Health Studies / D. Litt. et Phil. (Health Studies)
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