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Exploring the Socio-Ecological Influences on Family Physicians' and Residents' Commitment to Rural Maternity Care: A Scoping Review / Influencing Factors on Rural Maternity Care Practice

Background: Rural maternity care in Canada is in crisis, with many communities losing local services. This forces rural women and families to travel for care, leading to heightened stress, expenses, and adverse outcomes. Family physicians, often the primary providers of rural maternity care, are decreasing in numbers, exacerbating the problem. Without enough providers, rural communities struggle to offer safe and accessible maternity services, risking the health of expectant mothers and families.

Objective: This research aims to gain a comprehensive understanding of the socio-ecological influences that shape the commitment of family physicians and residents to practice rural maternity care.

Methods: A scoping review was conducted, and database searching occurred in Ovid Medline, Ovid Embase, Ovid Emcare, and Web of Science. Primary studies and literature reviews in English were included if they discussed family physicians' and residents' experiences and perspectives in practicing and training for rural maternity care. Articles were restricted to the past 30 years. Thematic analysis was applied to analyze the data, and results were reported in tabular format.

Results: Influencing factors were categorized into themes and contextualized across the socio-ecological model: 1) individual factors (i.e. interests, attitudes, motivation, burnout, risk), 2) interpersonal factors (i.e. lifestyle, interprofessional relationships, mentors), 3) organizational factors (i.e. training and professional development, work environment and practice characteristics, resources, regulation and privileging), 4) community-level factors (i.e. practice setting and location, job availability, community context), and 5) systematic factors (healthcare system structure, public policy, legal and regulatory framework).

Conclusion: The most salient influencing factors included challenges with Family Medicine residency training and role models, call schedule sustainability and interprofessional collaboration, as well as preserving clinical skills and financial stability with low procedural volume in rural communities. There is a need to implement evidence-based interventions targeting training, recruiting role models, interprofessional collaboration and call, and effective rural remuneration. / Thesis / Master of Science (MSc) / Family physicians (FP) are often the sole care providers of maternity care (MC) in rural communities. Unfortunately, there is a declining number of FPs choosing to provide comprehensive maternity care (CMC). In addition, centralization has resulted in rural maternity center closures across the country. Rural women and families that must travel to access MC experience increased levels of stress, personal costs, and increased rates of adverse outcomes. With fewer FPs available to provide CMC alongside maternity centre closures, rural communities face challenges in ensuring safe and accessible care for expectant mothers. Addressing this issue is vital to protecting the health and well-being of rural families.
Although research exists regarding the challenges FPs encounter when providing CMC in rural areas and what influences resident practice intentions, there has yet to be a synthesis of the literature over the last 30 years. To address this, a scoping review was conducted to explore the research on the influences on FPs’ and residents’ commitment to practicing rural MC. This scoping review can help understand what factors have been most influential over time, emerging challenges, and what socio-ecological levels to target for intervention.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/29690
Date January 2024
CreatorsTansey, Isabel
ContributorsMcNiven, Patricia, Global Health
Source SetsMcMaster University
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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