Exploring continuity of care for women with prenatal diagnosis of congenital anomaly: A mixed method study

Author:

Psaila Kim M.1ORCID,Schmied Virginia1ORCID,Heath Susan2

Affiliation:

1. School of Nursing and Midwifery University of Western Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. PEARLS Team Westmead Hospital Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractAimsTo map the pathway and service provision for pregnant women whose newborns require admission into the surgical neonatal intensive care unit at or soon after birth, and to examine the nature of continuity of care (COC) provided and the facilitators and barriers to woman‐ and family‐centred care from the perspective of women/parents and health professionals.BackgroundLimited research exists on current service and care pathways for families whose babies are diagnosed with congenital abnormality requiring surgery.DesignA mixed method sequential design adhering to EQUATOR guidelines for Good Reporting of a Mixed Methods Study.MethodsData collection methods included: (1) a workshop with health professionals (n = 15), (2) retrospective maternal record review (n = 20), prospective maternal record review (17), (3) interviews with pregnant women given a prenatal diagnosis of congenital anomaly (n = 17) and (4) interviews with key health professionals (n = 7).Results/FindingsParticipants perceived care delivered by state‐based services as problematic prior to admission into the high‐risk midwifery COC model. Once admitted to the high‐risk maternity team women described care ‘like a breath of fresh air’ with a ‘contrast in support’, where they felt supported in their decisions.ConclusionThis study highlights provision of COC, in particular relational continuity between health providers and women as essential to achieve optimal outcomes.Relevance to Clinical PracticeProvision of individualised COC offers an opportunity for perinatal services to reduce the negative consequences of pregnancy‐related stress associated with diagnosis of foetal anomaly.Patient or Public ContributionNo patient or public was involved in the design, analysis, preparation or writing of this review.

Funder

Western Sydney University

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,General Nursing

Reference38 articles.

1. AIHW. (2020).Australia's mothers and babies 2018: In brief(Perinatal statistics series no. 36. Cat. no. PER 108. Issue).

2. Australasian Society for Ultrasound in Medicine (ASUM). (2022).Parent‐centred communication in obstetric ultrasound.https://www.asum.com.au/files/public/SoP/curver/Obs‐Gynae/Parent‐centred‐communication‐in‐obstetric‐ultrasound.pdf

3. Transitioning across professional boundaries in midwifery models of care: A literature review

4. One size fits all? What counts as quality practice in (reflexive) thematic analysis?

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