Understanding Midwives’ Preferences for Providing Information About Newborn Bloodspot Screening

Author:

Wright Stuart James123ORCID,Ulph Fiona123,Lavender Tina123,Dharni Nimarta123,Payne Katherine123

Affiliation:

1. Manchester Centre for Health Economics, Division of Population Health, Health Services Research & Primary Care (SJW, KP)

2. Division of Psychology and Mental Health (FU, ND)

3. Division of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work (TL), the University of Manchester, Manchester, UK

Abstract

Background: Understanding preferences for information provision in the context of health care service provision is challenging because of the number of potential attributes that may influence preferences. This study aimed to identify midwives’ preferences for the process and outcomes of information provision in an expanded national newborn bloodspot screening program. Design: A sample of practicing midwives completed a hybrid-stated preference survey including a conjoint analysis (CA) and discrete choice experiment to quantify preferences for the types of, and way in which, information should be provided in a newborn bloodspot screening program. Six conjoint analysis questions captured the impact of different types of information on parents’ ability to make a decision, and 10 discrete choice experiment questions identified preferences for four process attributes (including parents’ ability to make a decision). Results: Midwives employed by the UK National Health Service (n = 134) completed the survey. All types of information content were perceived to improve parents’ ability to make a decision except for the possibility of false-positive results. Late pregnancy was seen to be the best time to provide information, followed by day 3 postbirth. Information before 20 weeks of pregnancy was viewed as reducing parents’ ability to make a decision. Midwives preferred information to be provided by an individual discussion and did not think parents should receive information on the Internet. Conclusion: A hybrid stated preference survey design identified that a wide variety of information should be provided to maximize parents’ ability to make a decision ideally provided late in pregnancy or on day 3 postbirth.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

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