Expert intrapartum maternity care: a meta‐synthesis
- 3 January 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in Journal of Advanced Nursing
- Vol. 57 (2) , 127-140
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2648.2006.04079.x
Abstract
Title. Expert intrapartum maternity care: a meta‐synthesis Aim. This paper reports a meta‐synthesis exploring the accounts of intrapartum midwifery skills, practices, beliefs and philosophies given by practitioners working in the field of intrapartum maternity care who are termed expert, exemplary, excellent or experienced.Background. Expertise in nursing and medicine has been widely debated and researched. However, there appear to be few studies of practitioners’ accounts of expertise in the context of maternity care. Given current international debates on the need to promote safe motherhood, and, simultaneously, on the need to reverse rising rates of routine intrapartum intervention, an examination of the nature of maternity care expertise is timely.Method. A systematic review and meta‐synthesis were undertaken. Twelve databases and 50 relevant health and social science journals were searched by hand or electronically for papers published in English between 1970 and June 2006, using predefined search terms, inclusion, exclusion and quality criteria.Findings. Seven papers met the criteria for this review. Five of these included qualified and licensed midwives, and two included labour ward nurses. Five studies were undertaken in the USA and two in Sweden. The quality of the included studies was good. Ten themes were identified by consensus. After discussion, three intersecting concepts were identified. These were: wisdom, skilled practice and enacted vocation.Conclusion. The derived concepts provide a possible first step in developing a theory of expert intrapartum non‐physician maternity care. They may also offer more general insights into aspects of clinical expertise across healthcare groups. Maternity systems that limit the capacity of expert practitioners to perform within the domains identified may not deliver optimal care. If further empirical studies verify that the identified domains maximize effective intrapartum maternity care, education and maternity care systems will need to be designed to accommodate them.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- What makes a good midwife? An integrative review of methodologically‐diverse researchJournal of Advanced Nursing, 2006
- Nurses and Doulas: Complementary Roles to Provide Optimal Maternity CareJournal of Obstetric, Gynecologic & Neonatal Nursing, 2006
- Meta‐synthesis method for qualitative research: a literature reviewJournal of Advanced Nursing, 2005
- Expertise or performance? Questioning the rhetoric of contemporary narrative use in nursingJournal of Advanced Nursing, 2004
- Effect of Shifting Policies on Traditional Birth Attendant TrainingJournal of Midwifery & Women's Health, 2004
- The landscape of caring for women: a narrative study of midwifery practice*1Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health, 2004
- Learning at work: midwives judging progress in labourLearning in Health and Social Care, 2002
- Identifying the characteristics of optimum practice: findings from a survey of practice experts in nursing, midwifery and health visitingJournal of Advanced Nursing, 1995
- Beyond reflection: practical wisdom and the practical syllogismNurse Education Today, 1994
- FROM NOVICE TO EXPERTThe American Journal of Nursing, 1984