Background: Poor implementation of evidence in practice has been reported as a reason behind the continued rise in unnecessary interventions in labour and birth. A validated tool can enable the systematic measurement of care to target interventions to support implementation of evidence. The Keeping Birth Normal tool has been developed to measure and support implementation of evidence to reduce unnecessary interventions in labour and birth. Aims: This pilot sought the views of midwives about the usefulness and relevance of the Keeping Birth Normal tool in measuring and supporting practice; it also identified barriers to implementation. Methods: Five midwives supported by five preceptors tested the tool on a delivery suite and birth ...
Background: The policy drive for the UK National Health Service (NHS) has focused on the need for hi...
Objectives to gain understanding about how participants perceived the value and effectiveness of ‘K...
In some instances midwives find it difficult to implementresearch into practice (Albers, 2001). For ...
Background: The overuse of interventions in labor and childbirth increase the risk of mortality and...
Objective: Prior to implementation of a Normal Labour and Birth Bundle (NLBB) at a regional maternit...
In some instances midwives find it difficult to implement research into practice (Albers, 2001). For...
Objective: Prior to implementation of a Normal Labour and Birth Bundle (NLBB) at a regional maternit...
Background: Widespread concerns are being voiced in the Western world about rising rates of childbir...
Background: Confronted with an increasing caesarean section rate, a regional Victorian hospital has ...
Evidence-based is a very effective strategy to improve the quality of midwifery services. One of the...
peer-reviewedObjective: to investigate how 'normal' childbirth is described by new mothers and their...
- Objective: To explore barriers to the involvement of community midwives in identifying women in ea...
UK legislation and government policy favour women’s rights to bodily autonomy and active involvement...
Objective: Women's planned place of birth is gaining increasing importance in the UK, however eviden...
A Cochrane systematic review has shown midwife-led continuity models of care provide explicit benefi...
Background: The policy drive for the UK National Health Service (NHS) has focused on the need for hi...
Objectives to gain understanding about how participants perceived the value and effectiveness of ‘K...
In some instances midwives find it difficult to implementresearch into practice (Albers, 2001). For ...
Background: The overuse of interventions in labor and childbirth increase the risk of mortality and...
Objective: Prior to implementation of a Normal Labour and Birth Bundle (NLBB) at a regional maternit...
In some instances midwives find it difficult to implement research into practice (Albers, 2001). For...
Objective: Prior to implementation of a Normal Labour and Birth Bundle (NLBB) at a regional maternit...
Background: Widespread concerns are being voiced in the Western world about rising rates of childbir...
Background: Confronted with an increasing caesarean section rate, a regional Victorian hospital has ...
Evidence-based is a very effective strategy to improve the quality of midwifery services. One of the...
peer-reviewedObjective: to investigate how 'normal' childbirth is described by new mothers and their...
- Objective: To explore barriers to the involvement of community midwives in identifying women in ea...
UK legislation and government policy favour women’s rights to bodily autonomy and active involvement...
Objective: Women's planned place of birth is gaining increasing importance in the UK, however eviden...
A Cochrane systematic review has shown midwife-led continuity models of care provide explicit benefi...
Background: The policy drive for the UK National Health Service (NHS) has focused on the need for hi...
Objectives to gain understanding about how participants perceived the value and effectiveness of ‘K...
In some instances midwives find it difficult to implementresearch into practice (Albers, 2001). For ...