Project 171018

A mixed-methods study of the experiences of Canadian maternity care providers and key informants with planned home birth

171018

A mixed-methods study of the experiences of Canadian maternity care providers and key informants with planned home birth

$298,277
Project Information
Study Type: Observational Cross_Sectional
Therapeutic Area: Maternal_Child_Health
Research Theme: Health systems / services
Disease Area: maternity care
Data Type: Canadian
Institution & Funding
Principal Investigator(s): Vedam, Saraswathi
Co-Investigator(s): Dharamsi, Shafik; Fairbrother, Nichole; Kaczorowski, Janusz A; Klein, Michael C; Kornelsen, Jude A; Liston, Robert M
Institution: University of British Columbia
CIHR Institute: Health Services and Policy Research
Program: Operating Grant
Peer Review Committee: Health Services Evaluation & Interventions Research - A
Competition Year: 2008
Term: 3 yrs 0 mth
Abstract Summary

In Canada today, there is a serious shortage of doctors and midwives who can take care of mothers and babies, and regional inequities in available birth settings. A woman's choice of birth site assumes she has a range of options and access to qualified providers. The attitudes of medical providers towards maternity care options have been shown to influence the nature of informed decision-making discussions, and patient choice. This study examines the attitudes of doctors and midwives towards practice in the home, and personal and professional experiences that predict those attitudes. Women who live in cities are faced with the prospect of hospitals that do not have enough beds or staff to care for them during pregnancy and birth and a limited choice of maternity care providers. Women in rural, remote, and First Nations communities often must leave their homes and families for several weeks before and after birth, to travel to centers where doctors or midwives are available. Building and staffing enough hospitals to meet the need will take significant time and money. The available research shows that healthy women can can safely plan home births if doctors or midwives provide prenatal and delivery care, and help families make informed decisions about which women and babies will benefit from hospital services. Currently, however, there are not enough maternity providers in Canada who are willing or able to provide home based care, so most women cannot choose this option. The information will help to guide health planning, development of new funding models, and educational programs that will enable physicians and midwives to work together to provide optimal maternity services in all settings.

Research Characteristics

This project includes the following research characteristics:

Cost Effectiveness
Budget Impact
Health Technology Assessment
Resource Utilization
Implementation Science
Policy Evaluation
Health System Integration
Scalability Assessment
Barrier Identification
Patient Engagement
Community Based
Indigenous Collaboration
Social Determinants
Health Equity
Knowledge Translation Focus
Equity Considerations
Study Justification

"This study examines the attitudes of doctors and midwives towards practice in the home, and personal and professional experiences that predict those attitudes."

Novelty Statement

"The information will help to guide health planning, development of new funding models, and educational programs that will enable physicians and midwives to work together to provide optimal maternity services in all settings."

Methodology Innovation

mixed-methods study of maternity care providers' attitudes towards planned home birth

Keywords
Collaborative Maternity Care Constant Comparative Analysis Health Resource Allocation Interprofessional Communication Mixed Methods Regression Analysis