Access and quality of maternity care for women with disability during pregnancy, birth and the postnatal period

<h4>Objectives</h4> <p>More women with disability are becoming mothers and yet their care is rarely the focus of quantitative research. This study aimed to investigate access and quality of maternity care for women with differing disabilities.</p> <h4>Design</h4>...

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Main Authors: Malouf, R, Henderson, J, Redshaw, M
Format: Journal article
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2017
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author Malouf, R
Henderson, J
Redshaw, M
author_facet Malouf, R
Henderson, J
Redshaw, M
author_sort Malouf, R
collection OXFORD
description <h4>Objectives</h4> <p>More women with disability are becoming mothers and yet their care is rarely the focus of quantitative research. This study aimed to investigate access and quality of maternity care for women with differing disabilities.</p> <h4>Design</h4> <p>Secondary analysis was conducted on data from a 2015 national survey of women’s experience of maternity care. Descriptive and adjusted analyses were undertaken for five disability groups: physical disability, sensory impairment, mental health disability, learning disability, and multiple disability, and comparisons made with the responses of women without disability.</p> <h4>Setting</h4> <p>Survey data were collected on women’s experience of primary and secondary in all trusts providing maternity care in England.</p> <h4>Participants</h4> <p>Women who had given birth three months previously, among whom were groups selfidentifying with different types of disability. Exclusions were limited to women whose baby had died and those who were aged less than 16 years at the time of the recent birth.</p> <h4>Results</h4> <p>Overall, 20,094 women completed and returned the survey; 1958 women (9.5%) selfidentified as having a disability. The findings indicate some gaps in maternity care provision for these women relating to interpersonal aspects of care: communication, feeling listened to and supported, involvement in decision making, having a trusted and respected relationship with clinical staff. Women from all disability groups wanted more postnatal contacts and help with infant feeding.</p> <h4>Conclusion</h4> <p>While access to care was generally satisfactory for women with a disability, women’s emotional wellbeing and support during pregnancy and beyond is an area that is in need of improvement. Specific areas identified included disseminating information effectively, ensuring appropriate communication and understanding, and supporting women’s sense of control to build trusting relationships with health care providers.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:fa8e24ed-d2f9-4774-88ef-3faac39ddea42022-03-27T13:06:45ZAccess and quality of maternity care for women with disability during pregnancy, birth and the postnatal periodJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:fa8e24ed-d2f9-4774-88ef-3faac39ddea4Symplectic Elements at OxfordBMJ Publishing Group2017Malouf, RHenderson, JRedshaw, M <h4>Objectives</h4> <p>More women with disability are becoming mothers and yet their care is rarely the focus of quantitative research. This study aimed to investigate access and quality of maternity care for women with differing disabilities.</p> <h4>Design</h4> <p>Secondary analysis was conducted on data from a 2015 national survey of women’s experience of maternity care. Descriptive and adjusted analyses were undertaken for five disability groups: physical disability, sensory impairment, mental health disability, learning disability, and multiple disability, and comparisons made with the responses of women without disability.</p> <h4>Setting</h4> <p>Survey data were collected on women’s experience of primary and secondary in all trusts providing maternity care in England.</p> <h4>Participants</h4> <p>Women who had given birth three months previously, among whom were groups selfidentifying with different types of disability. Exclusions were limited to women whose baby had died and those who were aged less than 16 years at the time of the recent birth.</p> <h4>Results</h4> <p>Overall, 20,094 women completed and returned the survey; 1958 women (9.5%) selfidentified as having a disability. The findings indicate some gaps in maternity care provision for these women relating to interpersonal aspects of care: communication, feeling listened to and supported, involvement in decision making, having a trusted and respected relationship with clinical staff. Women from all disability groups wanted more postnatal contacts and help with infant feeding.</p> <h4>Conclusion</h4> <p>While access to care was generally satisfactory for women with a disability, women’s emotional wellbeing and support during pregnancy and beyond is an area that is in need of improvement. Specific areas identified included disseminating information effectively, ensuring appropriate communication and understanding, and supporting women’s sense of control to build trusting relationships with health care providers.</p>
spellingShingle Malouf, R
Henderson, J
Redshaw, M
Access and quality of maternity care for women with disability during pregnancy, birth and the postnatal period
title Access and quality of maternity care for women with disability during pregnancy, birth and the postnatal period
title_full Access and quality of maternity care for women with disability during pregnancy, birth and the postnatal period
title_fullStr Access and quality of maternity care for women with disability during pregnancy, birth and the postnatal period
title_full_unstemmed Access and quality of maternity care for women with disability during pregnancy, birth and the postnatal period
title_short Access and quality of maternity care for women with disability during pregnancy, birth and the postnatal period
title_sort access and quality of maternity care for women with disability during pregnancy birth and the postnatal period
work_keys_str_mv AT maloufr accessandqualityofmaternitycareforwomenwithdisabilityduringpregnancybirthandthepostnatalperiod
AT hendersonj accessandqualityofmaternitycareforwomenwithdisabilityduringpregnancybirthandthepostnatalperiod
AT redshawm accessandqualityofmaternitycareforwomenwithdisabilityduringpregnancybirthandthepostnatalperiod