Spiby Helen, Mcleish Jenny, Green Josephine, Darwin Zoe
Division of Midwifery, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Nottingham, 12th Floor, Tower Building, Nottingham, NG7 2RD, UK.
Policy Research Unit for Maternal Health and Care, National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit, University of Oxford, Oxford, OX3 7LF, UK.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2016 Sep 29;16(1):289. doi: 10.1186/s12884-016-1086-6.
Support from a doula is known to have physical and emotional benefits for mothers, but there is little evidence about the experiences of volunteer doulas. This research aimed to understand the motivation and experiences of volunteer doulas who have been trained to support women during pregnancy, birth and the postnatal period.
A postal questionnaire survey was sent to volunteer doulas at five volunteer doula projects working in low-income areas in England. Quantitative and qualitative data were analysed in parallel using summary statistics and content analysis respectively.
Eighty-nine volunteer doulas (response rate 34.5 %) from diverse backgrounds responded to the survey. Major motivators for volunteering included a desire to help others and, to a lesser extent, factors related to future employment. Most reported that the training was effective preparation for their role. They continued volunteering because they derived satisfaction from the doula role, and valued its social aspects. Their confidence, skills, employability and social connectedness had all increased, but many found the ending of the doula-mother relationship challenging. For a minority, negative aspects of their experience included time waiting to be allocated women to support and dissatisfaction with the way the doula service was run.
Most respondents found the experience rewarding. To maintain doulas' motivation as volunteers, services should: ensure doulas can start supporting women as soon as possible after completing the training; consider the merits of more flexible endings to the support relationship; offer opportunities for ongoing mutual support with other doulas, and ensure active support from service staff for volunteers.
已知导乐的支持对母亲有生理和情感上的益处,但关于志愿导乐的经历的证据很少。本研究旨在了解经过培训以在孕期、分娩期和产后为女性提供支持的志愿导乐的动机和经历。
向在英格兰低收入地区开展工作的五个志愿导乐项目中的志愿导乐发送了邮寄问卷调查。分别使用汇总统计和内容分析并行分析定量和定性数据。
来自不同背景的89名志愿导乐(回复率34.5%)对调查做出了回应。志愿服务的主要动机包括帮助他人的愿望,以及在较小程度上与未来就业相关的因素。大多数人报告说培训对他们的角色起到了有效的准备作用。他们继续志愿服务是因为从导乐角色中获得了满足感,并重视其社会层面。他们的信心、技能、就业能力和社会联系都有所增强,但许多人发现导乐与母亲关系的结束具有挑战性。对于少数人来说,则是等待分配要支持的女性的时间,以及对导乐服务运营方式的不满。
大多数受访者认为这段经历很有意义。为了保持导乐作为志愿者的积极性,服务机构应该:确保导乐在完成培训后能尽快开始为女性提供支持;考虑更灵活地结束支持关系的优点;为与其他导乐持续相互支持提供机会,并确保服务人员对志愿者的积极支持。