Hardeman Rachel R, Kozhimannil Katy B
J Midwifery Womens Health. 2016 Nov;61(6):773-780. doi: 10.1111/jmwh.12497. Epub 2016 Nov 14.
The imperative to diversify the health care workforce is evident: increased diversity contributes to the overall health of the nation. Given persistent racial and ethnic disparities in birth outcomes, workforce diversity is particularly urgent in the context of clinical and supportive care during pregnancy and childbirth. The goal of this analysis was to characterize the intentions and motivations of racially and ethnically diverse women who chose to become doulas (maternal support professionals) and to describe their early doula careers, including the experiences that sustain their work.
In 2014, 12 women of color in the Minneapolis, Minnesota, metropolitan area (eg, African American, Somali, Hmong, Latina, American Indian) applied and were selected (from a pool of 58) to receive doula training and certification. In January and February 2015, we conducted semistructured interviews (30 to 90 minutes) with the newly trained doulas. We used an inductive qualitative approach to analyze key themes related to motivation and satisfaction with doula work.
For many of the women of color we interviewed, the underlying motivation for becoming a doula was related directly to a desire to support women from the doula's own racial, ethnic, and cultural community. Other key themes related to both motivation and satisfaction included perceiving birth work as a calling, easing women's transitions to motherhood by "holding space," honoring the ritual and ceremony of childbirth, and providing culturally competent support, often as the sole source of cultural knowledge during labor and birth.
Doulas of color have a strong commitment to supporting women from their communities. Given the evidence linking doula support to improved birth outcomes, successful recruitment and retention of women of color as doulas may support broader efforts to reduce long-standing disparities in birth outcomes.
使医疗保健劳动力多元化的必要性显而易见:增加多样性有助于国家的整体健康。鉴于出生结果方面持续存在的种族和族裔差异,在孕期和分娩期间的临床和支持性护理背景下,劳动力多元化尤为紧迫。本分析的目的是描述选择成为导乐(产妇支持专业人员)的不同种族和族裔女性的意图和动机,并描述她们早期的导乐职业生涯,包括维持其工作的经历。
2014年,明尼苏达州明尼阿波利斯都会区的12名有色人种女性(如非裔美国人、索马里人、苗族、拉丁裔、美洲印第安人)申请并被选中(从58人中选出)接受导乐培训和认证。2015年1月和2月,我们对新培训的导乐进行了半结构化访谈(30至90分钟)。我们采用归纳定性方法来分析与导乐工作的动机和满意度相关的关键主题。
对于我们采访的许多有色人种女性来说,成为导乐的潜在动机直接与支持来自导乐自身种族、族裔和文化社区的女性的愿望相关。与动机和满意度相关的其他关键主题包括将生育工作视为一种使命,通过“提供空间”来缓解女性向母亲角色的转变,尊重分娩的仪式和典礼,以及提供具有文化胜任力的支持,这通常是分娩过程中唯一的文化知识来源。
有色人种导乐坚定致力于支持来自其社区的女性。鉴于有证据表明导乐支持与改善出生结果相关,成功招募和留住有色人种女性作为导乐可能有助于更广泛地努力减少出生结果方面长期存在的差异。