Crowther Susan, Smythe Elizabeth
School of Nursing and Midwifery, Robert Gordon University, Garthdee Road, Aberdeen, Scotland, UK.
Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2016 Nov 24;16(1):370. doi: 10.1186/s12884-016-1164-9.
There are interwoven personal, professional and organisational relationships to be navigated in maternity in all regions. In rural regions relationships are integral to safe maternity care. Yet there is a paucity of research on how relationships influence safety and nurture satisfying experiences for rural maternity care providers and mothers and families in these regions. This paper draws attention to how these relationships matter.
This research is informed by hermeneutic phenomenology drawing on Heidegger and Gadamer. Thirteen participants were recruited via purposeful sampling and asked to share their experiences of rural maternity care in recorded unstructured in-depth interviews. Participants were women and health care providers living and working in rural regions. Recordings were transcribed and data interpretively analysed until a plausible and trustworthy thematic pattern emerged.
Throughout the data the relational nature of rural living surfaced as an interweaving tapestry of connectivity. Relationships in rural maternity are revealed in myriad ways: for some optimal relationships, for others feeling isolated, living with discord and professional disharmony. Professional misunderstandings undermine relationships. Rural maternity can become unsustainable and unsettling when relationships break down leading to unsafeness.
This study reveals how relationships are an important and vital aspect to the lived-experience of rural maternity care. Relationships are founded on mutual understanding and attuned to trust matter. These relationships are forged over time and keep childbirth safe and enable maternity care providers to work sustainably. Yet hidden unspoken pre-understandings of individuals and groups build tension in relationships leading to discord. Trust builds healthy rural communities of practice within which everyone can flourish, feel accepted, supported and safe. This is facilitated by collaborative learning activities and open respectful communication founded on what matters most (safe positive childbirth) whilst appreciating and acknowledging professional and personal differences.
在所有地区的产科领域,都存在着相互交织的个人、职业和组织关系需要应对。在农村地区,人际关系对于安全的产科护理至关重要。然而,关于这些关系如何影响农村产科护理提供者以及这些地区的母亲和家庭的安全并培育令人满意的体验,相关研究却很匮乏。本文旨在关注这些关系的重要性。
本研究以借鉴海德格尔和伽达默尔思想的诠释现象学为指导。通过目的抽样招募了13名参与者,并要求他们在无结构的深度访谈录音中分享他们在农村产科护理方面的经历。参与者为生活和工作在农村地区的女性和医疗保健提供者。对录音进行转录,并对数据进行解释性分析,直到出现合理且可信的主题模式。
在整个数据中,农村生活的关系本质呈现为一幅相互连接的交织挂毯。农村产科中的关系以多种方式展现出来:对一些人来说是理想的关系,而对另一些人来说则感到孤立,生活中存在不和以及职业上的不和谐。专业上的误解会破坏关系。当关系破裂导致不安全时,农村产科护理可能会变得不可持续且令人不安。
本研究揭示了关系是农村产科护理生活体验的一个重要且关键的方面。关系建立在相互理解的基础上,并与信任相契合。这些关系是随着时间的推移而形成的,能保障分娩安全,并使产科护理提供者能够可持续地工作。然而,个人和群体隐藏的、未言明的先入之见会在关系中引发紧张,导致不和。信任构建健康的农村实践社区,在其中每个人都能蓬勃发展,感到被接纳、得到支持且安全。这通过基于最重要的事情(安全、积极的分娩)开展协作学习活动以及开放、尊重的沟通来实现,同时要欣赏和承认专业及个人差异。