Department of Gender Studies, Queen's University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
J Midwifery Womens Health. 2024 Jan-Feb;69(1):91-100. doi: 10.1111/jmwh.13557. Epub 2023 Sep 14.
Research on how midwives in North America are trained to provide inclusive care to Two Spirited, Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer, Questioning, Intersex, or Asexual (2SLGBTQQIA+) clients is limited. The objective of this study was to define 2SLGBTQQIA+ inclusive midwifery care in the Canadian context and to explore the experiences of graduates of Ontario's Midwifery Education Program (MEP) to determine how midwives are trained to provide inclusive care.
Ethics approval was obtained for this qualitative study to perform semistructured interviews with graduates from the MEP hosted by McMaster, Toronto Metropolitan, and Laurentian University. Eleven midwives were recruited and were required to be (1) graduates of Ontario's MEP, (2) registered midwives under the College of Midwives of Ontario or elsewhere, (3) currently practicing or on leave, and (4) self-identified advocates for 2SLGBTQQIA+ individuals.
When defining 2SLGBTQQIA+ inclusive care, midwives described the following principles: using inclusive language, changing the clinical environment, amending documents and websites, and tailoring care for each client. Participants recognized recent efforts by Ontario's MEP to provide 2SLGBTQQIA+ inclusive education while highlighting the need to expand 2SLGBTQQIA+ content across all courses, practicing inclusive care during placement, and ensuring an inclusive environment in the program.
Midwives in this study helped conceptualize inclusive midwifery care for 2SLGBTQQIA+ clients and underlined remaining gaps in Ontario's MEP toward providing student midwives with this competency by graduation. This study helped to fill a gap in the literature on how Canadian midwives are trained to provide 2SLGBTQQIA+ inclusive care and generated recommendations for Ontario's MEP to support prelicensure education that trains inclusive midwives. Having demonstrated gaps in how birth workers are trained to provide 2SLGBTQQIA+ inclusive care, this study points to the need for other prelicensure health professional programs to evaluate their training and to support 2SLGBTQQIA+ inclusive practice.
关于北美如何培训助产士为 Two Spirited、女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别、酷儿、疑问、间性或无性(2SLGBTQQIA+)客户提供包容服务的研究有限。本研究的目的是在加拿大语境下定义 2SLGBTQQIA+包容助产护理,并探讨安大略省助产士教育计划(MEP)毕业生的经验,以确定如何培训助产士提供包容护理。
本定性研究获得了伦理批准,对麦克马斯特、多伦多都会和劳伦森大学主办的 MEP 的毕业生进行半结构化访谈。招募了 11 名助产士,他们必须是(1)安大略省 MEP 的毕业生,(2)安大略省助产士学院或其他地方的注册助产士,(3)目前执业或休假,以及(4)自我认同为 2SLGBTQQIA+个人的倡导者。
当定义 2SLGBTQQIA+包容护理时,助产士描述了以下原则:使用包容性语言、改变临床环境、修改文件和网站以及为每位客户定制护理。参与者认识到安大略省 MEP 最近为提供 2SLGBTQQIA+包容教育所做的努力,同时强调需要在所有课程中扩大 2SLGBTQQIA+内容,在实习期间提供包容护理,并确保项目中的环境包容。
本研究中的助产士帮助概念化了 2SLGBTQQIA+客户的包容助产护理,并强调了安大略省 MEP 在向学生助产士提供这种能力方面仍存在差距,直到毕业。本研究有助于填补加拿大助产士如何接受 2SLGBTQQIA+包容护理培训方面的文献空白,并为安大略省 MEP 提供支持,以支持培训包容助产士的前置许可教育。这项研究表明,生育工作者在接受 2SLGBTQQIA+包容护理培训方面存在差距,这表明其他前置许可卫生专业人员计划需要评估他们的培训,并支持 2SLGBTQQIA+包容实践。