Martha S. Pitzer Center for Women, Children and Youth, College of Nursing, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio.
J Midwifery Womens Health. 2024 Sep-Oct;69(5):697-717. doi: 10.1111/jmwh.13628. Epub 2024 Apr 1.
There are striking disparities in perinatal health outcomes for Black women in the United States. Although the causes are multifactorial, research findings have increasingly identified social and structural determinants of health as contributors to perinatal disparities. Maltreatment during perinatal care, which is disproportionately experienced by Black women, may be one such contributor. Qualitative researchers have explored Black women's perinatal care experiences, but childbirth experience data has yet to be analyzed in-depth across studies. The aim of this meta-synthesis was to explore the birthing experience of Black women in the United States.
PubMed, Embase, PsycINFO, and CINAHL databases were searched. Inclusion criteria were qualitative research studies that included birth experience data shared by self-identified Black or African American women who had given birth in the United States. Exclusion criteria were reports that did not include rich qualitative data or only included experience data that did not specify the race of the participant (eg, data pooled for women of color). The search began February 2022 and ended June 2022. The Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal Checklist for Qualitative Research was used to appraise the research. Results were synthesized using content analysis.
Fifteen studies met inclusion criteria. Main themes included (1) trust: being known and seen; (2) how race influences care; (3) preserving autonomy; and (4) birth as trauma.
Fragmented care resulted in reports of poor birth experiences in several studies. Open communication and feeling known by perinatal care providers was influential in improving childbirth experiences among Black women; these themes are consistent with existing research. Further prospective research exploring relationships among these themes and perinatal outcomes is needed. Limitations of this report include the use of content analysis and meta-synthesis which may lose the granularity of the original reports; however, the aggregation of voices may provide valuable, transferable, actionable insight that can inform future supportive care interventions.
美国黑人女性的围产期健康结果存在显著差异。尽管原因是多方面的,但研究结果越来越多地将健康的社会和结构性决定因素确定为围产期差异的促成因素。在围产期护理中受到虐待的情况,在黑人女性中比例过高,可能就是其中一个促成因素。定性研究人员已经探讨了黑人女性的围产期护理体验,但分娩体验数据在研究中尚未得到深入分析。本次元综合的目的是探讨美国黑人女性的分娩体验。
检索了 PubMed、Embase、PsycINFO 和 CINAHL 数据库。纳入标准为包括自我认同为美国黑人或非裔美国女性分娩经历数据的定性研究,这些女性在美国分娩。排除标准为未包括丰富定性数据的报告,或仅包括未具体说明参与者种族的体验数据的报告(例如,为有色人种女性汇总的数据)。检索始于 2022 年 2 月,止于 2022 年 6 月。采用 Joanna Briggs 研究所定性研究批判性评价清单对研究进行评价。结果采用内容分析法进行综合。
15 项研究符合纳入标准。主要主题包括(1)信任:被了解和被看到;(2)种族如何影响护理;(3)维护自主权;和(4)分娩即创伤。
在几项研究中,零碎的护理导致报告分娩体验较差。与围产期护理提供者进行开诚布公的沟通并感受到被了解,对改善黑人女性的分娩体验有影响;这些主题与现有研究一致。需要进一步进行前瞻性研究,以探索这些主题与围产期结局之间的关系。本报告的局限性包括使用内容分析法和元综合,这可能会丢失原始报告的粒度;然而,汇总的意见可能会提供有价值的、可转移的、可操作的见解,从而为未来的支持性护理干预提供信息。