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原住民母婴结局及妇女的助产护理体验:一项混合方法的系统评价。

Indigenous maternal and infant outcomes and women's experiences of midwifery care: A mixed-methods systematic review.

作者信息

McNeil Deborah, Elliott Sarah A, Wong Angie, Kromm Seija, Bialy Liza, Montesanti Stephanie, Purificati-Fuñe Adam, Juul Sonje, Roach Pamela, Bromely Jackie, Tailfeathers Esther, Amyotte Maddie, Oster Richard T

机构信息

Department of Community Health Sciences, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

Maternal Newborn Child & Youth Strategic Clinical Network™, Alberta Health Services, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

出版信息

Birth. 2025 Jun;52(2):173-188. doi: 10.1111/birt.12841. Epub 2024 Jun 19.

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The impact of midwifery, and especially Indigenous midwifery, care for Indigenous women and communities has not been comprehensively reviewed. To address this knowledge gap, we conducted a mixed-methods systematic review to understand Indigenous maternal and infant outcomes and women's' experiences with midwifery care.

METHODS

We searched nine databases to identify primary studies reporting on midwifery and Indigenous maternal and infant birth outcomes and experiences, published in English since 2000. We synthesized quantitative and qualitative outcome data using a convergent segregated mixed-methods approach and used a mixed-methods appraisal tool (MMAT) to assess the methodological quality of included studies. The Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Quality Appraisal Tool (ATSI QAT) was used to appraise the inclusion of Indigenous perspectives in the evidence.

RESULTS

Out of 3044 records, we included 35 individual studies with 55% (19 studies) reporting on maternal and infant health outcomes. Comparative studies (n = 13) showed no significant differences in mortality rates but identified reduced preterm births, earlier prenatal care, and an increased number of prenatal visits for Indigenous women receiving midwifery care. Quality of care studies indicated a preference for midwifery care among Indigenous women. Sixteen qualitative studies highlighted three key findings - culturally safe care, holistic care, and improved access to care. The majority of studies were of high methodological quality (91% met ≥80% criteria), while only 14% of studies were considered to have appropriately included Indigenous perspectives.

CONCLUSION

This review demonstrates the value of midwifery care for Indigenous women, providing evidence to support policy recommendations promoting midwifery care as a physically and culturally safe model for Indigenous women and families.

摘要

背景

助产护理,尤其是原住民助产护理,对原住民妇女及其社区的影响尚未得到全面评估。为填补这一知识空白,我们开展了一项混合方法的系统综述,以了解原住民孕产妇和婴儿的结局以及妇女接受助产护理的经历。

方法

我们检索了九个数据库,以识别自2000年以来以英文发表的关于助产护理以及原住民孕产妇和婴儿出生结局与经历的原始研究。我们采用趋同分离混合方法对定量和定性结局数据进行综合分析,并使用混合方法评估工具(MMAT)来评估纳入研究的方法学质量。原住民和托雷斯海峡岛民质量评估工具(ATSI QAT)用于评估证据中是否纳入了原住民的观点。

结果

在3044条记录中,我们纳入了35项个体研究,其中55%(19项研究)报告了孕产妇和婴儿健康结局。比较研究(n = 13)显示死亡率无显著差异,但发现接受助产护理的原住民妇女早产率降低、产前护理更早开始且产前检查次数增加。护理质量研究表明原住民妇女更倾向于助产护理。16项定性研究突出了三个关键发现——文化安全护理、整体护理以及就医机会改善。大多数研究的方法学质量较高(91%符合≥80%的标准),而只有14%的研究被认为适当纳入了原住民的观点。

结论

本综述证明了助产护理对原住民妇女的价值,为支持将助产护理作为原住民妇女及其家庭在身体和文化方面安全的护理模式的政策建议提供了证据。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/33e7/12060610/0af85b1e8cf4/BIRT-52-173-g002.jpg

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