Javornická Daniela, Folkvord Synnøve Mari Eidsvik, Jaeken Annelies, Krčméryová Terézia, Kisvetrová Helena, Steen Mary
The Centre for Research and Science, Faculty of Health Sciences, Palacký University Olomouc, Hněvotínská 976/3, Olomouc, 775 15, Czech Republic.
Department of Midwifery, Faculty of Health Sciences, Palacký University Olomouc, Hněvotínská 976/3, Olomouc, 775 15, Czech Republic.
BMC Nurs. 2025 Jul 1;24(1):766. doi: 10.1186/s12912-025-03296-2.
Meeting the safety needs of women and newborns is crucial in preventing harm in maternity care. Recent recommendations suggest that childbirth needs to be understood through a broader framework, since maternal and newborn mortality/morbidity remain a global challenge. The unique role of midwifery students in clinical environment can provide and contribute to such understanding. This paper explores aspects of maternity care services impacting patient safety as identified by midwifery students in five European countries.
A 2-stage qualitative design employed an interpretivist approach. Thirty-five midwifery students (Belgium, Czech Republic, Estonia, Norway, Slovakia) were recruited through purposive sampling to engage students with an Erasmus + experience. Stage 1 (2022-2023): Thirty-five written narratives were collected anonymously via an online 'Sharing LearnIng from Practice for Patient Safety' Learning Event Recording Tool. The dataset captured care in antenatal, maternity and postnatal wards. Stage 2 (2024): Three focus group discussions verified and added to the initial findings. Audio recordings were transcribed, NVivo software was utilised to assist reflexive thematic analysis in both stages.
Three themes emerged from the analyses. 'Treat me well' theme captured the communication gaps and dehumanised assembly-line approach leading to compromised safety, obstetric violence and trauma. The second theme describes the paralysing impact of specific team members in 'Team dynamics and accountability', reducing a sense of agency among staff to advocate for patient safety. Theme 'Traumatised team-members' reveals the secondary trauma impact on emotional fatigue and defensive practices.
Midwifery students emphasised the importance of individualised, well-communicated, and respectful care, with language barriers being addressed. Ensuring that patients feel safe seems equally relevant to physical safety. Collaborative teams prevent errors/hazards through interdisciplinary simulations, debriefings and students' continuous mentoring. By fostering a psychologically safe environment and implementing whistleblowing policies, the paralysing bystander effect among staff might be mitigated, and obstetric mistreatment, violence, and trauma could be addressed. Unresolved secondary trauma appears to increase unnecessary interventions and reduce the emotional availability of staff for patients in maternity care. Hence, effective recovery needs to be supported by management, and emotional resilience training should be incorporated into midwifery curricula to indirectly improve patient safety.
Not applicable.
满足妇女和新生儿的安全需求对于预防产科护理中的伤害至关重要。最近的建议表明,需要通过更广泛的框架来理解分娩,因为孕产妇和新生儿的死亡率/发病率仍然是一项全球性挑战。助产专业学生在临床环境中的独特作用可以提供并有助于这种理解。本文探讨了五个欧洲国家的助产专业学生所确定的影响患者安全的产科护理服务方面。
采用两阶段定性设计,采用解释主义方法。通过目的抽样招募了35名助产专业学生(来自比利时、捷克共和国、爱沙尼亚、挪威、斯洛伐克),以使学生具有伊拉斯谟+项目的经历。第一阶段(2022 - 2023年):通过在线“分享从患者安全实践中学习”学习活动记录工具匿名收集了35篇书面叙述。数据集涵盖了产前、产时和产后病房的护理情况。第二阶段(2024年):三次焦点小组讨论对初步结果进行了验证并补充。对录音进行了转录,在两个阶段均使用NVivo软件协助进行反思性主题分析。
分析得出了三个主题。“善待我”主题体现了沟通差距以及导致安全受损、产科暴力和创伤的非人性化流水线式方法。第二个主题描述了“团队动态与问责制”中特定团队成员的麻痹性影响,降低了工作人员为患者安全发声的能动感。“受创伤的团队成员”主题揭示了对情绪疲劳和防御性做法的继发性创伤影响。
助产专业学生强调了个性化、沟通良好且尊重患者的护理的重要性,同时要解决语言障碍问题。确保患者感到安全似乎与身体安全同样重要。协作团队通过跨学科模拟、汇报和对学生的持续指导来预防错误/风险。通过营造心理安全的环境并实施举报政策,可能会减轻工作人员中麻痹性的旁观者效应,并解决产科虐待、暴力和创伤问题。未解决的继发性创伤似乎会增加不必要的干预,并降低产科护理中工作人员对患者的情感投入。因此,有效的恢复需要管理层的支持,并且应将情绪恢复力培训纳入助产专业课程,以间接提高患者安全。
不适用。