TY - JOUR
T1 - ‘It's your body, but…’ Mixed messages in childbirth education
T2 - Findings from a hospital ethnography
AU - Newnham, Elizabeth
AU - McKellar, Lois
AU - Pincombe, Jan
PY - 2017/12
Y1 - 2017/12
N2 - Objective to investigate the personal, social, cultural and institutional influences on women making decisions about using epidural analgesia in labour. In this article we discuss the findings that describe practices around the gaining of consent for an epidural in labour, which we juxtapose with similar processes relating to use of water for labour and/or birth. Design ethnography. Setting tertiary hospital in Australian city. Participants sequential interviews were conducted with 16 women; hospital staff (primarily midwives and doctors) participated during six months of participatory observation fieldwork. Findings women were not given full disclosure of either practice and midwives tailored the information they gave according to the institutional policies rather than evidence. Key conclusions informed consent is an oft-cited human right in health care, yet in maternity care the micro-politics of how informed consent is gained is difficult to ascertain, leading to a situation whereby the concept of informed consent is more robust than the reality of practice; an illusion of informed consent exists, yet information is often biased towards medicalised birth practices. Implications for practice as primary maternity care-givers, midwives have a role in providing unbiased information to women; however it appears that hospital culture and policy affect the way that this information is presented. It is arguable whether women in such instances are giving true informed consent, and for this reason, the ethics of these hidden practices are questioned.
AB - Objective to investigate the personal, social, cultural and institutional influences on women making decisions about using epidural analgesia in labour. In this article we discuss the findings that describe practices around the gaining of consent for an epidural in labour, which we juxtapose with similar processes relating to use of water for labour and/or birth. Design ethnography. Setting tertiary hospital in Australian city. Participants sequential interviews were conducted with 16 women; hospital staff (primarily midwives and doctors) participated during six months of participatory observation fieldwork. Findings women were not given full disclosure of either practice and midwives tailored the information they gave according to the institutional policies rather than evidence. Key conclusions informed consent is an oft-cited human right in health care, yet in maternity care the micro-politics of how informed consent is gained is difficult to ascertain, leading to a situation whereby the concept of informed consent is more robust than the reality of practice; an illusion of informed consent exists, yet information is often biased towards medicalised birth practices. Implications for practice as primary maternity care-givers, midwives have a role in providing unbiased information to women; however it appears that hospital culture and policy affect the way that this information is presented. It is arguable whether women in such instances are giving true informed consent, and for this reason, the ethics of these hidden practices are questioned.
KW - Antenatal education
KW - Bioethics
KW - Epidural analgesia
KW - Informed consent
KW - Midwifery
KW - Water immersion
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85029709683&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.midw.2017.09.003
DO - 10.1016/j.midw.2017.09.003
M3 - Article
C2 - 28942214
AN - SCOPUS:85029709683
SN - 0266-6138
VL - 55
SP - 53
EP - 59
JO - Midwifery
JF - Midwifery
ER -