Genre
- Journal Article
Objective: To determine the factors that predict women's perceptions of the childbirth experience and to examine whether these vary with the type of birth a woman experiences. Design: Prospective cohort study. Setting: The postpartum units of two eastern Canadian hospitals. Participants: Six hundred fifty two women and their newborns. Data Collection: Data were collected in hospital at 12 to 48 hours postpartum using self-report questionnaires and chart review. Main Outcome Measure: Perception of the childbirth experience was measured for women having a vaginal and emergency cesarean birth using the Questionnaire Measuring Attitudes About Labor and Delivery and planned cesarean birth using the Modified Questionnaire Measuring Attitudes About Labor and Delivery. Results: Of the 20 predictors of women's childbirth perceptions, the strongest were type of birth; degree of awareness, relaxation, and control; helpfulness of partner support; and being together with the infant following birth. Conclusions: Of the predictors of a quality birth experience, most were amenable to nursing interventions: enhancement of patient awareness, relaxation, and control; promotion of partner support; and provision of immediate opportunities for women to be with their babies.
School of Nursing at the University of Prince Edward Island, Charlottetown, Canada.; Publisher URL: www.cinahl.com/cgi-bin/refsvc?jid=228&accno=2009775896
Language
- English
Subjects
- Sample Size Determination
- Cesarean Section
- Human
- Fear
- Perinatal Nursing
- Record Review
- Prospective Studies
- postnatal period
- Scales
- Labor
- Summated Rating Scaling
- Power Analysis
- Medical Records
- Funding Source
- Self Report
- Childbirth
- Descriptive Research
- Vaginal Birth
- RELAXATION
- Questionnaires
- Convenience Sample
- Hospital Units
- Coefficient Alpha
- Confidence Intervals
- Descriptive Statistics
- Attitude Measures
- Prince Edward Island
- Pregnancy
- Cesarean Section -- Classification
- Labor Pain
- Support, Psychosocial
- Maternal Attitudes -- Evaluation
- Analgesia, Obstetrical
- Maternal Attitudes
- Self-Efficacy -- Evaluation
- Adult
- Female
- Predictive Research