Background and context: a growing number of childbearing women are reported to prefer a caesarean... more Background and context: a growing number of childbearing women are reported to prefer a caesarean section in the absence of a medical reason. Qualitative research describing factors influencing this preference in pregnant women is lacking. Objective: to describe Australian women's request for caesarean section in the absence of medical indicators in their first pregnancy. Design: advertisements were placed in local newspapers inviting women to participate in a telephone interview exploring women's experience of caesarean section. Thematic analysis was used to analyse data. Setting: two states of Australia: Queensland and Western Australia. Participants: a community sample of women (n ¼ 210) responded to the advertisements. This paper presents the findings elicited from interviews conducted with 14 women who requested a caesarean section during their first pregnancy in the absence of a known medical indication. Findings: childbirth fear, issues of control and safety, and a devaluing of the female body and birth process were the main themes underpinning women's requests for a non-medically-indicated caesarean section. Women perceived that medical discourses supported and reinforced their decision as a 'safe' and 'responsible' choice. Key conclusions and recommendations for practice: these findings assist women and health professionals to better understand how childbirth can be constructed as a fearful event. In light of the evidence about the risks associated with surgical birth, health-care professionals need to explore these perceptions with women and develop strategies to promote women's confidence and competence in their ability to give birth naturally.
Aim: To discuss corporeal support of the brain-dead pregnant woman and to critically examine imp... more Aim: To discuss corporeal support of the brain-dead pregnant woman and to critically examine important aspects of this complex situation that remain as yet unexplored. Background: When brain death of the woman occurs during pregnancy, the fetus may be kept inside the corporeally supported body for prolonged periods to enable continued fetal growth and development. This has been increasingly reported in medical literature since 1982 and has received considerable media attention in the past few years. Implications for midwives and nurses: Sophisticated advances in medical technologies have altered the boundaries of conception and birth, life and death, Western biomedical and cultural conceptions of women and their bodies, fetal personhood, fetal rights and fetal patienthood, profoundly influencing maternal behaviors, medical decisions and the treatment of pregnant women. This is especially so in the rare, but fraught instance of brain death of the pregnant woman, where nurses and midwives working in High Dependency Care units undertake the daily care of the corporeally supported body that holds a living fetus within it. This discussion enables critical and ethical conversation around the complexities of developing appropriate discourse concerning the woman who suffers brain death during pregnancy and considers the complexities for nurses and midwives caring for the Woman/body/fetus in this context. The potential impact on the fetus of growing and developing inside a 'dead' body is examined, and the absence in the literature of long-term follow up of infants gestated thus is questioned. Problem Case studies in the medical literature reporting prolonged corporeal support of the body of the brain dead (BD) pregnant woman demonstrate the considerable complexity of care, use of resources and cost involved in aiming for the birth of a live viable infant, yet aside from ethical debate, little is written about this fraught and complex situation. What is already known The bodies of BD pregnant women have been corporeally supported since 1982 for prolonged periods (2 days– 107 days) solely to enable fetal growth and development. With 37 cases reported to date, literature has either focussed on the ethics of this act, or detailed the technical aspects and complications of high dependency care used to stabilise a BD body to gestate a fetus with the aim of achieving the birth of a live and viable infant. What this paper adds This article raises compelling questions for further consideration around BD in pregnancy and points to new research areas for exploration of this complex and fraught context. These include: the lack of appropriate terminology/dis-course used to describe the woman/body/fetus, the need for qualitative research that examines nurses' and midwives' experiences of caring for the BD body and the fetus, discussion of potential consequences for fetal growth and development inside a dead body, and the need for detailed long-term follow-up of infants gestated thus.
Background and context: a growing number of childbearing women are reported to prefer a caesarean... more Background and context: a growing number of childbearing women are reported to prefer a caesarean section in the absence of a medical reason. Qualitative research describing factors influencing this preference in pregnant women is lacking. Objective: to describe Australian women's request for caesarean section in the absence of medical indicators in their first pregnancy. Design: advertisements were placed in local newspapers inviting women to participate in a telephone interview exploring women's experience of caesarean section. Thematic analysis was used to analyse data. Setting: two states of Australia: Queensland and Western Australia. Participants: a community sample of women (n ¼ 210) responded to the advertisements. This paper presents the findings elicited from interviews conducted with 14 women who requested a caesarean section during their first pregnancy in the absence of a known medical indication. Findings: childbirth fear, issues of control and safety, and a devaluing of the female body and birth process were the main themes underpinning women's requests for a non-medically-indicated caesarean section. Women perceived that medical discourses supported and reinforced their decision as a 'safe' and 'responsible' choice. Key conclusions and recommendations for practice: these findings assist women and health professionals to better understand how childbirth can be constructed as a fearful event. In light of the evidence about the risks associated with surgical birth, health-care professionals need to explore these perceptions with women and develop strategies to promote women's confidence and competence in their ability to give birth naturally.
Aim: To discuss corporeal support of the brain-dead pregnant woman and to critically examine imp... more Aim: To discuss corporeal support of the brain-dead pregnant woman and to critically examine important aspects of this complex situation that remain as yet unexplored. Background: When brain death of the woman occurs during pregnancy, the fetus may be kept inside the corporeally supported body for prolonged periods to enable continued fetal growth and development. This has been increasingly reported in medical literature since 1982 and has received considerable media attention in the past few years. Implications for midwives and nurses: Sophisticated advances in medical technologies have altered the boundaries of conception and birth, life and death, Western biomedical and cultural conceptions of women and their bodies, fetal personhood, fetal rights and fetal patienthood, profoundly influencing maternal behaviors, medical decisions and the treatment of pregnant women. This is especially so in the rare, but fraught instance of brain death of the pregnant woman, where nurses and midwives working in High Dependency Care units undertake the daily care of the corporeally supported body that holds a living fetus within it. This discussion enables critical and ethical conversation around the complexities of developing appropriate discourse concerning the woman who suffers brain death during pregnancy and considers the complexities for nurses and midwives caring for the Woman/body/fetus in this context. The potential impact on the fetus of growing and developing inside a 'dead' body is examined, and the absence in the literature of long-term follow up of infants gestated thus is questioned. Problem Case studies in the medical literature reporting prolonged corporeal support of the body of the brain dead (BD) pregnant woman demonstrate the considerable complexity of care, use of resources and cost involved in aiming for the birth of a live viable infant, yet aside from ethical debate, little is written about this fraught and complex situation. What is already known The bodies of BD pregnant women have been corporeally supported since 1982 for prolonged periods (2 days– 107 days) solely to enable fetal growth and development. With 37 cases reported to date, literature has either focussed on the ethics of this act, or detailed the technical aspects and complications of high dependency care used to stabilise a BD body to gestate a fetus with the aim of achieving the birth of a live and viable infant. What this paper adds This article raises compelling questions for further consideration around BD in pregnancy and points to new research areas for exploration of this complex and fraught context. These include: the lack of appropriate terminology/dis-course used to describe the woman/body/fetus, the need for qualitative research that examines nurses' and midwives' experiences of caring for the BD body and the fetus, discussion of potential consequences for fetal growth and development inside a dead body, and the need for detailed long-term follow-up of infants gestated thus.
Uploads
Papers by Lynne Staff