Experiences of Dutch Midwives Regarding the Quality of Care during the COVID-19 Pandemic
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Week of Pregnancy | Regular Midwifery Care [15] | Midwifery Care during COVID-19 [7] |
---|---|---|
6–8 | Face-to-face intake | Intake through telephone |
8–10 | Face-to-face counselling prenatal screening | Counselling through telephone |
14–26 | 2–3 face-to-face check-ups including one ultrasound around 20 weeks, 1 group counselling session on pregnancy | 1–2 face-to-face check-ups, potentially including and ultrasound around 20 weeks, depending on whether the ultrasound is performed by the midwife or by an external ultrasound technician |
27–40 | 6–8 face-to-face check-ups, 1 group counselling session on childbirth and the post-partum period | 6 face-to-face check-ups |
41–42 (if applicable) | 1–3 face-to-face check-ups | 1–2 face-to-face check-ups |
Postpartum | At least 3–4 home-visit check-ups | 2–3 check-ups through telephone, video call or a window visit |
Total | 13–22 face-to-face check-ups | 8–10 face-to-face check-ups, 4 telephone check-ups |
2. Methods
2.1. Study Design and Procedures
2.2. Participants
2.3. Theoretical Framework and Instrument
2.4. Analysis
3. Findings
3.1. Experiences of Midwives on Providing Care during the COVID-19 Pandemic
“I think that the biggest obstacle for me was that I constantly had to think about everything. I’m making decisions differently now. Before, you would always say: ‘oh just come by our practice’ or ‘I’ll come visit you’ [if a client experienced any problems]. Now I must remember to first ask whether they are showing any symptoms, then I have to reconsider what I have to do.”(Respondent 2)
“What I liked is that I supported all of the measures that were taken. This made it easier to communicate them to our clients. And I have to say, I was surprised about how much is still possible. And how happy I was with businesses such as Zoom,… Imagine if this had happened 50 years ago, it would have been a much bigger problem.”(Respondent 11)
“It’s just not fun anymore. You want to give people an ultrasound or give them a shoulder to cry on, but you always have to think about keeping distance and the safety measures.”(Respondent 4)
“You do your best to prevent it [spreading of the virus]. If it happens despite this, then you could not have prevented it. But I still get afraid when I hear of cases where young people get really ill from it. And for yourself it would be horrible of course, but it is worse for the young children you would leave behind. At the beginning, I experienced anxiety often, when you entered someone’s home and thought: was this a moment [of infection/spreading] or not?”(Respondent 1)
3.2. Experiences on Information Provision on COVID-19
“We just don’t know what the best thing to do is. Everybody wants to do it well, but exaggerating and putting on too much protective equipment is also not good, because that only causes fear.”(Respondent 7)
3.3. Interprofessional Collaboration
“The collaboration with the maternity nurses went fine. I did realize I think, that we but a pretty large burden on the shoulders of the maternity nurses, because they are our eyes and ears now, even though they are not trained for that. Normally, we are able to decide together: is this child looking a bit yellow? These things are a matter of judgement, which now falls fully on the shoulders of the maternity nurse.”(Respondent 11)
3.4. Costs
“It is funny, because you would think that a telephone consult would be faster, but it takes a lot more time. Normally, you can explain thinks using your computer or a folder, but now you have to explain it all by telephone. After the telephone call, we then have to deliver said folders to the clients. So in that case it costs a lot more time, on average about two to three hours more I think.”(Respondent 12)
3.5. Under/Overtreatment
“Telephone check-ups are more difficult, that really is a shame. You cannot see them, and if they say: ‘My back hurts’, they cannot point it out over the telephone. And when they come to the face-to-face check-up, it still takes just as long, so there is no time won there.”(Respondent 13)
3.6. Experiences Pregnant Women
“There were clients who were making a fuss about wanting an ultrasound, although it was not medically necessary. They were asking when it would be necessary to get an ultrasound and I explained it to them. The next day, they would call me with those exact symptoms for an ultrasound. Then you have no other option but to give them an ultrasound.”(Respondent 2)
“What we noticed in the region is that we had to beware of still caring for the people who really need it the most. I got scared by an example where they [the midwife] had missed something [in a case of intrauterine foetal death]. What kind of symptoms did the pregnant woman have and why was she not seen? … in the beginning we had to hold everybody off as much as possible. But … If someone calls with severe worries and symptoms, then you will still go and visit them. If they are very worried, you simply cannot let them down.”(Respondent 1)
3.7. Shared Decision Making
“You say more often: ‘This is necessary now’. There is less room to talk about it and decide about it together. It is of importance for the general health and wellbeing, and most people get that. There is less wiggle room to divert from those measures.”(Respondent 14)
4. Discussion
Strengths and Limitations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Theory/Concept | Question |
---|---|
Background | Have you completed any other higher education studies besides Midwifery? If so, which study? |
For how long have you been working as a midwife? | |
At which midwifery practice do you work? | |
For how long have you been working at this specific midwifery practice? | |
How many hours do you normally work a week? [part-time/full-time] | |
Do you have any underlying health conditions that may increase the severity of a COVID-19 infection? | |
Do you live with or care for people who have underlying health issues that may increase the severity of a COVID-19 infection? | |
High-quality midwifery care | How do you experience providing midwifery care during the COVID-19 pandemic? Is it more or less challenging than you expected? [mentally and physically] |
What is your perception on how pregnant women and their partners experience the quality of midwifery care during the COVID-19 pandemic? | |
What do you think of the way that midwifery care is organized at the moment? | |
What do you think could increase the quality of midwifery care given the current circumstances? | |
What are, in your opinion, the biggest obstacles in currently providing midwifery care? | |
Do you notice any effects of social media coverings of COVID-19 on you and your clients? | |
Which of the changes because of COVID-19 could be continued after the pandemic has ended? | |
Information provision | Where do you primarily obtain information from regarding midwifery care and COVID-19? |
Was/is this information easy to find and has it been published on time? | |
Was this information comprehensible? | |
Has it been clear when to use what personal protective equipment? | |
Has it been clear when you and your pregnant women should get tested for COVID-19? | |
Were new measures and/or guidelines clear? | |
Do you think that large organizations such as the KNOV and RIVM could have done more for the pregnant women with regards to information provision? | |
Costs | Do you spend more or fewer hours working because of the changes due to COVID-19? How many hours? What caused this increase or decrease? |
Do you think the extra costs you made because of COVID-19 and/or the extra hours you worked will be reimbursed? | |
Under/over treatment | How often did you have to deviate from the COVID-19 midwifery care schedule provided by the KNOV? |
Do you feel like you had enough contact with your clients during pregnancy or after childbirth? | |
Shared decision making | To what extent were you able to practice shared decision making? |
Interprofessional collaboration | What do you think of the interprofessional collaboration during the COVID-19 pandemic? |
Participant | Total Working Years as Midwife | Working Years at Current Midwifery Practice | Working Part-Time/Full-Time | High Risk Group a | Care for or Live with High Risk Group a |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 14 | 13 | Full-time | No | No |
2 | 16 | 14 | Full-time | No | No |
3 | 1.5 | 1 | Full-time | No | No |
4 | 12 | 8 | Full-time | No | No |
5 | 3 | 2 | Full-time | No | No |
6 | 5 | 0.5 | Part-time | No | No |
7 | 16 | 15 | Full-time | No | No |
8 | 5 | 1.5 | Full-time | No | No |
9 | 33 | 24 | Part-time | No | No |
10 | 29 | 15 | Full-time | No | No |
11 | 7 | 3.5 | Full-time | No | No |
12 | 5 | 5 | Part-time | Yes | No |
13 | 22 | 12 | Full-time | No | No |
14 | 11 | 11 | Full-time | No | No |
15 | 5 | 1 | Full-time | No | No |
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Hijdra, R.; Rutten, W.; Gubbels, J. Experiences of Dutch Midwives Regarding the Quality of Care during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Healthcare 2022, 10, 304. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10020304
Hijdra R, Rutten W, Gubbels J. Experiences of Dutch Midwives Regarding the Quality of Care during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Healthcare. 2022; 10(2):304. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10020304
Chicago/Turabian StyleHijdra, Roos, Wim Rutten, and Jessica Gubbels. 2022. "Experiences of Dutch Midwives Regarding the Quality of Care during the COVID-19 Pandemic" Healthcare 10, no. 2: 304. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10020304
APA StyleHijdra, R., Rutten, W., & Gubbels, J. (2022). Experiences of Dutch Midwives Regarding the Quality of Care during the COVID-19 Pandemic. Healthcare, 10(2), 304. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10020304