Sentences with phrase «in midwifery teams»

Not exact matches

Antenatal tutor Noreen Hart from the National Childbirth Trust (which organised a family fun day in June 2010 to support the initiative) said: «During the last 12 months campaigners have been working closely with Wiltshire Community Health Services» midwifery team and the suggestion of partners having the opportunity of staying the first night after birth was welcomed by all involved in maternity services.
The Believe Midwifery team was with us the whole time and was so supportive even as I labored in the hospital.
This 21 / 2 - day hands - on workshop is designed to prepare advanced level birth doulas with the tools and skills to serve as an assistant to a home birth midwife at a 36 week prenatal home visit, home birth and the strategies to work cooperatively with the home birth midwifery team, Experience in breastfeeding support, childbirth education and other birth skills are important.
Following discharge, my little one's early weeks and months will not be spent in a germ - filled waiting room of a pediatric clinic, but rather either in my own home with my midwifery team visiting me or our driving to her clinic which is largely healthy clientele who support healthy living.
She is also a member of the legislative liaison team with the Indiana State Nursing Association (ISNA) and offers expert witness consultation in legal cases involving women's health issues or midwifery.
Even your midwifery team you will probably have gotten to know well in the lead up to the big day.
This type of care includes care in the community from a team of midwives, caseload midwifery or independent midwives and can include antenatal care, home birth and postpartum care options such as early transfer home.
We thank the North American Registry of Midwives Board for helping facilitate the study; Tim Putt for help with layout of the data forms; Jennesse Oakhurst, Shannon Salisbury, and a team of five others for data entry; Adam Slade for computer programming support; Amelia Johnson, Phaedra Muirhead, Shannon Salisbury, Tanya Stotsky, Carrie Whelan, and Kim Yates for office support; Kelly Klick and Sheena Jardin for the satisfaction survey; members of our advisory council (Eugene Declerq (Boston University School of Public Health), Susan Hodges (Citizens for Midwifery and consumer panel of the Cochrane Collaboration's Pregnancy and Childbirth Group), Jonathan Kotch (University of North Carolina Department of Maternal and Child Health), Patricia Aikins Murphy (University of Utah College of Nursing), and Lawrence Oppenheimer (University of Ottawa Division of Maternal Fetal Medicine); and the midwives and mothers who agreed to participate in the study.
Carol is a member of the Expecting More team that is creating state - of - the - science maternity care decision aids; co-author of 2010 direction - setting companion reports: «2020 Vision for a High - Quality, High - Value Maternity Care System» and «Blueprint for Action»; lead author of the Milbank Report Evidence - based Maternity Care: What It Is and What It Can Achieve; a co-investigator of three path - breaking national Listening to Mothers surveys; founding author of a quarterly evidence column (2003 - 07) that continues to be published in midwifery and nursing journals; author of an annual column in Birth (2006 --RRB-; and guest editor of special issues on Transforming Maternity Care, The Nature and Management of Labor Pain, and cesarean section overuse.
As your midwifery team, we work to educate you in your options.
Owned by Certified Nurse Midwife and Nurse Practitioner Mary Mumford Haley, the team of midwives at RI Home Birth provide personalized care for the childbearing years for all pregnant people, and proudly care for families in the collaborative and empowering tradition that midwifery embodies.
Continuity of care is a key and deliberate feature of the model of midwifery care in BC and to achieve this, midwives work as solo practitioners or in teams of up to four midwives, each midwife can provide care for a caseload of up to 60 women each year, and each midwife is compensated per «course of care» through the province's universal health insurance (Medical Services Plan).
The average cost per delivery was higher in the standard care group (AUD 3475) compared to the team - midwifery group (AUD 3324).
Team midwifery shortens the length of stay in special care nurseries for infants, slightly shortens the length of stay in hospital for women giving birth, and probably leads to little or no difference in perinatal deaths.
The nurse - midwifery team at Believe Midwifery Services, LLC is as equipped, if not more so, than the local remote hospital to handle obstetric emergencies and to date, has a successfully assisted all their VBAC clients in a subsequent homebirth with the exception of two who self - elected a non-emergent transfer for pain mamidwifery team at Believe Midwifery Services, LLC is as equipped, if not more so, than the local remote hospital to handle obstetric emergencies and to date, has a successfully assisted all their VBAC clients in a subsequent homebirth with the exception of two who self - elected a non-emergent transfer for pain maMidwifery Services, LLC is as equipped, if not more so, than the local remote hospital to handle obstetric emergencies and to date, has a successfully assisted all their VBAC clients in a subsequent homebirth with the exception of two who self - elected a non-emergent transfer for pain management.
Comparison 2 Midwife - led versus other models of care: variation in midwifery models of care (caseload / one - to - one or team), Outcome 3 Instrumental vaginal birth (forceps / vacuum).
Community - based continuity of midwifery care through a team of 6 midwives and one obstetrician; intra-partum care and 3 — 4 domiciliary visits in post-natal period
Comparison 2 Midwife - led versus other models of care: variation in midwifery models of care (caseload / one - to - one or team), Outcome 2 Caesarean birth.
Comparison 2 Midwife - led versus other models of care: variation in midwifery models of care (caseload / one - to - one or team), Outcome 6 Preterm birth (< 37 weeks).
Experimental: women randomised to CLU received standard care: antenatal care provided by obstetricians supported by the midwifery and medical team; intrapartum and postpartum care (2 to 3 days in hospital) provided by midwives, overseen by consultants.
An AMIHS consists of a community midwife and Aboriginal health worker team who provide community - based services to pregnant Aboriginal women in conjunction with existing medical, midwifery, paediatric and child and family health staff.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z