TY - JOUR
T1 - Challenging the status quo
T2 - Women's experiences of opting for a home birth in Andalucia, Spain
AU - Leon-Larios, Fatima
AU - Nuno-Aguilar, Cristina
AU - Rocca-Ihenacho, Lucia
AU - Castro-Cardona, Felipe
AU - Escuriet, Ramon
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2018 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2019/3
Y1 - 2019/3
N2 - Objective: To explore the perceptions, beliefs and attitudes of women who opted for a home birth in Andalusia (Spain). Background: Home birth is currently an unusual choice among Spanish women. It is not an option covered by the Spanish National Health Service and women who opt for a home birth have to pay for an independent midwife. Design: A qualitative study with a phenomenological approach was adopted. All participants who took part in this study had chosen to have a home birth and given written consent to take part in the study. Methods: Data collection was conducted in 2015–16. Face-to-face, semi-structured interviews were undertaken with women who chose a home birth in the last 5 years. Findings: The sample consisted of thirteen women. Seven themes were created through analysis: 1. Getting informed about home birth; 2. Home birth as a choice, despite feeling unsupported; 3. The best way to have a personalized and a physiological birth; 4. Seeking a healing and empowering experience 5. The need for emotional safety, establishing a relationship and trusting the midwife; 6. Preparing for birth and working on fears; 7. Inequality of access (because of financial implications). Conclusions: Women opted to plan birth at home because they wanted a personalised birth and control over their decision-making in labour, which they felt would not have been afforded to them in hospital settings. Andalusian maternity care leaders should strive to ensure that all pregnant women receive respectful and high-quality personalised care, by appropriately trained staff, both in the hospital and in the community.
AB - Objective: To explore the perceptions, beliefs and attitudes of women who opted for a home birth in Andalusia (Spain). Background: Home birth is currently an unusual choice among Spanish women. It is not an option covered by the Spanish National Health Service and women who opt for a home birth have to pay for an independent midwife. Design: A qualitative study with a phenomenological approach was adopted. All participants who took part in this study had chosen to have a home birth and given written consent to take part in the study. Methods: Data collection was conducted in 2015–16. Face-to-face, semi-structured interviews were undertaken with women who chose a home birth in the last 5 years. Findings: The sample consisted of thirteen women. Seven themes were created through analysis: 1. Getting informed about home birth; 2. Home birth as a choice, despite feeling unsupported; 3. The best way to have a personalized and a physiological birth; 4. Seeking a healing and empowering experience 5. The need for emotional safety, establishing a relationship and trusting the midwife; 6. Preparing for birth and working on fears; 7. Inequality of access (because of financial implications). Conclusions: Women opted to plan birth at home because they wanted a personalised birth and control over their decision-making in labour, which they felt would not have been afforded to them in hospital settings. Andalusian maternity care leaders should strive to ensure that all pregnant women receive respectful and high-quality personalised care, by appropriately trained staff, both in the hospital and in the community.
KW - Home birth
KW - Midwifery-led care
KW - Midwives
KW - Phenomenological approach
KW - Private practice
KW - Qualitative methodology
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85057847697&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.midw.2018.12.001
DO - 10.1016/j.midw.2018.12.001
M3 - Article
C2 - 30530209
AN - SCOPUS:85057847697
SN - 0266-6138
VL - 70
SP - 15
EP - 21
JO - Midwifery
JF - Midwifery
ER -