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'We all think with the same brain': midwives' stories of normal birth in a community of practice.

Susanne Darra

Evidence Based Midwifery, Volume: 14, Issue: 3, Pages: 101 - 106

Swansea University Author: Susanne Darra

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Abstract

Abstract‘Normal’ birth is at the heart of midwifery . However, there is very little published research with women and the midwives who cared for them during in ‘normal’ birth. This paper discusses qualitative, reflexive, narrative study, which explored 21 birth stories from 16 midwives using in-dept...

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Published in: Evidence Based Midwifery
ISSN: 1449-4489
Published: 2016
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa30897
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first_indexed 2016-11-01T21:54:35Z
last_indexed 2018-02-09T05:17:15Z
id cronfa30897
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spelling v2 30897 2016-11-01 'We all think with the same brain': midwives' stories of normal birth in a community of practice. 5627207fad0f577fb461c580e9d64fe0 Susanne Darra Susanne Darra true false 2016-11-01 FGMHL Abstract‘Normal’ birth is at the heart of midwifery . However, there is very little published research with women and the midwives who cared for them during in ‘normal’ birth. This paper discusses qualitative, reflexive, narrative study, which explored 21 birth stories from 16 midwives using in-depth, largely un-structured interviews.A favourable ethical review was achieved and midwives were recruited as part of a larger study (Darra and Murphy, 2016).The participants were 16 midwives, who had attended 21 ‘normal’ births. The study utilised a qualitative, narrative approach, which was underpinned by a commitment to reflexivity throughout aiming to tell the story of the research participants as faithfully as possible. The midwives’ stories demonstrated that they shared the three crucial characteristics of a ‘community of practice’ however, they used rather technical ways of telling the birth stories and of referring to women, leading one to suspect that their midwifery ‘community of practice’ was highly technocratic. If one considers that people ‘become’ the stories that they tell about themselves this paper questions whether the way in which midwives talk about themselves and their work has an impact on their identity and feelings of autonomy as midwives, and consequently their work as lead professionals in ‘normal’ childbirth. Journal Article Evidence Based Midwifery 14 3 101 106 1449-4489 Qualitative, narrative research; midwifery; childbirth; midwifery language; obstetrics, evidence based midwifery. 30 9 2016 2016-09-30 COLLEGE NANME Medicine, Health and Life Science - Faculty COLLEGE CODE FGMHL Swansea University 2023-06-26T16:22:16.2181768 2016-11-01T13:46:05.7821669 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Health and Social Care - Midwifery Susanne Darra 1
title 'We all think with the same brain': midwives' stories of normal birth in a community of practice.
spellingShingle 'We all think with the same brain': midwives' stories of normal birth in a community of practice.
Susanne Darra
title_short 'We all think with the same brain': midwives' stories of normal birth in a community of practice.
title_full 'We all think with the same brain': midwives' stories of normal birth in a community of practice.
title_fullStr 'We all think with the same brain': midwives' stories of normal birth in a community of practice.
title_full_unstemmed 'We all think with the same brain': midwives' stories of normal birth in a community of practice.
title_sort 'We all think with the same brain': midwives' stories of normal birth in a community of practice.
author_id_str_mv 5627207fad0f577fb461c580e9d64fe0
author_id_fullname_str_mv 5627207fad0f577fb461c580e9d64fe0_***_Susanne Darra
author Susanne Darra
author2 Susanne Darra
format Journal article
container_title Evidence Based Midwifery
container_volume 14
container_issue 3
container_start_page 101
publishDate 2016
institution Swansea University
issn 1449-4489
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
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hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Health and Social Care - Midwifery{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Health and Social Care - Midwifery
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description Abstract‘Normal’ birth is at the heart of midwifery . However, there is very little published research with women and the midwives who cared for them during in ‘normal’ birth. This paper discusses qualitative, reflexive, narrative study, which explored 21 birth stories from 16 midwives using in-depth, largely un-structured interviews.A favourable ethical review was achieved and midwives were recruited as part of a larger study (Darra and Murphy, 2016).The participants were 16 midwives, who had attended 21 ‘normal’ births. The study utilised a qualitative, narrative approach, which was underpinned by a commitment to reflexivity throughout aiming to tell the story of the research participants as faithfully as possible. The midwives’ stories demonstrated that they shared the three crucial characteristics of a ‘community of practice’ however, they used rather technical ways of telling the birth stories and of referring to women, leading one to suspect that their midwifery ‘community of practice’ was highly technocratic. If one considers that people ‘become’ the stories that they tell about themselves this paper questions whether the way in which midwives talk about themselves and their work has an impact on their identity and feelings of autonomy as midwives, and consequently their work as lead professionals in ‘normal’ childbirth.
published_date 2016-09-30T16:22:11Z
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