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Theories for interventions to reduce physical and verbal abuse: A mixed methods review of the health and social care literature to inform future maternity care

Despite global attention, physical and verbal abuse remains prevalent in maternity and newborn healthcare. We aimed to establish theoretical principles for interventions to reduce such abuse. We undertook a mixed methods systematic review of health and social care literature (MEDLINE, SocINDEX, Glob...

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Autores principales: Downe, Soo, Nowland, Rebecca, Clegg, Andrew, Akooji, Naseerah, Harris, Cath, Farrier, Alan, Gondo, Lisa Tanyaradzwa, Finlayson, Kenny, Thomson, Gill, Kingdon, Carol, Mehrtash, Hedieh, McCrimmon, Rebekah, Tunçalp, Özge
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10124898/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37093790
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001594
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author Downe, Soo
Nowland, Rebecca
Clegg, Andrew
Akooji, Naseerah
Harris, Cath
Farrier, Alan
Gondo, Lisa Tanyaradzwa
Finlayson, Kenny
Thomson, Gill
Kingdon, Carol
Mehrtash, Hedieh
McCrimmon, Rebekah
Tunçalp, Özge
author_facet Downe, Soo
Nowland, Rebecca
Clegg, Andrew
Akooji, Naseerah
Harris, Cath
Farrier, Alan
Gondo, Lisa Tanyaradzwa
Finlayson, Kenny
Thomson, Gill
Kingdon, Carol
Mehrtash, Hedieh
McCrimmon, Rebekah
Tunçalp, Özge
author_sort Downe, Soo
collection PubMed
description Despite global attention, physical and verbal abuse remains prevalent in maternity and newborn healthcare. We aimed to establish theoretical principles for interventions to reduce such abuse. We undertook a mixed methods systematic review of health and social care literature (MEDLINE, SocINDEX, Global Index Medicus, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, Sept 29th 2020 and March 22(nd) 2022: no date or language restrictions). Papers that included theory were analysed narratively. Those with suitable outcome measures were meta-analysed. We used convergence results synthesis to integrate findings. In September 2020, 193 papers were retained (17,628 hits). 154 provided theoretical explanations; 38 were controlled studies. The update generated 39 studies (2695 hits), plus five from reference lists (12 controlled studies). A wide range of explicit and implicit theories were proposed. Eleven non-maternity controlled studies could be meta-analysed, but only for physical restraint, showing little intervention effect. Most interventions were multi-component. Synthesis suggests that a combination of systems level and behavioural change models might be effective. The maternity intervention studies could all be mapped to this approach. Two particular adverse contexts emerged; social normalisation of violence across the socio-ecological system, especially for ‘othered’ groups; and the belief that mistreatment is necessary to minimise clinical harm. The ethos and therefore the expression of mistreatment at each level of the system is moderated by the individuals who enact the system, through what they feel they can control, what is socially normal, and what benefits them in that context. Interventions to reduce verbal and physical abuse in maternity care should be locally tailored, and informed by theories encompassing all socio-ecological levels, and the psychological and emotional responses of individuals working within them. Attention should be paid to social normalisation of violence against ‘othered’ groups, and to the belief that intrapartum maternal mistreatment can optimise safe outcomes.
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spelling pubmed-101248982023-04-25 Theories for interventions to reduce physical and verbal abuse: A mixed methods review of the health and social care literature to inform future maternity care Downe, Soo Nowland, Rebecca Clegg, Andrew Akooji, Naseerah Harris, Cath Farrier, Alan Gondo, Lisa Tanyaradzwa Finlayson, Kenny Thomson, Gill Kingdon, Carol Mehrtash, Hedieh McCrimmon, Rebekah Tunçalp, Özge PLOS Glob Public Health Review Despite global attention, physical and verbal abuse remains prevalent in maternity and newborn healthcare. We aimed to establish theoretical principles for interventions to reduce such abuse. We undertook a mixed methods systematic review of health and social care literature (MEDLINE, SocINDEX, Global Index Medicus, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, Sept 29th 2020 and March 22(nd) 2022: no date or language restrictions). Papers that included theory were analysed narratively. Those with suitable outcome measures were meta-analysed. We used convergence results synthesis to integrate findings. In September 2020, 193 papers were retained (17,628 hits). 154 provided theoretical explanations; 38 were controlled studies. The update generated 39 studies (2695 hits), plus five from reference lists (12 controlled studies). A wide range of explicit and implicit theories were proposed. Eleven non-maternity controlled studies could be meta-analysed, but only for physical restraint, showing little intervention effect. Most interventions were multi-component. Synthesis suggests that a combination of systems level and behavioural change models might be effective. The maternity intervention studies could all be mapped to this approach. Two particular adverse contexts emerged; social normalisation of violence across the socio-ecological system, especially for ‘othered’ groups; and the belief that mistreatment is necessary to minimise clinical harm. The ethos and therefore the expression of mistreatment at each level of the system is moderated by the individuals who enact the system, through what they feel they can control, what is socially normal, and what benefits them in that context. Interventions to reduce verbal and physical abuse in maternity care should be locally tailored, and informed by theories encompassing all socio-ecological levels, and the psychological and emotional responses of individuals working within them. Attention should be paid to social normalisation of violence against ‘othered’ groups, and to the belief that intrapartum maternal mistreatment can optimise safe outcomes. Public Library of Science 2023-04-24 /pmc/articles/PMC10124898/ /pubmed/37093790 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001594 Text en © 2023 Downe et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Review
Downe, Soo
Nowland, Rebecca
Clegg, Andrew
Akooji, Naseerah
Harris, Cath
Farrier, Alan
Gondo, Lisa Tanyaradzwa
Finlayson, Kenny
Thomson, Gill
Kingdon, Carol
Mehrtash, Hedieh
McCrimmon, Rebekah
Tunçalp, Özge
Theories for interventions to reduce physical and verbal abuse: A mixed methods review of the health and social care literature to inform future maternity care
title Theories for interventions to reduce physical and verbal abuse: A mixed methods review of the health and social care literature to inform future maternity care
title_full Theories for interventions to reduce physical and verbal abuse: A mixed methods review of the health and social care literature to inform future maternity care
title_fullStr Theories for interventions to reduce physical and verbal abuse: A mixed methods review of the health and social care literature to inform future maternity care
title_full_unstemmed Theories for interventions to reduce physical and verbal abuse: A mixed methods review of the health and social care literature to inform future maternity care
title_short Theories for interventions to reduce physical and verbal abuse: A mixed methods review of the health and social care literature to inform future maternity care
title_sort theories for interventions to reduce physical and verbal abuse: a mixed methods review of the health and social care literature to inform future maternity care
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10124898/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37093790
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgph.0001594
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