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African midwifery students’ self-assessed confidence in antenatal care: a multi-country study

Background: Evidence-based antenatal care is one cornerstone in Safe Motherhood and educated and confident midwives remain to be optimal caregivers in Africa. Confidence in antenatal midwifery skills is important and could differ depending on the provision of education among the training institution...

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Autores principales: Hildingsson, Ingegerd, Lindgren, Helena, Karlström, Annika, Christensson, Kyllike, Bäck, Lena, Mudokwenyu–Rawdon, Christina, Maimbolwa, Margaret C., Laisser, Rose Mjawa, Omoni, Grace, Chimwaza, Angela, Mwebaza, Enid, Kiruja, Jonah, Sharma, Bharati
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Taylor & Francis 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6882463/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31747850
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2019.1689721
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author Hildingsson, Ingegerd
Lindgren, Helena
Karlström, Annika
Christensson, Kyllike
Bäck, Lena
Mudokwenyu–Rawdon, Christina
Maimbolwa, Margaret C.
Laisser, Rose Mjawa
Omoni, Grace
Chimwaza, Angela
Mwebaza, Enid
Kiruja, Jonah
Sharma, Bharati
author_facet Hildingsson, Ingegerd
Lindgren, Helena
Karlström, Annika
Christensson, Kyllike
Bäck, Lena
Mudokwenyu–Rawdon, Christina
Maimbolwa, Margaret C.
Laisser, Rose Mjawa
Omoni, Grace
Chimwaza, Angela
Mwebaza, Enid
Kiruja, Jonah
Sharma, Bharati
author_sort Hildingsson, Ingegerd
collection PubMed
description Background: Evidence-based antenatal care is one cornerstone in Safe Motherhood and educated and confident midwives remain to be optimal caregivers in Africa. Confidence in antenatal midwifery skills is important and could differ depending on the provision of education among the training institutions across Africa. Objective: The aim of the study was to describe and compare midwifery students’ confidence in basic antenatal skills, in relation to age, sex, program type and level of program. Methods: A survey in seven sub-Saharan African countries was conducted. Enrolled midwifery students from selected midwifery institutions in each country presented selfreported data on confidence to provide antenatal care. Data were collected using a selfadministered questionnaire. The questionnaire consisted of 22 antenatal skills based on the competency framework from the International Confederation of Midwives. The skills were grouped into three domains; Identify fetal and maternal risk factors and educate parents; Manage and document emergent complications and Physical assessment and nutrition. Results: In total, 1407 midwifery students from seven Sub-Saharan countries responded. Almost one third (25-32%) of the students reported high levels of confidence in all three domains. Direct entry programs were associated with higher levels of confidence in all three domains, compared to post-nursing and double degree programs. Students enrolled at education with diploma level presented with high levels of confidence in two out of three domains. Conclusions: A significant proportion of student midwives rated themselves low on confidence to provide ANC. Midwifery students enrolled in direct entry programs reported higher levels of confidence in all domains. It is important that local governments develop education standards, based on recommendations from the International Confederation of midwives. Further research is needed for the evaluation of actual competence.
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spelling pubmed-68824632019-12-05 African midwifery students’ self-assessed confidence in antenatal care: a multi-country study Hildingsson, Ingegerd Lindgren, Helena Karlström, Annika Christensson, Kyllike Bäck, Lena Mudokwenyu–Rawdon, Christina Maimbolwa, Margaret C. Laisser, Rose Mjawa Omoni, Grace Chimwaza, Angela Mwebaza, Enid Kiruja, Jonah Sharma, Bharati Glob Health Action Original Article Background: Evidence-based antenatal care is one cornerstone in Safe Motherhood and educated and confident midwives remain to be optimal caregivers in Africa. Confidence in antenatal midwifery skills is important and could differ depending on the provision of education among the training institutions across Africa. Objective: The aim of the study was to describe and compare midwifery students’ confidence in basic antenatal skills, in relation to age, sex, program type and level of program. Methods: A survey in seven sub-Saharan African countries was conducted. Enrolled midwifery students from selected midwifery institutions in each country presented selfreported data on confidence to provide antenatal care. Data were collected using a selfadministered questionnaire. The questionnaire consisted of 22 antenatal skills based on the competency framework from the International Confederation of Midwives. The skills were grouped into three domains; Identify fetal and maternal risk factors and educate parents; Manage and document emergent complications and Physical assessment and nutrition. Results: In total, 1407 midwifery students from seven Sub-Saharan countries responded. Almost one third (25-32%) of the students reported high levels of confidence in all three domains. Direct entry programs were associated with higher levels of confidence in all three domains, compared to post-nursing and double degree programs. Students enrolled at education with diploma level presented with high levels of confidence in two out of three domains. Conclusions: A significant proportion of student midwives rated themselves low on confidence to provide ANC. Midwifery students enrolled in direct entry programs reported higher levels of confidence in all domains. It is important that local governments develop education standards, based on recommendations from the International Confederation of midwives. Further research is needed for the evaluation of actual competence. Taylor & Francis 2019-11-21 /pmc/articles/PMC6882463/ /pubmed/31747850 http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2019.1689721 Text en © 2019 The Author(s). Published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Hildingsson, Ingegerd
Lindgren, Helena
Karlström, Annika
Christensson, Kyllike
Bäck, Lena
Mudokwenyu–Rawdon, Christina
Maimbolwa, Margaret C.
Laisser, Rose Mjawa
Omoni, Grace
Chimwaza, Angela
Mwebaza, Enid
Kiruja, Jonah
Sharma, Bharati
African midwifery students’ self-assessed confidence in antenatal care: a multi-country study
title African midwifery students’ self-assessed confidence in antenatal care: a multi-country study
title_full African midwifery students’ self-assessed confidence in antenatal care: a multi-country study
title_fullStr African midwifery students’ self-assessed confidence in antenatal care: a multi-country study
title_full_unstemmed African midwifery students’ self-assessed confidence in antenatal care: a multi-country study
title_short African midwifery students’ self-assessed confidence in antenatal care: a multi-country study
title_sort african midwifery students’ self-assessed confidence in antenatal care: a multi-country study
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6882463/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31747850
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/16549716.2019.1689721
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