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Slovenian midwifery professionalization: Perception of midwives and related health professions

INTRODUCTION: This article presents research into the professionalization of midwifery in Slovenia. Since recognition by related occupations is important for professions, this comparative study asked doctors and nurses in Slovenia about their perceptions of the status of midwifery. METHODS: A questi...

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Autores principales: Mivšek, Polona A., Hundley, Vanora, van Teijlingen, Edwin, Pahor, Majda, Hlebec, Valentina
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: European Publishing 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8290859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34316548
http://dx.doi.org/10.18332/ejm/137664
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author Mivšek, Polona A.
Hundley, Vanora
van Teijlingen, Edwin
Pahor, Majda
Hlebec, Valentina
author_facet Mivšek, Polona A.
Hundley, Vanora
van Teijlingen, Edwin
Pahor, Majda
Hlebec, Valentina
author_sort Mivšek, Polona A.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: This article presents research into the professionalization of midwifery in Slovenia. Since recognition by related occupations is important for professions, this comparative study asked doctors and nurses in Slovenia about their perceptions of the status of midwifery. METHODS: A questionnaire survey was conducted with 300 Slovenian midwives, 666 nurses and 416 obstetricians. The questionnaire included statements covering traditional sociological notions of the profession (ethics, theory, power), and three notions based on new elements of professionalism (reflective practice, interdisciplinary working, and partnership with clients). RESULTS: Findings suggest that nurses perceived themselves to be less autonomous than midwives, and this partly explains why most nurses thought that midwifery should be a specialized course of study, after the general nursing diploma. Obstetricians claimed to support midwives, however, they did not give midwives credit for basic midwifery competencies and did not feel midwifery to be equal to their profession. Midwives revealed not to feel autonomous; they felt that nursing and obstetrics is jeopardizing independent midwifery practice. CONCLUSIONS: Slovenian midwifery was poorly evaluated in some attributes of professionalism, especially knowledge and autonomy. Even midwives themselves consider midwifery more occupation than profession. The autonomy of midwifery will be hard to achieve in the institutions of medical dominance. The study revealed that participants of all three groups are in a competitive relation and are poorly aware of the roles and competencies of the other two professions. Therefore, partially joined education might be beneficial in order to promote interprofessional collaboration in the future.
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spelling pubmed-82908592021-07-26 Slovenian midwifery professionalization: Perception of midwives and related health professions Mivšek, Polona A. Hundley, Vanora van Teijlingen, Edwin Pahor, Majda Hlebec, Valentina Eur J Midwifery Research Paper INTRODUCTION: This article presents research into the professionalization of midwifery in Slovenia. Since recognition by related occupations is important for professions, this comparative study asked doctors and nurses in Slovenia about their perceptions of the status of midwifery. METHODS: A questionnaire survey was conducted with 300 Slovenian midwives, 666 nurses and 416 obstetricians. The questionnaire included statements covering traditional sociological notions of the profession (ethics, theory, power), and three notions based on new elements of professionalism (reflective practice, interdisciplinary working, and partnership with clients). RESULTS: Findings suggest that nurses perceived themselves to be less autonomous than midwives, and this partly explains why most nurses thought that midwifery should be a specialized course of study, after the general nursing diploma. Obstetricians claimed to support midwives, however, they did not give midwives credit for basic midwifery competencies and did not feel midwifery to be equal to their profession. Midwives revealed not to feel autonomous; they felt that nursing and obstetrics is jeopardizing independent midwifery practice. CONCLUSIONS: Slovenian midwifery was poorly evaluated in some attributes of professionalism, especially knowledge and autonomy. Even midwives themselves consider midwifery more occupation than profession. The autonomy of midwifery will be hard to achieve in the institutions of medical dominance. The study revealed that participants of all three groups are in a competitive relation and are poorly aware of the roles and competencies of the other two professions. Therefore, partially joined education might be beneficial in order to promote interprofessional collaboration in the future. European Publishing 2021-07-20 /pmc/articles/PMC8290859/ /pubmed/34316548 http://dx.doi.org/10.18332/ejm/137664 Text en © 2021 Mivšek P. A. et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Mivšek, Polona A.
Hundley, Vanora
van Teijlingen, Edwin
Pahor, Majda
Hlebec, Valentina
Slovenian midwifery professionalization: Perception of midwives and related health professions
title Slovenian midwifery professionalization: Perception of midwives and related health professions
title_full Slovenian midwifery professionalization: Perception of midwives and related health professions
title_fullStr Slovenian midwifery professionalization: Perception of midwives and related health professions
title_full_unstemmed Slovenian midwifery professionalization: Perception of midwives and related health professions
title_short Slovenian midwifery professionalization: Perception of midwives and related health professions
title_sort slovenian midwifery professionalization: perception of midwives and related health professions
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8290859/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34316548
http://dx.doi.org/10.18332/ejm/137664
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