Midwives' experiences of providing contraception counselling to immigrant women
(2017) In Sexual & Reproductive Healthcare 12. p.100-106- Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To describe midwives' experiences of providing contraception counselling to immigrant women.
METHODS: The study was conducted with a qualitative design, based on interviews followed by inductive content analysis. Ten midwives were interviewed, working at midwife-led prenatal clinics in immigrant-dense areas in southern Sweden.
RESULTS: Midwives require knowledge and understanding of cultures and religions in order to provide contraception counselling to immigrant women. It is important for the midwives to be aware that women have different values regarding sexual and reproductive health. The challenge for the midwives is to understand and to be curious about every woman's lifeworld perspective, culture and... (More)
OBJECTIVE: To describe midwives' experiences of providing contraception counselling to immigrant women.
METHODS: The study was conducted with a qualitative design, based on interviews followed by inductive content analysis. Ten midwives were interviewed, working at midwife-led prenatal clinics in immigrant-dense areas in southern Sweden.
RESULTS: Midwives require knowledge and understanding of cultures and religions in order to provide contraception counselling to immigrant women. It is important for the midwives to be aware that women have different values regarding sexual and reproductive health. The challenge for the midwives is to understand and to be curious about every woman's lifeworld perspective, culture and religion. The midwives knowledge and understanding of cultures and religions is acquired through experience and shared between them. Knowledge makes a midwife confident in her role as the contraception counselling provider to immigrant women.
CONCLUSION: Cultural and religious factors affect contraception counselling. According to the midwives, knowledge and awareness of these factors is crucial and leads to improved understanding of midwives providing contraception counselling, better compliance, fewer unwanted pregnancies and improved sexual and reproductive health among women.
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- author
- Kolak, Mia LU ; Jensen, Carina and Johansson, Marianne
- publishing date
- 2017-06
- type
- Contribution to journal
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Circumcision, Female/ethnology, Contraception, Cultural Competency, Culturally Competent Care, Directive Counseling/methods, Emigrants and Immigrants/education, Female, Humans, Midwifery, Patient Education as Topic, Pregnancy, Pregnancy, Unwanted/ethnology, Qualitative Research, Religion, Self Efficacy
- in
- Sexual & Reproductive Healthcare
- volume
- 12
- pages
- 7 pages
- publisher
- Elsevier
- external identifiers
-
- pmid:28477921
- scopus:85018512203
- ISSN
- 1877-5764
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.srhc.2017.04.002
- project
- Contraceptive counselling for immigrant women provided by midwives in Sweden
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- no
- additional info
- Copyright © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
- id
- 9648b302-60d9-4817-bf06-52b75d902530
- date added to LUP
- 2019-09-12 10:40:29
- date last changed
- 2024-08-21 07:19:03
@article{9648b302-60d9-4817-bf06-52b75d902530, abstract = {{<p>OBJECTIVE: To describe midwives' experiences of providing contraception counselling to immigrant women.</p><p>METHODS: The study was conducted with a qualitative design, based on interviews followed by inductive content analysis. Ten midwives were interviewed, working at midwife-led prenatal clinics in immigrant-dense areas in southern Sweden.</p><p>RESULTS: Midwives require knowledge and understanding of cultures and religions in order to provide contraception counselling to immigrant women. It is important for the midwives to be aware that women have different values regarding sexual and reproductive health. The challenge for the midwives is to understand and to be curious about every woman's lifeworld perspective, culture and religion. The midwives knowledge and understanding of cultures and religions is acquired through experience and shared between them. Knowledge makes a midwife confident in her role as the contraception counselling provider to immigrant women.</p><p>CONCLUSION: Cultural and religious factors affect contraception counselling. According to the midwives, knowledge and awareness of these factors is crucial and leads to improved understanding of midwives providing contraception counselling, better compliance, fewer unwanted pregnancies and improved sexual and reproductive health among women.</p>}}, author = {{Kolak, Mia and Jensen, Carina and Johansson, Marianne}}, issn = {{1877-5764}}, keywords = {{Circumcision, Female/ethnology; Contraception; Cultural Competency; Culturally Competent Care; Directive Counseling/methods; Emigrants and Immigrants/education; Female; Humans; Midwifery; Patient Education as Topic; Pregnancy; Pregnancy, Unwanted/ethnology; Qualitative Research; Religion; Self Efficacy}}, language = {{eng}}, pages = {{100--106}}, publisher = {{Elsevier}}, series = {{Sexual & Reproductive Healthcare}}, title = {{Midwives' experiences of providing contraception counselling to immigrant women}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.srhc.2017.04.002}}, doi = {{10.1016/j.srhc.2017.04.002}}, volume = {{12}}, year = {{2017}}, }