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Removal at birth and its challenges for midwifery care

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Removal at birth and its challenges for midwifery care. / De Backer, Kaat; Chivers, Kate; Mason, Claire et al.
In: European journal of midwifery, Vol. 6, 19, 01.04.2022.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

De Backer, K, Chivers, K, Mason, C, Sandall, J & Easter, A 2022, 'Removal at birth and its challenges for midwifery care', European journal of midwifery, vol. 6, 19. https://doi.org/10.18332/ejm/146647

APA

De Backer, K., Chivers, K., Mason, C., Sandall, J., & Easter, A. (2022). Removal at birth and its challenges for midwifery care. European journal of midwifery, 6, Article 19. https://doi.org/10.18332/ejm/146647

Vancouver

De Backer K, Chivers K, Mason C, Sandall J, Easter A. Removal at birth and its challenges for midwifery care. European journal of midwifery. 2022 Apr 1;6:19. doi: 10.18332/ejm/146647

Author

De Backer, Kaat ; Chivers, Kate ; Mason, Claire et al. / Removal at birth and its challenges for midwifery care. In: European journal of midwifery. 2022 ; Vol. 6.

Bibtex

@article{f727f539e7fd402285b7cc5273b26caa,
title = "Removal at birth and its challenges for midwifery care",
abstract = "In England, care proceedings refer to the process whereby the family court decides to remove a child from its parents against their wish, due to a heightened risk of significant harm. There has been a worrying increase of the number of babies that are removed shortly after birth due to care proceedings in England. The removal of a newborn baby from its parents often occurs while the mother is still recovering in hospital and is a deeply distressing, intrusive and emotionally impactful event, both for parents as well as for midwives involved in their care. Although the number of removals of newborn has risen, increasing support for those involved has not followed the same pace. These women are particularly vulnerable after the removal of a child but there is a lack of evidence and guidance to improve the experiences and the perinatal outcomes of these mothers and their infants. At a healthcare professional level, the impact of care proceedings and removals at birth on the midwifery workforce cannot be underestimated and has been described as one of the most challenging aspects of contemporary midwifery practice. In order to improve the care and outcomes of this under-researched and often stigmatized group of mothers, midwives need to have access to adequate training and supervision. Against the current challenges within UK maternity services, this is of the utmost importance to prevent further burnout among midwives.",
keywords = "Child Protection, Maternity Care, Safeguarding, Loss Of Custody",
author = "{De Backer}, Kaat and Kate Chivers and Claire Mason and Jane Sandall and Abigail Easter",
year = "2022",
month = apr,
day = "1",
doi = "10.18332/ejm/146647",
language = "English",
volume = "6",
journal = "European journal of midwifery",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Removal at birth and its challenges for midwifery care

AU - De Backer, Kaat

AU - Chivers, Kate

AU - Mason, Claire

AU - Sandall, Jane

AU - Easter, Abigail

PY - 2022/4/1

Y1 - 2022/4/1

N2 - In England, care proceedings refer to the process whereby the family court decides to remove a child from its parents against their wish, due to a heightened risk of significant harm. There has been a worrying increase of the number of babies that are removed shortly after birth due to care proceedings in England. The removal of a newborn baby from its parents often occurs while the mother is still recovering in hospital and is a deeply distressing, intrusive and emotionally impactful event, both for parents as well as for midwives involved in their care. Although the number of removals of newborn has risen, increasing support for those involved has not followed the same pace. These women are particularly vulnerable after the removal of a child but there is a lack of evidence and guidance to improve the experiences and the perinatal outcomes of these mothers and their infants. At a healthcare professional level, the impact of care proceedings and removals at birth on the midwifery workforce cannot be underestimated and has been described as one of the most challenging aspects of contemporary midwifery practice. In order to improve the care and outcomes of this under-researched and often stigmatized group of mothers, midwives need to have access to adequate training and supervision. Against the current challenges within UK maternity services, this is of the utmost importance to prevent further burnout among midwives.

AB - In England, care proceedings refer to the process whereby the family court decides to remove a child from its parents against their wish, due to a heightened risk of significant harm. There has been a worrying increase of the number of babies that are removed shortly after birth due to care proceedings in England. The removal of a newborn baby from its parents often occurs while the mother is still recovering in hospital and is a deeply distressing, intrusive and emotionally impactful event, both for parents as well as for midwives involved in their care. Although the number of removals of newborn has risen, increasing support for those involved has not followed the same pace. These women are particularly vulnerable after the removal of a child but there is a lack of evidence and guidance to improve the experiences and the perinatal outcomes of these mothers and their infants. At a healthcare professional level, the impact of care proceedings and removals at birth on the midwifery workforce cannot be underestimated and has been described as one of the most challenging aspects of contemporary midwifery practice. In order to improve the care and outcomes of this under-researched and often stigmatized group of mothers, midwives need to have access to adequate training and supervision. Against the current challenges within UK maternity services, this is of the utmost importance to prevent further burnout among midwives.

KW - Child Protection

KW - Maternity Care

KW - Safeguarding

KW - Loss Of Custody

U2 - 10.18332/ejm/146647

DO - 10.18332/ejm/146647

M3 - Journal article

VL - 6

JO - European journal of midwifery

JF - European journal of midwifery

M1 - 19

ER -