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dc.contributor.authorSteen, Mary*
dc.contributor.authorDowne, Soo*
dc.contributor.authorBamford, Nicola*
dc.contributor.authorEdozien, Leroy*
dc.date.accessioned2011-11-18T16:01:27Z
dc.date.available2011-11-18T16:01:27Z
dc.date.issued2011-08-06
dc.identifier.citationMidwifery, 2012, 28(4), pp. 362-71
dc.identifier.issn0266-6138
dc.identifier.doi10.1016/j.midw.2011.06.009
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10034/189992
dc.descriptionThis article is not available through ChesterRep.
dc.description.abstractThe active engagement of fathers in maternity care is associated with long-term health and social benefits for the mother, baby and family. This study's aim was to identify and synthesise good quality qualitative research that explores the views and experiences of fathers who have encountered maternity care in high resource settings. A pre-determined search strategy identified 23 papers published between January 1999 and January 2010. Analysis was based on the metaethnographic techniques of Noblit and hare (1988) as amended by Downe et al, (2007). The emerging themes were: risk and uncertainty, exclusion, fear and frustation, the ideal and the reality, issues of support and experiencing transition.The following synthesis was generated from these themes:Most fathers in the included studies saw themselves as partner and parent, with a strong desire to support their partners and to be fully engaged with the process of becoming a father. However, the experience of maternity care was often as not-patient and not visitor. This situated them in an interstitial and undefined space (both emotionally and physically) with the consequence that many felt uncertain, excluded and fearful.
dc.description.sponsorshipCentral Manchester University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust Research Grant for Engaging Partners in Childbirth (EPIC-1)
dc.language.isoenen
dc.publisherElsevieren
dc.relation.urlhttp://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S026661381100088Xen
dc.subjectfathersen
dc.subjectmaternity careen
dc.subjectMetasynthesisen
dc.subjectviews and experiencesen
dc.subjectpregnancyen
dc.subjectbirthen
dc.titleNot-patient and not-visitor: A metasynthesis of fathers’ encounters with pregnancy, birth and maternity careen
dc.typeArticleen
dc.contributor.departmentUniversity of Chester ; University of Central Lancashire ; St Mary's Hospital, Manchester
dc.identifier.journalMidwifery
dc.date.accepted2011-06-22
html.description.abstractThe active engagement of fathers in maternity care is associated with long-term health and social benefits for the mother, baby and family. This study's aim was to identify and synthesise good quality qualitative research that explores the views and experiences of fathers who have encountered maternity care in high resource settings. A pre-determined search strategy identified 23 papers published between January 1999 and January 2010. Analysis was based on the metaethnographic techniques of Noblit and hare (1988) as amended by Downe et al, (2007). The emerging themes were: risk and uncertainty, exclusion, fear and frustation, the ideal and the reality, issues of support and experiencing transition.The following synthesis was generated from these themes:Most fathers in the included studies saw themselves as partner and parent, with a strong desire to support their partners and to be fully engaged with the process of becoming a father. However, the experience of maternity care was often as not-patient and not visitor. This situated them in an interstitial and undefined space (both emotionally and physically) with the consequence that many felt uncertain, excluded and fearful.


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