Comment on 'Midwives' experiences and views of giving postpartum contraceptive advice and providing long-acting reversible contraception: a qualitative study'.

نویسندگان

  • An Vanthuyne
  • Geraldine Joyce
  • Rudiger Pittrof
چکیده

We thank McCance and Cameron for their article on midwives’ experiences and views on postpartum contraception and for highlighting an often neglected aspect of maternity care. The midwives interviewed by McCance were generally not very positive about their ability to make a difference. We would like to describe a positive experience and the approach used in our work with vulnerable families. There is no current best practice for promoting and providing postpartum contraception. However, we feel that new mothers are in a health care environment and are open to receiving information about reproductive health. Estrogen-containing contraceptives and intrauterine methods are United Kingdom Medical Eligibility Criteria (UKMEC) Category 3 in the postpartum period. Diaphragms and cervical caps are also not suitable. Contraceptive options are thus limited to progestogen-only methods and condoms. Oral progestogen-only methods can be started following discharge from the ward. The only contraceptive options that should be started prior to discharge are those that women cannot initiate themselves, namely progestogen injections or contraceptive implants. Contraceptive implants are effective, safe and one of the most cost-effective contraceptive options available. Offering contraceptive implants to teenagers in the postpartum period has been found to be highly cost effective. Immediate postpartum contraceptive implants are very well tolerated and retained and have no effect on lactation and neonatal development. In practical terms we only had to answer two questions, namely (1) how do we best inform women of the availability of postpartum implants and (2) how do we best make this option available to women who request it? Every obstetric unit has a health worker specialising in the care of women who are at risk of having their children taken into care, usually a safeguarding midwife. They know the pain caused when children are taken away from their parents, and that frequent pregnancies at brief intervals can result in a cycle of hope and despair. They usually have a good rapport with their patients and are often one of the few health workers that these women trust. Since January 2014 we have been operating in the following way. The safeguarding midwife discusses contraception with her patients in the antenatal and immediate postpartum periods. In an ideal world the contraceptive implant would be provided by the midwife herself, but complex training requirements make this option less attractive and feasible. The obvious solution is to make other implant providers easily accessible to the midwives. If a patient accepts an implant then the midwife calls a designated implant inserter. At Guy’s and St Thomas’ we (RP and AV) insert contraceptive implants between clinics on Tuesdays and Fridays, and on demand on other days, when we are in the same building as the obstetric department. The implant provision takes only 15 minutes on the postnatal ward as the patient is certain of her choice, needs only the essential information about the implant, and is generally in good health. Using this approach we protect over 50% of the patients under the care of the safeguarding midwife from rapid repeat pregnancies and provide on average one implant each week. Of all our activities this is likely to be the most cost-effective and rewarding. Each inserted implant can be expected to be retained for 2 years and will probably prevent >0.5 children going through the Family Drugs and Alcohol Court (FDAC), where the cost of one FDAC case is in excess of £50 000. Letters to the editor

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منابع مشابه

Midwives' experiences and views of giving postpartum contraceptive advice and providing long-acting reversible contraception: a qualitative study.

BACKGROUND National sexual health frameworks in the UK advise that women in maternity units who are at risk of unintended pregnancy should receive contraceptive advice and supplies of the most effective long-acting reversible methods of contraception (LARC). In the UK, midwives currently deliver contraceptive advice to women following childbirth. There is a lack of information on how midwives c...

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Comments on 'Midwives' experiences and views of giving postpartum contraceptive advice and long-acting reversible contraception: a qualitative study': authors' response.

We are grateful to Drs Walker and Davis for their letter which suggests that the views expressed by midwives in our study (regarding lack of knowledge and training on contraception) are likely to represent midwives’ experiences throughout the UK. We also are pleased to learn that local initiatives are underway (such as those in Lanarkshire) to facilitate access to the contraceptive implant for ...

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Comment on 'Midwives' experiences and views of giving postpartum contraceptive advice and long-acting reversible contraception: a qualitative study'.

We would like to thank Kirsty McCance and Sharon Cameron for their article that appeared in the July 2014 Journal issue. We would like to share our experience in Lanarkshire with Journal readers. We concur with the authors’ three key message points. However, the Sexual and Reproductive Health team in Lanarkshire decided to grasp the opportunity to provide immediate contraception for extremely v...

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Views of general practitioners on providing contraceptive advice and long-acting reversible contraception at the 6-week postnatal visit: a qualitative study.

BACKGROUND Increased uptake of long-acting reversible contraception (LARC) postpartum could prevent more unintended pregnancies and short inter-birth intervals. General practitioners (GPs) play a pivotal role in providing postpartum contraception at the 6-week postnatal visit. AIM To explore how GPs view their role in delivering postpartum contraception at the 6-week visit and on providing LA...

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Views of final-year student midwives on giving postpartum contraception and sexual health advice.

We read with interest McCance and Cameron’s article reporting the experiences and views of qualified midwives on giving postpartum contraceptive advice in the July 2014 issue of the Journal. We would like to draw readers’ attention to a complementary study that we carried out with final-year student midwives on a 3-year midwifery programme in a UK university. 3 This study reflects McCance and C...

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Attitudes of women in Scotland to contraception: a qualitative study to explore the acceptability of long-acting methods.

BACKGROUND AND METHODOLOGY Long-acting reversible contraception (LARC) (i.e. injections, implants and intrauterine methods) has the potential to reduce unintended pregnancies but in the UK these methods are under-used. To inform a campaign planned to increase awareness of LARC, eight focus discussion groups were held with 55 women in two cities in Scotland, UK. Trained interviewers sought spont...

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عنوان ژورنال:
  • The journal of family planning and reproductive health care

دوره 40 4  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2014