When you go on vacation, you map out the route. When you go to the grocery store, you make a
list. When women are pregnant, it is
logical to make a birth plan on paper.
Many expectant mothers make plans in their heads but to share their
thoughts with those that will be supporting them through the process makes good
sense.
According to Medline Plus, a service of the US National
Library of Medicine and the National Institutes
of Health, birth plans are good
tools to help expectant mothers think and learn about what might happen during
the birthing process and afterwards. As
childbirth educators or doulas, we often play a vital role in assisting in
information gathering and decision processing for birth plans. Bailey stated that as a component of
childbirth preparation, a birth plan can be a medium to improve patient-provider
communication regarding a desired labor and birth experience and improved
satisfaction with care.
Pregnant women often create birth plans to specify their
preferences for the birthing process.
When nurses implement and advocate for women’s birth plans, it increases
women’s autonomy and decision making in the process and can lead to greater
patient satisfaction. (Anderson)
Again, satisfaction.
Yet, in many situations, birth plans are treated like a plan
to fail. Lothian points to the tension
between health professionals and patients caused by birth plans and that it
might reflect the larger problem with contemporary maternity care: conflicting
beliefs about birth, what constitutes safe/effective care and ethical issues
related to informed consent and informed refusal. Lothian goes on to suggest that birth plans
should focus on three patient-focus questions:
- What will I do to stay confident and feel safe?
- What will I do to find comfort in response to my contractions?
- Who will support me through labor and what will I need from them?
A childbirth educator’s guidance in birth plan preparation is
key. In searching the Internet,
web-based birth plans typically do not give adequate (if any) explanation of
terms or options. They lack the depth to explore the Ripple Effect™
of interventions, nor do they include what Lothian called informed refusal
conditions. Multiple pages in length,
web-based birth plans often are too long for hospital staff to read and may
evoke feelings that the laboring women is trying to tell them how to do their
job. Wagner and Gunning suggest that a
birth plan is an approach to labor, rather than a term for a specific kind of
outcome. Childbirth educators,
counseling expectant mothers, can ensure this flexibility.
A vital piece to understanding of birth plans by the
expectant mother is the concept of informed consent and the five questions that
should be asked/answered. These five
questions can provide a memory hook by the acronym BRAIN. Asking these five
questions when there are exceptions to be made to the birth plan can also ease
flexibility.
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1 comment:
Hi Connie - Thanks for this enlightening article. Very informative, about time there was research on the conflict between healthcare practitioners and consumers re birth plans!
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