Learning to be a midwife: Midwifery students’ experiences of an extended placement within a midwifery group practice

To investigate the experiences, perspectives and plans of students who had a six-month placement with the midwifery group practice. Focus groups were conducted with fifteen third – year Bachelor of Midwifery students who had undertaken an extended placement at a midwifery group practice in a large t...

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Veröffentlicht in:Women and birth : journal of the Australian College of Midwives 2022-02, Vol.35 (1), p.e19-e27
Hauptverfasser: Baird, Kathleen, Hastie, Carolyn R., Stanton, Paula, Gamble, Jenny
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container_title Women and birth : journal of the Australian College of Midwives
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creator Baird, Kathleen
Hastie, Carolyn R.
Stanton, Paula
Gamble, Jenny
description To investigate the experiences, perspectives and plans of students who had a six-month placement with the midwifery group practice. Focus groups were conducted with fifteen third – year Bachelor of Midwifery students who had undertaken an extended placement at a midwifery group practice in a large tertiary referral hospital in Queensland, Australia. Four main themes were identified in the data: Expectations of the Placement; Facilitating learning within a midwifery group practice model; Transitioning between models of care and Philosophy and culture of midwifery group practice. Third-year midwifery students valued the experience of working one-on-one for an extended placement with a midwife providing continuity of care within a caseload model. The experience was the highlight of their degree and they learned ‘how to be a midwife’. Most students found reintegrating back into the hospital system of care challenging, reporting that their developed skills of supporting women holistically and facilitating normal birth were not fully utilised when returning to the task-orientated birth suite. Students valued thoughtful, kind and supportive midwifery preceptors who supported them to transition back into the hospital. Undertaking an extended placement within a midwifery group practice provides students with a rich and holistic learning experience and helps them develop a sense of professional identity. Student placements situated within models of care which provide continuity of midwifery care should be proactively enabled by health services and universities. Research of the longer-term impacts of an extended midwifery group practice clinical placement on midwifery graduates’ capabilities and competencies 3–5 years post registration should be conducted.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.wombi.2021.01.002
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identifier ISSN: 1871-5192
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Clinical placements
Continuity of midwifery care
Education, Nursing, Baccalaureate
Female
Group Practice
Humans
Midwifery
Midwifery Group Practice
Midwifery students
Preceptorship
Pregnancy
Qualitative Research
Students, Nursing
Work integrated learning
title Learning to be a midwife: Midwifery students’ experiences of an extended placement within a midwifery group practice
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