Preferences for birth center care in the Netherlands: an exploration of ethnic differences

To examine the preferences for comprehensive services and facilities in a new proposed birth center which will be established in a large Dutch city, specifically among pregnant women from different ethnic backgrounds. The analyses of this study were based on a survey among 200 pregnant women living...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC pregnancy and childbirth 2017-03, Vol.17 (1), p.79-79, Article 79
Hauptverfasser: Lescure, Dominique, Schepman, Sanneke, Batenburg, Ronald, Wiegers, Therese A, Verbakel, Ellen
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container_issue 1
container_start_page 79
container_title BMC pregnancy and childbirth
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creator Lescure, Dominique
Schepman, Sanneke
Batenburg, Ronald
Wiegers, Therese A
Verbakel, Ellen
description To examine the preferences for comprehensive services and facilities in a new proposed birth center which will be established in a large Dutch city, specifically among pregnant women from different ethnic backgrounds. The analyses of this study were based on a survey among 200 pregnant women living in The Hague, the Netherlands in 2011. Multiple linear regression was applied to analyze if preferences differ by ethnic background, controlling for various other predictors. Pregnant women had relatively strong preferences for comprehensive services and facilities to be offered by the new proposed birth center compared to both other dimensions of birth center care: extensive practical information and comfortable accommodation. With regard to ethnic differences, non-Dutch women had higher preferences for comprehensive care compared to Dutch women. This difference between Dutch and non-Dutch women increased with their level of education. Especially for non-Dutch women, birth centers that are able to provide comprehensive services and facilities can potentially be a good setting in which to give birth compared to hospitals or at home. In particular, higher educated non-Dutch women had a preference for the personalized care that could be offered by this new birth center.
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source PubMed (Medline); MEDLINE; Springer_OA刊; DOAJ Directory of Open Access Journals; Free E-Journal (出版社公開部分のみ); SpringerLink (Online service); PubMed Central Open Access
subjects Adult
Birthing Centers
Childbirth & labor
Cities
Collaboration
Educational Status
Ethnic Groups
Female
Health care
Home births
Humans
Linear Models
Maternal child nursing
Midwifery
Morocco - ethnology
Netherlands
Patient Preference
Patient satisfaction
Postpartum period
Pregnancy
Prenatal Care
Socioeconomic Factors
Suriname - ethnology
Surveys and Questionnaires
Turkey - ethnology
Womens health
Young Adult
title Preferences for birth center care in the Netherlands: an exploration of ethnic differences
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