Health
promotion in pregnancy: the role of the midwife
1. Annemarie Beldon, RGN, RM, BSc(Hons)
1. North Tyneside General Hospital, Rake Lane, North Shields
NE29 8NH, England Tel: +44 (0)191 293 2545
1. Suzanne Crozier, RGN, RM, MSc
1. University of Northumbria at Newcastle, Coach Lane Campus
NE7 7XA, England Tel: +44 (0)191 2156119 suzanne.crozier@unn.ac.uk
Abstract
Health promotion is of particular importance to midwives who
promote health rather than manage disease and ill health. Although the midwife
has always had a role in public health, there is now an explicit need for the
profession to direct its attention to teenage pregnancy, smoking cessation,
drug awareness and domestic violence. Much of the role of the midwife during
pregnancy is in health promotion and a more explicit application of such may
carry benefits in meeting Government policy on public health.
Some activities undertaken by midwives may not be identified as
health promotion, though there is evidence that the interaction generated by
routine examinations is of benefit to the motherís health. Midwives should work
in partnership with women and families, facilitating decisions about the care
that they feel they may require. Social disadvantage may impede participation
where formal education was not valued or ethnic background or language impaired
access to traditional childbirth education. Tackling this is at the heart of
current public health policy around childbirth and child care.
Education can take place during any interaction and this gives
midwives huge scope to provide an educational experience for women each time
they meet. For the pregnant teenager the extended family may need to be
included in health promotion activities particularly if breastfeeding targets
are to be met. A united health and education policy to inform and educate
children and teenagers about the benefits of pre-conceptional care and
breastfeeding may be needed. In this way young women come into contact with
midwives before they are pregnant, before attitudes to breastfeeding are
established and before the concept of pre-conceptional care is lost. Although
breastfeeding improves health for women and their infants it can become another
burden and expectation which they fail to achieve. Professionals need to be
sensitive to the possible negative impact on a womanís health, which could be
reduced if the emphasis was moved from individual behaviour change to the
inequalities within society.
Midwives should seek to respond positively to service changes to
achieve the goal of multidisciplinary, non-hierarchical patient-centred
services. In facilitating change midwives seek to use their influence to the
benefit of the pregnant woman.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16220735http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16220735
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