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Measuring health professionals' beliefs about skin‐to‐skin care during a cesarean

Jeannette T. Crenshaw, Ellise D. Adams, Richard E. Gilder, Hannah G. Nolte

2021Maternal and Child Nutrition15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Abstract Women and their newborns are at risk of delayed or withheld skin‐to‐skin care (SSC) during a caesarean, which is about one‐third of births, worldwide. To date, no instrument exists to assess health professionals' (HPs) beliefs, and potential barriers and strategies for implementing SSC during a cesarean. The study aims were to (1) develop an instrument, Health Professionals' Beliefs about Skin‐to‐Skin Care During a Cesarean (SSC B ), (2) establish its validity and reliability and (3) describe HPs' beliefs about SSC during a caesarean. Quantitative and qualitative analyses were used to test the SSC B and describe HPs' beliefs. SSC B analysis yielded a content validity of 0.83 and reliability of α = 0.9. We grouped all practice roles as either nurses or physicians. The mean rank score for nurses ( n = 120, M = 90) was significantly higher ( p = 0.001) than physicians ( n = 46, M = 79). Despite this difference, scores for both roles reflected support for SSC. Participants identified hospital readiness to implement SSC and maintaining maternal and newborn safety as major issues. SSC B is a valid, reliable instrument to measure HPs' beliefs about SSC during a caesarean birth. HPs can use the SSC B during quality improvement initiatives to improve access to immediate SSC for women who have a caesarean birth. Improved access can enhance breastfeeding outcomes and promote optimal maternal and child health.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineBreastfeedingCaesarean deliveryHealth professionalsFamily medicineReliability (semiconductor)Health careValidityNursingPregnancyObstetricsCaesarean sectionPediatricsClinical psychologyPsychometricsPower (physics)GeneticsPhysicsQuantum mechanicsBiologyEconomic growthEconomicsMaternal and Perinatal Health InterventionsBreastfeeding Practices and InfluencesMaternal Mental Health During Pregnancy and Postpartum