• Midwifery · Feb 2012

    The relationship between prenatal control, expectations, experienced control, and birth satisfaction among primiparous women.

    • Cynthia D Fair and Taylor E Morrison.
    • Human Services Department, CB 2338, Elon University, Elon, NC 27244, USA. cfair@elon.edu
    • Midwifery. 2012 Feb 1;28(1):39-44.

    ObjectivesThis paper explores the relationship between perceptions of prenatal control, expectations for childbirth, and experienced control in labour and birth and how they individually and collectively affect birth satisfaction.DesignA repeated measures exploratory study was conducted with 31 primiparous women between 26 and 40 weeks pregnant. Standardised interviews were conducted prior to birth to assess levels of prenatal control and expectations for control during childbirth. Six weeks after the birth, women were interviewed again to assess experiences of control and birth satisfaction.SettingPrenatal clinic, North Carolina, USA.FindingsResults show experienced control to be a significant predictor of birth satisfaction, with high levels of control correlating with high satisfaction levels. However, no correlations were found between the three aspects of control, and both prenatal control and birth expectations were found to have no significant effect on birth satisfaction. Findings also indicate that women cared for by midwives have significantly higher experienced control and birth satisfaction than women whose care was provided by obstetricians, while incidence of caesarean birth did not affect either measure.ConclusionsExperienced control during labour and birth is an important predictor of birth satisfaction. Health care providers should collaborate with the women they care for to use techniques that maximize the experience of control especially during labour and birth.Copyright © 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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