Women’s Birth Preparedness
Cross-source consensus on Women’s Birth Preparedness from 1 sources and 6 claims.
1 sources · 6 claims
Preparation
Risks & contraindications
Evidence quality
Where it comes from
Highlighted claims
- Women’s limited knowledge of childbirth and intrapartum practices was identified as a barrier to evidence-based care. — Barriers to integrating evidence-based practices into intrapartum care during vaginal births: a descriptive qualitative study in Sri Lanka
- Women’s resistance during labour may reflect systemic problems rather than only individual unwillingness. — Barriers to integrating evidence-based practices into intrapartum care during vaginal births: a descriptive qualitative study in Sri Lanka
- Some women were perceived as unprepared for the severity and duration of labour pain. — Barriers to integrating evidence-based practices into intrapartum care during vaginal births: a descriptive qualitative study in Sri Lanka
- Some women first learned delivery positions and pushing techniques in the labour room. — Barriers to integrating evidence-based practices into intrapartum care during vaginal births: a descriptive qualitative study in Sri Lanka
- Limited maternal awareness was linked to insufficient participation in antenatal education sessions. — Barriers to integrating evidence-based practices into intrapartum care during vaginal births: a descriptive qualitative study in Sri Lanka
- Some women did not know about epidural analgesia and some refused it despite explanations of its labour pain relief effectiveness. — Barriers to integrating evidence-based practices into intrapartum care during vaginal births: a descriptive qualitative study in Sri Lanka