Mother (Person) Clinical Trial
Official title:
Women's Involvement In Decision Making At Labor And Its Effect on Their Perceived Labor Process
1. Increased women's involvement in decision making at labor process correlates with a
positive perception of the labor process.
2. Increased maternal satisfaction with midwifery and gynecological care at labor
correlates with a more positive perception of the labor process.
The Interrelationship Between Women's Involvement In Decision Making In Labor And Their
Perception Of The Labor Experience Labor is one of the most significant events in women's
lives. The process and outcome of labor may have long term effects on the way women perceive
the parenting role and their personal, emotional and physical capability. Each woman arrives
to labor with a planned construct of beliefs, expectations and fantasies regarding the labor
process and outcomes, which are driven from different cultural values and personal beliefs.
The clinical reality does not always correlate with this emotional construct and with a
woman's anticipated level of involvement in decision making at labor. Discrepancy between
women's desired or expected labor processes and what happens in actuality may have a
substantial impact on women's lives and on the way they will experience future births. The
main goal of this research is to investigate the effects of labor process on women by
examining the question whether women's involvement in decision making during labor has an
effect on their perceived labor process.
The perceived labor process is a combination of a woman's level of engagement in decision
making at labor, her perceived level of control in the labor process and the level of
satisfaction from the obstetric caregivers (gynecologists and midwives). The participants of
this research project shall be comprised of 100 women who were hospitalized during the two
days immediately following labor and delivery in the maternity unit at Hillel Yaffe
hospital, who gave birth in a normal delivery, at term (37 weeks of gestation) with no
surgical or instrumental intervention and had no complications either to them or their
babies. The participants will be given a self-replying questionnaire constructed especially
for the purposes of this research project. The questionnaire is comprised of seven parts:
(1) social-demographic information,(2) health background,(3) obstetric background,(4) the
woman's perspective of labor process in general,(5) the woman's perspective of the
progression of her actual labor,(6) the woman's evaluation of the attitude of obstetric
caregivers (gynecologists and midwives) and (7) the level of control the woman had in
decision making during labor and her perception of the labor experience. The research
findings will be analyzed statistically using Statistical Package for the Social Sciences
(SPSS) format. In addition to understanding the way women perceive their labor and delivery
in terms of the level of involvement in decision making, these findings may also contribute
to develop a therapeutic intervention tool to assist accommodating specific treatment to
women in labor and childbirth according to the level of her desired involvement in decision
making at birth, her viewpoint of therapeutic intervention and her expectations of the labor
process.
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Time Perspective: Prospective
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