Abstract

BackgroundThe ability to act on and justify clinical decisions as autonomous accountable midwifery practitioners, is encompassed within many international regulatory frameworks, yet decision-making within midwifery is poorly defined. Decision-making theories from medicine and nursing may have something to offer, but fail to take into consideration midwifery context and philosophy and the decisional autonomy of women. Using an underpinning qualitative methodology, a decision-making framework was developed, which identified Good Clinical Reasoning and Good Midwifery Practice as two conditions necessary to facilitate optimal midwifery decision-making during 2nd stage labour. This study aims to confirm the robustness of the framework and describe the development of Enhancing Decision-making Assessment in Midwifery (EDAM) as a measurement tool through testing of its factor structure, validity and reliability.MethodA cross-sectional design for instrument development and a 2 (country; Australia/UK) x 2 (Decision-making; optimal/sub-optimal) between-subjects design for instrument evaluation using exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis, internal consistency and known-groups validity. Two ‘expert’ maternity panels, based in Australia and the UK, comprising of 42 participants assessed 16 midwifery real care episode vignettes using the empirically derived 26 item framework. Each item was answered on a 5 point likert scale based on the level of agreement to which the participant felt each item was present in each of the vignettes. Participants were then asked to rate the overall decision-making (optimal/sub-optimal).FindingsPost factor analysis the framework was reduced to a 19 item EDAM measure, and confirmed as two distinct scales of ‘Clinical Reasoning’ (CR) and ‘Midwifery Practice’ (MP). The CR scale comprised of two subscales; ‘the clinical reasoning process’ and ‘integration and intervention’. The MP scale also comprised two subscales; women’s relationship with the midwife’ and ‘general midwifery practice’.ConclusionEDAM would generally appear to be a robust, valid and reliable psychometric instrument for measuring midwifery decision-making, which performs consistently across differing international contexts. The ‘women’s relationship with midwife’ subscale marginally failed to meet the threshold for determining good instrument reliability, which may be due to its brevity. Further research using larger samples and in a wider international context to confirm the veracity of the instrument’s measurement properties and its wider global utility, would be advantageous.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12884-016-0882-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The ability to act on and justify clinical decisions as autonomous accountable midwifery practitioners, is encompassed within many international regulatory frameworks, yet decision-making within midwifery is poorly defined

  • A midwife has a scope of practice that is built on the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM) international definition of the midwife [1], which recognises the midwife as a responsible and accountable professional who works in partnership with women to give the necessary support, care and advice during pregnancy, labour and the postpartum period

  • Midwifery scope of practice is defined by essential competencies, which are the combination of knowledge, psychomotor, communication and decision-making skills that enable an individual to perform a specific task to a defined level of proficiency

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Summary

Introduction

The ability to act on and justify clinical decisions as autonomous accountable midwifery practitioners, is encompassed within many international regulatory frameworks, yet decision-making within midwifery is poorly defined. The Nursing and Midwifery Board of Australia and the United Kingdom (UK) Nursing and Midwifery Council [2,3,4], provide examples of competency standards related to decision-making. During labour and birth, where the need to make decisions can be time limited and where women may be distracted by pain and contractions, the level of interaction necessary to promote decisional autonomy for the woman, or shared decision-making may be compromised [5]

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