“We Should Be Working Together, and It Felt like They Disrupted That”: Pregnant Women and Partners’ Experiences of Maternity Care in the First UK COVID-19 Pandemic Lockdown
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Sample and Recruitment
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Qualitative Results
3.2. Uncertainty and Anxiety
3.2.1. Uncertainty about COVID-19
‘Yeah, most of our information, most of my understanding of COVID has come from the media and, like, they’re not usually the most reliable of places.’(John, Family 3: antenatal interview)
‘I’ve been trying really careful to just following like the same couple of sources, which is basically, yeah, like the Royal College and like the Midwifery, like official sources and the Gynaecologists and the Obstetricians sources, because otherwise I just get really overwhelmed with like social media stuff and I read these terrible stories.’(Beatrice, Family 2: antenatal interview)
‘I was clicking on all those [NHS webpage] links madly and trying to kind of read what the guidance was and yeah, and I tried, I tried at that point, because obviously I suddenly became massively anxious.’(Hazel, Family 1: antenatal interview)
‘I shielded myself quite a bit from the news and let [husband] be my shelter, basically because it was not doing me any good to hear all that negativity. I didn’t really want that.’(Donna, Family 5: postnatal interview)
3.2.2. Uncertainty about Maternity Services
‘But they said because of COVID that they… they can’t guarantee that we’d be able to go on the midwife led unit, because they would be using the rooms for COVID patients if there were any. Which again is frustrating.’(Beatrice, Family 2: antenatal interview)
‘I feel like it was just like a lot of things were quite up in the air and there was like a lot of anxiety around all of this and I just felt quite stressed that it had like suddenly just been cancelled and if anything it made me want a home birth more, like obviously with like COVID and hospitals and stuff.’(Colette, Family 7: postnatal interview)
‘I guess that’s the thing that’s in my mind which is that I could call on the day and they could say, “no, you have to come in”. Which obviously could always happen, but it’s just more likely…’(Beatrice, Family 2: antenatal interview)
‘Up until March [2020] I’d heard the midwife saying at our appointments that I went to, saying a home birth is absolutely fine in our area, and then they got taken off the table because of COVID. And then things start calming down a little bit towards the end of May, June. I thought, right, and [partner] tried to get hold of the Head Midwife, but there was no contact details for her anywhere so [partner] ended up going through the complaint service of the hospital and then from that the community midwife phoned and explained why home births weren’t on.’(Tim, Family 1: antenatal interview)
‘So, they have been, they have been good at, sort of, supplying information... every Friday. The midwifery team do a Facebook Iive chat, which has been really, really helpful actually. That’s been really good.’(Joanna, Family 4: antenatal interview)
‘When she is having the baby, I’ll pretty much drop her off and then they’ll give me a call when she’s in (..) established labour if you like. Then I can come into the hospital for the birth and then maybe spend a little bit of time with them after, and then I have to leave pretty quickly.’
‘I completely understand it, I do. I mean I would love to be there for the whole thing, I mean, it was an amazing experience with [1st baby], but I’m not, kind of, cross about it. I’s just the situation’(Graham, Family 4: antenatal interview)
3.3. Disruption of Partnering and Parenting Roles
‘We’re not even able to make decisions ourselves. Everything is sort of being dictated to us and the lack of communication, as well for [partner] and, you know, she has these questions and then they’re not getting answered.’(Seth, Family 2: antenatal interview)
‘I felt like I could have really helped a lot more if I was in the appointment, I could have offered my insights and also my perspective on like her sleeping pattern and the way the baby was kicking, just everything that I felt like I actually could have had a positive imprint on them appointments, if I was there too.’(Seth, Family 2: postnatal interview)
‘Generally, my main desire in life is to support [partner] and to make sure she’s okay and to be that supportive partner… So yeah, it was about just being supportive.’(Tim, Family 1: postnatal interview)
‘But then, you know, I did begin to become frustrated around actually these are big decisions and I’m not there to be able to make them… We should be working together, and it felt like they disrupted that quite a lot.’(Tim, Family 1: postnatal interview)
‘Like, I shouldn’t have had to sit there and tell [husband] over video that I had pre-eclampsia, like that. He should have been there while I was told that, you know, he should have been part of that conversation.’(Hazel, Family 1: postnatal interview)
‘There’s nowhere to wait because the waiting rooms and the café and everything is closed. You can’t... so you have to sit in the car or wander round the streets. So that’s what you found outside [the hospital], there was just lots of men walking around the car park.’(Tim, Family 1: postnatal interview)
‘I was aware of this guy stood at the end of the bed kind of saying ‘you need to sign this because you’ve agreed to..’ whatever it was, but I didn’t, I still don’t really know what that was about and it just felt as though, you know, this is a decision to do with my wife and my child and I can’t really hear what’s going on. I don’t know what the form is, I can’t see what it says on it.’(Tim, Family 1: postnatal interview)
‘[H]e’s got quite a lot of trust and faith [that] in either hospital the risks will be managed by the people that work there.’(Emily, Family 3: antenatal interview)
‘I’m not a medical professional, I’m not an epidemiologist or virologist, I don’t kind of question too much the guidance. I just think it’s best practice just to follow it. Let’s just all be careful and follow the rules.’(John, Family 3: antenatal interview)
‘Induction is hard for the woman. It’s really hard and to do that on your own is, you know, it’s just, it’s not ideal is it? It’s much better if someone is there to hold your hand… The most important thing is that, yeah, you get a baby out safely and the mother’s safe and that we don’t unnecessarily spread anything around.’
‘I mean probably right now, because we’re not in the thick of it, I’m able to see that bigger picture and be all philosophical about it. You know, at crunch time, I might feel a bit differently, who knows. You know, if it goes badly wrong, I don’t know, you just don’t know how you’ll feel.’(John, Family 3: antenatal interview)
3.4. Complexity around Entering Hospital Spaces
3.4.1. Hospitals Offering Protection While Posing Threat
‘I think pre-COVID stuff, I probably would have gone, but it suddenly felt so much more complicated and risky to go, because I was thinking, well, if I go down to the hospital, first of all my husband can’t come with me because there’s no-one to look after the children. So, I’d have to go on my own, which would mean me getting in a taxi and there’s a degree of risk in getting in a taxi and then going into the hospital and being on my own in the hospital. There’s a degree of risk of me picking something up and bringing it back.’(Joanna, Family 4: antenatal interview)
‘There were security guards at the gate of the car park. It was really quiet and they came really close, they asked me to wind down my window and they came really close and I just felt really like, this feels really strange, Like, I appreciate you need to check something, but you’re getting really close to me and presumably you’ll see everyone coming into this hospital. So, I was a bit like okay, alright, back off!’(Donna, Family 5: antenatal interview)
‘I don’t want [partner] having our baby in a hospital where there might be a COVID ward just down the corridor.’(Tim, Family 1: antenatal interview)
3.4.2. Caring Individuals in Inflexible Organisations
‘[T]he midwives were brilliant and really helped her through it, and then they were under a lot of pressure. They were really busy.’(John, Family 3: postnatal interview)
‘The midwives, you know, they’re wonderful, they are generally kind and empathic and they understand, they listen. It’s the system, it’s the structures, it’s the hierarchy, it’s the power imbalance that is the difficulty.’(Tim, Family 1: postnatal interview)
3.5. Attempting to Feel in Control
‘I’m just so pleased, you know, that I made that decision about having the private midwife in the end and everything, and being able to do it at home and you know, because I sort of feel a birth is such a deep-rooted experience and you know, you only have really that, your memory for a lifetime, so it is just so important that it should be the most positive experience.’(Inge, Family 6: postnatal interview)
‘I think for me it was really mixed, and the reason I decided to go ahead with it was because of what the induction offered in terms of certainty in a very uncertain world. That I had a date when I knew I needed my children looked after and a date when there was a ticking clock in terms of when my baby would arrive.’(Emily, Family 3: postnatal interview)
‘I had said ‘Stop’ and I probably would have been more forceful, you know, when she said ‘No, I’m just going to carry on’, I would have said ‘No, you’re going to stop’, had it not been for the fact that I just wanted this induction to happen, given that the unit was full, there’s a pandemic, everyone is wearing masks, everyone’s a bit stressed, you know. Those kinds of things that impacted what I decided… when actually my instinct was ‘I’d like you to take your hand out of my vagina now, please.’(Emily, Family 3: postnatal interview)
‘Had I been more confident about myself and my body… and more confident with the idea of uncertainty… maybe I would have trusted to have not accepted that induction, and that things might have been a bit easier.’(Emily, Family 3: postnatal interview)
4. Discussion
4.1. Ethical Approval
4.2. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Family | Participant | Age | Employment | Number of Previous Children | Original Planned Birthplace | Preference Birthplace at Antenatal Interview | Birthplace | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Hazel | 30 | Public sector | 0 | Home | Home | Hospital (medical reason) | Booked for homebirth; pre-eclampsia, induced labour; non-operative vaginal birth |
Tim | 34 | Public sector | ||||||
2 | Beatrice | 31 | Health worker | 0 | Home | Home | Hospital (homebirth cancelled by NHS) | Booked for homebirth, considered freebirth when uncertain about service provision; non-operative vaginal birth |
Seth | 30 | Arts worker | ||||||
3 | Emily | 32 | Health worker | 2 | Hospital | Hospital | Hospital | Induced labour; non-operative vaginal birth |
John | 33 | Business owner | ||||||
4 | Joanna | 33 | Public sector | 1 | Hospital | Hospital | Hospital | Non-operative vaginal birth |
Graham | 33 | Manual skilled | ||||||
5 | Donna | 35 | Retailer | 2 | Home | Home | Home (NHS) | Non-operative vaginal birth |
6 | Inge | 39 | Home maker | 1 | Home | N/A * | Home (Independent MW) | Booked for homebirth with NHS Trust but transferred to independent midwifery care amidst uncertainty around service provision. Non-operative vaginal birth |
7 | Collette | 30 | Self-employed | 1 | Home | Home | Hospital (homebirth cancelled by NHS) | Non-operative vaginal birth |
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Share and Cite
Keely, A.; Greenfield, M.; Darwin, Z. “We Should Be Working Together, and It Felt like They Disrupted That”: Pregnant Women and Partners’ Experiences of Maternity Care in the First UK COVID-19 Pandemic Lockdown. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 3382. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043382
Keely A, Greenfield M, Darwin Z. “We Should Be Working Together, and It Felt like They Disrupted That”: Pregnant Women and Partners’ Experiences of Maternity Care in the First UK COVID-19 Pandemic Lockdown. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(4):3382. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043382
Chicago/Turabian StyleKeely, Alice, Mari Greenfield, and Zoe Darwin. 2023. "“We Should Be Working Together, and It Felt like They Disrupted That”: Pregnant Women and Partners’ Experiences of Maternity Care in the First UK COVID-19 Pandemic Lockdown" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 4: 3382. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043382
APA StyleKeely, A., Greenfield, M., & Darwin, Z. (2023). “We Should Be Working Together, and It Felt like They Disrupted That”: Pregnant Women and Partners’ Experiences of Maternity Care in the First UK COVID-19 Pandemic Lockdown. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 20(4), 3382. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20043382