Vedeler, Carina, Nilsen, Anne Britt Vika, Downe, Soo ORCID: 0000-0003-2848-2550 and Eri, Tine S. (2024) The “Doing” of Compassionate Care in the Context of Childbirth From a Women’s Perspective. Qualitative Health Research . ISSN 1049-7323
Preview |
PDF (VOR)
- Published Version
Available under License Creative Commons Attribution. 598kB |
Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1177/10497323241280370
Abstract
Women who are giving birth need to be met with compassion and understanding from healthcare professionals. However, there are growing concerns about the perceived lack of compassion in the delivery of healthcare services in general and maternity care in particular. We conducted 15 qualitative interviews with women who had given birth in Norway within the previous year, asking them to describe their experiences of compassionate care. We aimed to explore what healthcare professionals “do” that is experienced as compassionate. The analysis was informed by Paul Gilbert’s theory of compassion and a concept analysis of compassionate midwifery undertaken by Ménage and colleagues. The compassionate caring actions of healthcare professionals that were identified in the women’s narratives generated five themes: attuning actions, validating actions, contextualizing actions, empowering actions, and small acts of kindness. The findings build on the prior theoretical concepts used for the study and provide a nuanced account of how women perceive compassionate care from healthcare professionals. They could contribute to understanding more of the meaning and nature of compassionate care during childbirth. The analysis indicates the importance of ensuring that compassionate care is at the very core of maternity care services.
Repository Staff Only: item control page