This work looks specifically at research relevant to the care provided by midwives for childbearing women and their families. The studies encompass many areas of midwifery practice, education and management and topics covered include antenatal care, supportive care in labour, reasons for not breast feeding, the role and responsibilities of the midwife and women's experiences of childbirth. These studies illustrate the diversity of research methods appropriate to the study of midwifery, ranging from randomized controlled trials to evaluate the effects of clinical procedures, to detailed observational studies to describe interactions between midwives and women in their care.
1 Research and midwifery.- 2 Caring for childbearing women: the interrelationship between midwifery and medical responsibilities.- 3 Recording an obstetric history or relating to a pregnant woman? A study of the antenatal booking interview.- 4 Psychosocial effectiveness of antenatal and postnatal care.- 5 Placental grading as a test of fetal well-being.- 6 Midwives and information-giving during labour.- 7 Is anyone out there still giving enemas?.- 8 Postnatal care and adjustment to motherhood.- 9 Midwives’ and mothers’ perceptions of motherhood.- 10 Models of childbirth and social class: a study of 80 working class primigravidae.- 11 Why don’t women breast feed?.