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Qualitative study of evidence based leaflets in maternity care

BMJ 2002; 324 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.324.7338.639 (Published 16 March 2002) Cite this as: BMJ 2002;324:639
  1. Helen Stapleton, research midwife (h.stapleton{at}sheffield.ac.uk)a,
  2. Mavis Kirkham, professor of midwiferya,
  3. Gwenan Thomas, midwifeb
  1. a Women's Informed Childbearing and Health Research Group, School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Sheffield, Sheffield S3 7ND
  2. b Carmarthenshire NHS Trust, West Wales General Hospital, Carmarthen SA31 2AF
  1. Correspondence to: H Stapleton
  • Accepted 5 October 2001

Abstract

Objective: To examine the use of evidence based leaflets on informed choice in maternity services.

Design: Non-participant observation of 886 antenatal consultations. 383 in depth interviews with women using maternity services and health professionals providing antenatal care.

Setting: Women's homes; antenatal and ultrasound clinics in 13 maternity units in Wales.

Participants: Childbearing women and health professionals who provide antenatal care.

Intervention: Provision of 10 pairs of Informed Choice leaflets for service users and staff and a training session in their use.

Main outcome measures: Participants' views and commonly observed responses during consultations and interviews.

Results: Health professionals were positive about the leaflets and their potential to assist women in making informed choices, but competing demands within the clinical environment undermined their effective use. Time pressures limited discussion, and choice was often not available in practice. A widespread belief that technological intervention would be viewed positively in the event of litigation reinforced notions of “right” and “wrong” choices rather than “informed” choices. Hierarchical power structures resulted in obstetricians defining the norms of clinical practice and hence which choices were possible. Women's trust in health professionals ensured their compliance with professionally defined choices, and only rarely were they observed asking questions or making alternative requests. Midwives rarely discussed the contents of the leaflets or distinguished them from other literature related to pregnancy. The visibility and potential of the leaflets as evidence based decision aids was thus greatly reduced.

Conclusions: The way in which the leaflets were disseminated affected promotion of informed choice in maternity care. The culture into which the leaflets were introduced supported existing normative patterns of care and this ensured informed compliance rather than informed choice.

What is already known on this topic

What is already known on this topic Informed Choice leaflets are widely used in maternity care but little is known about their ability to influence informed choice and decision making

High quality information is essential for promoting informed choice but is insufficient by itself

What this study adds

What this study adds Time constraints and other pressures on health professionals resulted in a lack of discussion of the content of the leaflets

Fear of litigation, power hierarchies, and the technological imperative in maternity care limited the choices available

Health professionals promoted normative practices rather than choice, and as women valued their opinions this led to the promotion of informed compliance rather than informed choice

Introduction

The organisation and provision of maternity care in the United Kingdom was challenged when the Changing Childbirth report recommended that it become more “woman centred.” 1 The 10 research based leaflets (Informed Choice)2 were developed by the Midwives Information and Resource Service to support consumer choice.3 The effectiveness of these leaflets has been studied in a randomised controlled trial which is reported separately.2 To understand the social context in which the leaflets were used we undertook qualitative research alongside, but independently of, the randomised trial.

Attitudes of staff are thought to influence the choices available to childbearing women 4 5 and decision making in clinical practice.68 Organisational culture affects the quality of health care.911 “Socially complex interventions,”12 such as the Informed Choice leaflets, should be evaluated within the context in which they are used and through a prudent combination of qualitative and quantitative methods. 13 14

Methods

In the randomised controlled trial, 13 maternity units formed 10 clusters, five of which received the intervention of the Informed Choice leaflets between May and December 1998. 3 15 Four female midwifery researchers, including two of the authors (HS and GT), undertook non-participant observation and in depth interviews with health professionals and women, in both intervention and control maternity units (table). All the researchers kept detailed field notes for analysis. We used a grounded theory approach to data collection and analysis16 and the software package QSR NUD*IST17 to organise and interrogate the datasets.

Summary of qualitative methods in study of informed choice in maternity services

View this table:

The combination of qualitative methods enabled us to examine the same issue from a range of different perspectives and to explore beyond “official” accounts of choice and decision making from health professionals and childbearing women.

We obtained approval for the study from the local ethics committee.

Observations

We used observations of antenatal consultations (table) to identify how the leaflets were used and how informed choice and decision making occurred in practice. We made detailed field notes concerning setting, actions, words, and non-verbal cues of all present.

Interviews

We undertook face to face interviews using a semistructured format. We developed interview guides that were specific to the different participant groups, but all participants were invited to discuss the availability and quality of information, including the Informed Choice leaflets, receiving and conveying information, the meaning of informed choice, and the role of childbearing women in decision making. We also discussed inferences made by the researchers about behaviours and interactions during consultations. More than half of the interviews followed on from observation sessions, and this enabled us to explore issues, especially those of a sensitive nature, within the context of a previously established relationship.

Sampling

Our initial observation sample was “opportunistic,” being determined by the staff on duty and whether they and their clients were willing to accommodate the researchers. We identified commonly observed responses, such as pregnant women expressing satisfaction with their care and complying with the choices offered to them, staff expressing concern about time pressures, and midwives describing the leaflets as useful tools. As the research progressed, we sampled more selectively to ensure that all women of childbearing age, all social classes, and various current and previous obstetric experiences were represented, together with women from minority groups. In an effort to observe and understand good practice we sampled a small number of midwives in all maternity units who were described by their managers as excellent in facilitating informed choice.

Towards the end of the intervention period we selected interviewees to confirm or refute emerging theory. We continued to explore themes with all relevant participant groups until repeated, rather than new, information was forthcoming and theoretical saturation was achieved.

We removed identifying information from selected transcripts and shared them with members of the research team and outside experts. This guided future data collection, guarded against any researcher dominating the analytical process, and helped to ensure validity and reliability. 18 19

Results

The “invisible” leaflets

Most health professionals initially expressed positive views about the principles underpinning the Informed Choice leaflets (box 1). Within practice settings, however, they were seldom used to maximum effect. Pragmatic usage resulted in many leaflets being withheld from women because staff disagreed with the contents of the leaflet or were concerned because some leaflets promoted choices that were unavailable locally. Some midwives also made assumptions about the ability and willingness of women to participate in decision making. These assumptions were sometimes incorrect.

Box 1: General views

“… the best thing I've seen in terms of patient information … it's the way we should all be going in the health services … everyone, including health professionals, needs access to information of that quality” (obstetrician, intervention site)

“There are some ladies you don't want to be giving the leaflets to because you don't want them thinking they can have choices that aren't available… There are some women who can't read for example … and the young girls don't tend to be that interested” (community midwife, intervention site)

“They're good. They were really good. Especially the one about the positions. No one told me I could walk around last time. I didn't know you could stand up in labour. I thought it had to be lying on the bed. It were a real eye opener that one were …” (17 year old unemployed woman, in the third trimester of pregnancy and expecting her second baby, when asked her opinion about the leaflets; field notes, intervention site)

“Here's a leaflet on … [leaflet topic]. Have a read of it … see what you think, it might give you some ideas… If you want to discuss anything, give us a ring” (observation of midwife interaction, intervention site)

“If I hadn't actually stopped to read them [Informed Choiceleaflets] I'd never have appreciated how important they were … The leaflets were just given to me … When I started reading them I thought ‘Oh this is what I've been looking for …’ I always had them with me when I went for my visits but nobody ever mentioned them, besides to say ‘Have you got your leaflets?’ But nobody ever discussed them” (service user, intervention site)

“The fact that they were called Informed Choice … that's a very good title for them. They really push you to make an informed choice … The one about epidural really made me think. I didn't have one [epidural] this time … I know I might not have needed one because it was my second [baby] but I didn't want one either because of what it said in the leaflet about it” (service user, intervention site)

“They were OK … they were nothing ‘wow’ or anything … they weren't anything new … they didn't change my mind … I already knew what I wanted to do” (service user, intervention site)

The potential of the leaflets was further diluted because they were often given out “wrapped” within advertising materials or concealed within the maternity folder. During interviews, questions about the leaflets usually failed to elicit any response from most women. They often confused them with other information related to pregnancy or indeed denied having received them. It was often only after coaxing by the researcher or after her suggestion that women look within their maternity folder that leaflets were discovered and some comments were forthcoming.

Midwives generally distributed leaflets in routine ways and were rarely observed differentiating them from other information they offered women. Health professionals were seldom observed discussing the leaflets with women or asking them if they understood the information or found it useful. Women rarely initiated discussion about leaflet topics. A few women were complimentary about the leaflets and thought that they had influenced their intentions. Most women, however, did not find them helpful in decision making.

Health professionals under pressure

Most health professionals reported feeling pressured by time constraints (box 2). Midwives in particular were concerned about assuming the role of “information broker” without preparation or the allocation of additional time. Midwives on intervention sites sometimes viewed the leaflets as a pragmatic solution to time pressures. Women were often observed accommodating health professionals by limiting their questions, but some expressed dissatisfaction when written information was used as an alternative to discussion.

Box 2: Time pressures

“… at the end of the day we are governed by time, we haven't hours and hours to spend with each person… It's been good having the [Informed Choice] leaflets … it's a quick way out of it … You can give them a leaflet and tell them to have a read of it” (midwife, intervention site)

“It's strange, but I found that there were often things that I felt I needed to know. I was never sure whether I should ask the midwife or not … sometimes they are busy aren't they? … But if I did ask then they were brilliant … The information was there but you had to ask for it, you couldn't expect it to come pouring out” (service user, intervention site)

“I didn't feel happy throughout the pregnancy with the information I received … I constantly felt they [midwives] did not have any time for me. I was given plenty of leaflets but not enough discussion. I was never in the consulting room for any longer than five minutes at any of my antenatal appointments” (service user, intervention site)

Lack of choice in practice

Health professionals noted that many leaflets suggested choices that were not available at a local level (box 3). Furthermore, some technological interventions, such as ultrasound scanning and monitoring in labour, have become so routine in maternity care that health professionals no longer perceive them as optional. Women sometimes made choices on the basis of their previous experiences of childbirth but were often met with resistance if their preferences contradicted established clinical norms. Staff sometimes expressed a strong dislike for an option covered by the leaflets to the extent that distribution of some leaflets was terminated on some sites. Women tended to comply with the suggestions of health professionals, and, unless openings were made, they rarely instigated discussion about their own preferences.

Box 3: Choices

“When you go for your hospital appointment they'll do a little scan just to see how far on you are … They have the portable scanners in all the rooms so it's very quick. Then at 18 weeks you'll have your big scan … the detailed anomaly scan” (observation of midwife interaction, intervention site)

Researcher: “Was monitoring in labour ever discussed with you?”

Woman: “No … not really… They gave me that leaflet [Informed Choice leaflet 22] and told me to read it but they never said anything about what would happen in labour. They said they had to do a little trace when I first came in and then I think they just forgot to take it off” (service user, intervention site)

“With my first, I was monitored the whole time. I didn't realise that you could move round. Nobody explained that to me, but the second time around I knew that you didn't have to do it. I think the second time round I knew you had an option. You're stronger. You're a stronger person. You know what to expect” (service user, control site)

“When I declined the dating scan, the receptionist said: “Oh, I'll just go and see if you're allowed.’ … That did annoy me, you're not allowed this, you're not allowed that … I didn't have a dating scan and I had a hassle over it right up to the end” (service user, control site)

“Home deliveries are for pizzas and nothing else … women who choose to have home deliveries are very irresponsible … I know you can't stop them but I don't agree with them. If something does go wrong you haven't got a hope” (registrar, intervention site)

Researcher: “Was the option of having this baby at home discussed?”

Woman: “No … it did cross my mind. I thought I wouldn't mind considering a home birth but it wasn't mentioned. It was either a choice of [hospital X or hospital Y].”

Researcher: “And were you given this leaflet?” [researcher shows woman the Informed Choice leaflet on place of birth]

Woman: “Oh yes. I had that one but she [midwife] never discussed it with me … I thought she would ask me at the next visit if I'd read it but she never did so I just dropped it really. It wasn't that important … I'm quite happy with [hospital X]. I don't know why she bothered giving it me. I did wonder that…” (interview with women expecting her third baby; intervention site)

Technology and litigation

Researchers observed health professionals driving decision making towards technological intervention by conveying information which either minimised the risk of the intervention or emphasised the potential for harm without the intervention. This seemed to make it difficult for women to hear alternative messages, even from obstetricians. Fear of litigation promoted notions of “right” choices with which clinicians felt clinically secure and which they thought would afford them protection against litigation. Midwives occasionally expressed frustration when such imperatives, rather than evidence based information or client choice, determined the options available. Some women were aware of the influence of technological imperatives on the attitudes of health professionals, and they occasionally experienced this as bullying. Some views are shown in box 4.

Box 4: Technology

“Giving them a choice is not enough. They need to know the reality behind it [vaginal breech delivery] … about the head getting stuck definitely. You can give them scare stories but you don't even have to do that. You just have to mention a complication. Something like the baby might die…” (registrar, intervention site)

The following excerpt, taken from field notes made during a routine antenatal consultation, describes an interaction between a female registrar and a working class woman with a breech presentation in her first pregnancy. The woman and her mother have both made it clear that they consider an elective caesarean section to be the only safe delivery option. The registrar attempts to present an alternative perspective:

“Well … women still die from caesarean sections … It's a big operation and not without its risks and complications … What I want you to do, every morning, lunch time and tea time, is get on the floor on all fours for 10 minutes, with your forearms on the floor and your bum in the air. Do that for 10 minutes three times a day. It might encourage that baby to turn round.”

The woman laughs; her mother looks disgusted (field notes, control site)

“You see there is a need for the legal document and I think rightly so because it's useful to have this in practice where there is a lot of litigation… A patient comes in, you think the foetus is OK because the Pinard has recorded everything as normal. Then the next moment you get sudden deceleration… You have no excuse for not having a tracing. If a tracing had been done perhaps it would have shown … [an] increased risk in utero … (consultant obstetrician, intervention site)

“… they will always guide a woman towards elective section for breech even if she wants to try for a vaginal delivery … They're so geared towards an elective section … Even when the woman comes in with an undiagnosed breech in labour, fully dilated, ready to push, they'll do an emergency section at that point rather than let her deliver vaginally. So what's the point of giving a leaflet [number 92] … What's the point of giving them information about choices they haven't got?” (midwife, intervention site)

“He [the obstetrician] is a real Jekyll and Hyde that one. He was fine as long as he thought I was going to the hospital but as soon as I said I wanted to have the baby at home it was all about haemorrhage and the risks to the baby. If anything went wrong it would be my own fault; it would be on my head. It was horrible. I came home and cried” (service user, intervention site)

“I do think you can be bullied into things, particularly if you're not strong minded about what you want. It's quite easy for them to bully you, they say things like ‘The baby will die’ if you don't do so and so. Or: ‘You'll be in danger.’; It's very easy for them because you don't really understand the medical stuff” (service user, intervention site)

Hierarchy, power, and trust

We observed a strong hierarchy within the maternity services, with obstetricians at the top, midwives and health professionals other than doctors in the middle, and pregnant women at the bottom (box 5). This correlates with women's observations that midwives generally exercised little clinical influence compared with doctors. Midwives were concerned about the consequences of recommending options that contradicted obstetrically defined clinical norms. Most of the choices suggested in the leaflets required obstetric support, and hence the options offered tended to reflect the preferences of obstetricians rather than those of pregnant women or midwives. The practice of lower ranking doctors was similarly constrained by power differentials.

Box 5: Knowing your place

“In the later stage they [midwives] don't seem to have as much say in your care really. It's down to the consultant whether he chooses, or whether he recommends to you if the baby should be born [induced]” (service user, intervention site)

“ … you wish your midwife was given more power than they are … it comes to a certain question which they have to refer to a doctor and you think, but they know! They're in there … But they still have to defer. They should be empowered to do this” (service user, control site)

“… the Informed Choice leaflets actually put midwives between a rock and a very hard place… It's unreal to encourage women to go against local policies and guidelines when we all know that if she takes that line, she'll be given a really hard time, especially by the medical profession … I mean we've still got women in this area being threatened and struck off GPs' lists just for saying they are considering a home birth, for God's sake … and they will have to live with the consequences of making a choice … for a lot longer than I will” (community midwife, intervention site)

“So I was still thinking should I or shouldn't I have an epidural? This leaflet [leaflet number 62] was guiding me whether I should or shouldn't. In the end I had no choice anyway. When I went to deliver my babies, I had no choice. They were deciding how I was going to deliver my babies and told me I needed an epidural. I didn't know whether I did or not” (service user, intervention site)

“… it's a consultant led service. You may disagree with what your consultant says but if you're working for that consultant that's what you've got to tell the patient … Whether you like it or not that's what you do, whether you totally disagree, you've got to do it” (registrar, intervention site)

“They [midwives] become your friends don't they? It's not just about the pregnancy. They start to know what your husband does, what you did, what you worked as; and it's the trust thing. Going back to that word again, they become part of your life and you do put your trust in that person” (service user, intervention site)

“You start to doubt yourself if you think differently to the midwife or whoever is advising you, and if you don't agree, you think, ‘Oh! I must be wrong.’ Or at least, I did” (service user, control site)

“We let them [women] do what they want to do and then when things go wrong we get sued. We are … afraid to go against the women's wishes … [But] you get very skilled at smelling a rat. We know now when trouble is approaching and that woman [who had requested something with which the obstetrician disagreed] smells like trouble” (obstetrician, intervention site)

Women who experienced continuity of midwifery care were more likely to report trusting relationships in which they felt more able to ask questions. Such relationships, which were rarely encountered in this study, seemed to reduce imbalances in power and facilitate a partnership approach to maternity care.20 Women who questioned practice norms in the absence of such support often reported feeling undermined and were sometimes mistrusted by health professionals.

Discussion

This qualitative study of evidence based leaflets for pregnant women found that they did not promote informed choice. This was related to time pressures on staff working within a culture that supported existing normative patterns of care rather than informed choice. The hierarchical power structures within the maternity services, and the framing of information in favour of particular options, ensured compliance with the “right” choice.

Health professionals' initial views of the Informed Choice leaflets were generally positive but the ways in which leaflets were distributed or withheld, however, severely diluted their potential benefits. Health professionals, pressured by time and concerned about litigation, rarely discussed the content of the leaflets or promoted their difference from other literature.

The way in which information is presented influences decision making22 and competing “hierarchies of evidence”14 are known to reduce the credibility of some healthcare choices. Passive dissemination of information is ineffective in changing the behaviour of health professionals.23 Choices that are offered but not actively supported by staff are rarely taken up by pregnant women.24 The absence of opportunities for discussion25 that we observed is also likely to have hindered women in using the leaflets to make (informed) decisions.

The organisational and hierarchical structure of the maternity services worked against maximising the potential of the leaflets. The relative lack of continuity of care observed throughout the study made it difficult for women to follow up on issues raised in a previous consultation or to initiate discussion on leaflets and other topics related to pregnancy. Lack of continuity also precluded the formation of trusting relationships thought necessary to facilitate informed choice.21 Societal and medical expectations tend to normalise technological interventions, and some choices promoted in the leaflets, such as whether to have ultrasound scanning or electronic monitoring in labour, were rarely available in practice because the technology had long been integrated into routine care. Health professionals generally felt responsible for anything that went wrong in maternity care, and a widespread fear of litigation caused many to promote technological interventions, even when they were contradicted by the evidence base of the Informed Choice leaflets.

Choice and decision making seemed to be heavily circumscribed by the pressures and norms of the local obstetric culture. Hierarchical structures in the maternity services also made it difficult for lower ranking practitioners to support women in going against these right choices. There was little evidence to suggest that concepts such as partnership20 or shared decision making22 were understood by staff who generally were observed to seek women's compliance with the professionally defined right choices.

Childbearing women generally complied with expected norms in their encounters with staff, who they perceived as busy people with many demands on their time. Our results show that cultural barriers within the maternity services encourage informed compliance, even though staff adopted the rhetoric of informed choice.

Conclusions and implications

The results of this study are not specific to maternity units in Wales as similar issues have been identified in units that independently purchased the leaflets.15 These leaflets are unlikely to promote informed choice in maternity care unless they are introduced as part of a coherent strategy addressing power imbalances and the ambiguities currently underpinning choice. The concept of informed choice carries great potential to resolve many of the issues faced by maternity services today, with informed choice and partnership in decision making lessening the burden of responsibility presently experienced by health professionals. From this and other research we can begin to understand the barriers facing the implementation of research based evidence and the use of decision aids for informed choice in various clinical settings. 14 21 23 The additional barriers we have identified are unlikely to be unique to maternity care. Their removal, however, will entail considerable cultural change at all levels of the maternity services.

Acknowledgments

We thank the women, health professionals and managers, representatives of consumer groups and other organisations, and non-NHS antenatal teachers who contributed to the research. We also thank the project advisory group; colleagues and friends who assisted the research team in many ways including critical reading of work in progress; the National Childbirth Trust, who kindly agreed to withhold dissemination of a range of their leaflets on pregnancy related topics until our study was complete; and MIDIRS (Midwives Information and Resource Service) for answering our many queries and for withholding sales of the Informed Choice leaflets to control maternity units participating in the research until the end of the intervention period.

Contributors: HS advised on the study design, coordinated the qualitative research team, assisted in the qualitative data collection, conducted most of the data analysis, and participated in writing the paper. MK designed the study, supervised the qualitative data collection, and assisted in data analysis and writing the paper. GT contributed to the qualitative data collection and analysis. Donna Mead, Barbara Bale, Laurence Moseley, Sandy Kirkman, Heather Rothwell, David Cohen, and Penny Curtis were members of the research team for the wider study. Jane Durell was the project administrator. HS and MK are the guarantors.

Footnotes

  • Funding Department of Health. The Welsh Office funded the translation into Welsh of the women's version of the Informed Choice leaflets and the transcribing of interviews conducted in Welsh.

  • Competing interests None declared.

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