Regina Leader-Post

RESEARCHER­S SHOW BENEFIT OF MIDWIVES

Study suggests positive effects for low-income pregnant women

- FEDERICA GIANNELLI Federica Giannelli is a graduate student intern in the University of Saskatchew­an research profile and impact unit. This content runs through a partnershi­p with The Starphoeni­x.

SASKATOON Midwifery care may be key to better childbirth outcomes for low-income women with low- to moderate-risk pregnancie­s, says a study by researcher­s at the University of Saskatchew­an and the University of British Columbia.

U of S PHD student Daphne Mcrae and her supervisor Nazeem Muhajarine, in collaborat­ion with co-supervisor Patricia Janssen and two other UBC researcher­s, have found a strong associatio­n between midwifery care and better birth outcomes for women who struggle with poverty.

In the first study on midwifery care for low-income women in Canada, the researcher­s have found that low-income pregnant women who receive midwifery care are less likely than women under physician care to have low-birth-weight babies and premature births, or to give birth to small-for-gestationa­l-age babies (babies less developed than normal for the number of weeks of fetal growth).

“We interprete­d these better birth outcomes as being the result of the prolonged contact and extra support given by midwives to pregnant women with difficult background­s,” said Muhajarine, U of S professor in community health and epidemiolo­gy.

The researcher­s analyzed data from almost 58,000 low-income women who used midwifery care in British Columbia between 2005 and 2012. Funded by U of S and UBC, the study has been published in the BMJ Open journal (formerly called the British Medical Journal) and presented nationally and internatio­nally.

Previous research in British Columbia showed that midwives tend to spend more time with soon-tobe mothers (an average of between 30 and 60 minutes) while physicians’ appointmen­ts in British Columbia last around 20 minutes.

While midwives, general practition­ers and obstetrici­ans are all qualified to provide safe care, each provide a different type of care that women can choose based on their preference.

“Midwives can provide a personaliz­ed and comprehens­ive care, which allows them to address pregnant women’s adverse health and social conditions, such as depression, use of substances, and violence,” said Mcrae, who is now doing post-doctoral research at UBC.

Mcrae and Muhajarine have found that low-income women with low-to-moderate-risk pregnancie­s under midwifery care were 34 per cent less likely to deliver low-birth-weight babies, and almost 30 per cent less likely to deliver small-for-gestationa­l-age babies compared to patients of general physicians.

The women also showed a 26-per-cent reduction in early labour, compared to low-income women exclusivel­y under general physicians’ care.

Compared to obstetrici­ans’ patients in the study, women who relied on midwives experience­d a 41-per-cent reduction in delivering small-for-gestationa­l-age babies, and almost half the chance of premature births.

Among substance-using mothers, U of S researcher­s noted a 75-per-cent reduction in the chance of premature births for midwives versus obstetrici­ans’ patients.

Pregnant women in the study mostly received care by one group of providers only — either general physicians, obstetrici­ans, or midwives.

Mcrae restricted her study to women who would have been eligible for midwifery care regardless of the practition­er who delivered the baby, and then she controlled for difference­s in health and lifestyle

We interprete­d these better outcomes as being the result of prolonged contact and extra support given by midwives ...

risks among the three groups.

Mcrae explains she could not analyze data from Saskatchew­an simply because not enough data have been collected over a long period. The Saskatchew­an Midwifery Act was implemente­d in 2008, but to date only 13 midwives are registered and practising in the province.

“If more midwives were added, Saskatchew­an could save money in public health care and achieve equal to, if not better, birth outcomes than what we are currently experienci­ng,” said Muhajarine. “Our research could help develop policies that make the service more accessible to low-income women.”

But Muhajarine cautions more research is needed for a better understand­ing of costs and to pinpoint which sub-groups among low-income women are benefiting most from midwifery use, so that a more targeted approach in prenatal care can be developed.

 ?? DANIEL HALLEN FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEW­AN ?? Nazeem Muhajarine and Daphne Mcrae study the benefits of midwifery care.
DANIEL HALLEN FOR THE UNIVERSITY OF SASKATCHEW­AN Nazeem Muhajarine and Daphne Mcrae study the benefits of midwifery care.

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