33 research outputs found

    Protecting pregnancy at work: Normative safety measures and employees' safety strategies in reconciling work and pregnancy

    Get PDF
    Background: In Switzerland, occupational risks for pregnant workers are covered by specific maternity protection legislation (MPL); however, studies show significant shortcomings in the implementation of these policies among companies. Aims: Analyse the gaps between the provisions of Switzerland's MPL, the protective measures companies plan to take and actual protection practices. We also aim to understand how employees develop their own strategies in order to make up for the shortcomings or contradictions of companies' measures. Methods: Interviews with 46 different stakeholders from organisations in the healthcare sector and the food industry were transcribed and analysed thematically. Results: Some of the organisations used procedures apparently in line with legislation, while others planned more informal approaches to managing on a case-by-case basis. Normative safety measures within the framework of national legislation served as resources for both managers and their employees. However, implementing these measures ran up against real-world workplace constraints, which sometimes rendered them impracticable. Employees adapted some measures considered insufficient or developed their own strategies to reconcile work and pregnancy. Conclusions: Being pregnant is challenging to represent in occupational settings; it is not a disease, but it involves important physical and biopsychosocial changes, which affect women's occupational life. The multidimensional, evolving, and yet temporary nature of pregnancy represents a significant challenge to the implementation of MPL within companies. Linking the normative safety measures stipulated in the legislation with pregnant employees' needs-and their job-related knowledge and skills-could be an interesting pathway towards improving maternity protection at work

    Implementation, mechanisms and effects of maternity protection legislation: a realist narrative review of the literature.

    Get PDF
    Most industrialized countries have introduced maternity protection legislation (MPL) to protect the health of pregnant workers and their unborn children from workplace exposure. This review aimed to assess this legislation's level of implementation, barriers and facilitators to it, and its expected or unexpected effects. A realist narrative review was conducted. Keyword searches of the PubMed, CINAHL, PsycINFO, MIDIRS, Sociological abstracts and Google Scholar electronic databases were performed in March 2018. The 42 publications included show that the implementation of MPL is deficient in most countries. Allowing pregnant women to withdraw from work on preventive leave or sick leave is favored over workplace adaptations or worker reassignments. The publications highlight mechanisms which encourage or obstruct the enforcement of legislation at the levels of the individual, the physical and social environment, and the macrosocial context. The delay between the conception and implementation of maternity protection measures appears to be a major barrier to the efficacy of MPL. The literature also suggests that unexpected adverse effects, such as degradation in working relationships or discrimination can obstruct the implementation of protective measures. This study showed the need for a better implementation of MPL during pregnancy. Further research and recommendations for improvements in MPL should consider the diverse mechanisms and effects of its implementation. Barriers and adverse effects of this implementation do not only ensure a lack of information or awareness about MPL, but are also linked to contradictions between requirements to protect employment and protect pregnancy

    Quality of maternal and newborn care in Switzerland during the COVID-19 pandemic : a cross-sectional study based on WHO quality standards

    Get PDF
    Objective: To explore quality of maternal and newborn care (QMNC) in healthcare facilities during the COVID-19 pandemic in Switzerland. Methods: Women giving birth in Switzerland answered a validated online questionnaire including 40 WHO standards-based quality measures. QMNC score was calculated according to linguistic region and mode of birth. Differences were assessed using logistic regression analysis adjusting for relevant variables. Results: A total of 1175 women were included in the analysis. Limitations in QMNC during the pandemic were reported by 328 (27.9%) women. Several quality measures, such as deficient communication (18.0%, n = 212), insufficient number of healthcare professionals (19.7%, n= 231), no information on the newborn after cesarean (26.5%, n = 91) or maternal and newborn danger signs (34.1%, n = 401 and 41.4% n = 4 87, respectively) suggested preventable gaps in QMNC. Quality measures significantly differed by linguistic region and mode of birth. Multivariate analysis established a significantly lower QMNC for women in French- and Italian-speaking regions compared with the German-speaking region. Moreover, in several quality indicators reflecting communication with healthcare providers, women who did not answer the questionnaire in one of the Swiss national languages had significantly worse scores than others. A significant lower QMNC was also found for young and primiparous women and for those who experienced cesarean or instrumental vaginal birth. Conclusion: Women giving birth in Switzerland during the pandemic reported notable gaps in QMNC. Providers should be attuned to women who are younger, primiparous, and those who had an emergency cesarean or instrumental vaginal birth given the lower QMNC reported by these groups. Women who did not respond in a Swiss national language may need improved communication strategies

    Role of risk stratification by SPECT, PET, and hybrid imaging in guiding management of stable patients with ischaemic heart disease: expert panel of the EANM cardiovascular committee and EACVI

    Get PDF
    Risk stratification has become increasingly important in the management of patients with suspected or known ischaemic heart disease (IHD). Recent guidelines recommend that these patients have their care driven by risk assessment. The purpose of this position statement is to summarize current evidence on the value of cardiac single-photon emission computed tomography, positron emission tomography, and hybrid imaging in risk stratifying asymptomatic or symptomatic patients with suspected IHD, patients with stable disease, patients after coronary revascularization, heart failure patients, and specific patient population. In addition, this position statement evaluates the impact of imaging results on clinical decision-making and thereby its role in patient management. The document represents the opinion of the European Association of Nuclear Medicine (EANM) Cardiovascular Committee and of the European Association of Cardiovascular Imaging (EACVI) and intends to stimulate future research in this fiel

    Individual and country-level variables associated with the medicalization of birth: Multilevel analyses of IMAgiNE EURO data from 15 countries in the WHO European region

    Get PDF
    Objective: To investigate potential associations between individual and country-level factors and medicalization of birth in 15 European countries during the COVID-19 pandemic. Methods: Online anonymous survey of women who gave birth in 2020–2021. Multivariable multilevel logistic regression models estimating associations between indicators of medicalization (cesarean, instrumental vaginal birth [IVB], episiotomy, fundal pressure) and proxy variables related to care culture and contextual factors at the individual and country level. Results: Among 27 173 women, 24.4% (n = 6650) had a cesarean and 8.8% (n = 2380) an IVB. Among women with IVB, 41.9% (n = 998) reported receiving fundal pressure. Among women with spontaneous vaginal births, 22.3% (n = 4048) had an episiotomy. Less respectful care, as perceived by the women, was associated with higher levels of medicalization. For example, women who reported having a cesarean, IVB, or episiotomy reported not feeling treated with dignity more frequently than women who did not have those interventions (odds ratio [OR] 1.37; OR 1.61; OR 1.51, respectively; all: P< 0.001). Country-level variables contributed to explaining some of the variance between countries. Conclusion: We recommend a greater emphasis in health policies on promotion of respectful and patient-centered care approaches to birth to enhance women's experiences of care, and the development of a European-level indicator to monitor medicalization of reproductive care

    Regards croisĂ©s sur l’application des mesures de protection de la grossesse au travail : entre dispositifs lĂ©gaux, pratiques et expĂ©riences

    No full text
    Des expositions spĂ©cifiques sur le lieu de travail peuvent affecter nĂ©gativement la santĂ© des femmes, leur bien- ĂȘtre au travail, les issues de grossesse et le dĂ©veloppement de l'enfant. En Suisse, Ă  l’instar d’autres pays, ces risques font l’objet d’une protection via une rĂ©glementation spĂ©cifique : l’Ordonnance sur la protection de la maternitĂ© (OProMa). Dans une perspective de santĂ© publique et en intĂ©grant certaines notions issues de l’ergonomie de l’activitĂ©, la prĂ©sente thĂšse vise Ă  : 1) acquĂ©rir des connaissances sur le degrĂ© d’application de la lĂ©gislation en Suisse romande ; 2) identifier les obstacles et les appuis Ă  l’application de ces mesures de protection ; 3) comprendre comment les diffĂ©rents acteurs impliquĂ©s dans la protection des collaboratrices enceintes et les femmes ayant vĂ©cu une grossesse en cours d’emploi perçoivent et appliquent de maniĂšre situĂ©e ces mesures. Afin d’obtenir des donnĂ©es quantitatives concernant l’application de l’OProMa en Suisse romande nous avons menĂ© deux enquĂȘtes, l’une en ligne auprĂšs des gynĂ©cologues obstĂ©triciens et l’autre tĂ©lĂ©phonique auprĂšs de 202 entreprises de deux secteurs Ă©conomiques (santĂ© et industrie alimentaire). La faible application de l’OProMa tĂ©moigne d'un nombre important de femmes qui ne bĂ©nĂ©ficient pas des mesures protectrices auxquelles elles auraient droit. Nous avons ensuite menĂ© une Ă©tude qualitative par le biais d’études de cas au sein de six entreprises appartenant aux mĂȘmes secteurs Ă©conomiques. En premier lieu, nous avons interrogĂ© les perceptions des travailleuses qui ont vĂ©cu une grossesse en cours d’emploi et d’autres parties prenantes au sein de l’entreprise vis-Ă -vis des risques professionnels, des mesures protectrices proposĂ©es et des effets de l’application de telles mesures. Les donnĂ©es montrent que dans une mĂȘme entreprise, les acteurs peuvent avoir des perceptions diffĂ©rentes ; certaines actions de protection adoptĂ©es par l’entreprise peuvent occasionner des effets inattendus et ĂȘtre perçues nĂ©gativement par les travailleuses. DeuxiĂšmement, nous avons investiguĂ© les pratiques de protection concernant la grossesse au travail en entreprises et les stratĂ©gies dĂ©veloppĂ©es par les travailleuses elles-mĂȘmes afin de concilier grossesse et travail. Dans les cas Ă©tudiĂ©s, nous avons observĂ© des rĂ©alitĂ©s trĂšs contrastĂ©es entre les entreprises. La prĂ©sence de mesures protectrices prĂ©vues encadrĂ©es par la lĂ©gislation reprĂ©sente une ressource pour les managers et les travailleuses, cependant la mise en Ɠuvre de ces mesures peut se heurter Ă  des contraintes propres Ă  l’activitĂ© elle-mĂȘme. L’articulation entre des mesures prĂ©vues d’office et la prise en compte des connaissances des travailleuses enceintes vis-Ă -vis du travail rĂ©el s’avĂšre ĂȘtre une piste intĂ©ressante. Dans une perspective d’amĂ©lioration des connaissances et des pratiques, la prĂ©sente thĂšse propose des pistes de rĂ©flexion sur les difficultĂ©s d’application et les limites des politiques de protection actuelles. Au vu des lacunes mises en Ă©vidence sur plusieurs niveaux d’analyse, une amĂ©lioration de la protection des travailleuses enceintes ne peut se faire qu’en adoptant une perspective systĂ©mique et en s’appuyant sur des alliances solides entre les diffĂ©rentes parties prenantes. -- Specific exposures in the workplace can negatively affect women's health, their well-being and represent a risk to pregnancy and the unborn child. In Switzerland, as in other developed countries, these risks are protected against by specific regulation: the Maternity Protection Ordinance (OProMa). Using a public health perspective, and by integrating some notions developed in the ergonomics of activity approach, the present thesis aims to: 1) develop an understanding of the degree to which the OProMa is applied in French-speaking Switzerland; 2) identify the obstacles to and the facilitators of the appropriate implementation of that legislation, and; 3) comprehend how the different actors involved in the protection of pregnant employees, and women who had experienced pregnancy while employed, perceived and applied maternity protection measures in workplaces. We carried out two surveys to obtain the necessary quantitative data about the implementation of the OProMa in French-speaking Switzerland. The first was on-line and aimed at gynaecologist obstetricians; the second was conducted by telephone and aimed at 202 companies from two economic sectors (the healthcare and the food industry). The poor implementation of the OProMa across the region was witness to the significant numbers of women who do not benefit from the maternity protection measures which they are entitled to. We subsequently carried out a qualitative study among six companies from the same two economic sectors. First, we interviewed employees who had experienced pregnancy in the workplace and other stakeholders within their organisations about their perceptions of occupational risks, the protective measures proposed and the effects of the implementation of those measures. Data showed that the actors in a single organisation could have different perceptions; some of the protective measures adopted by the company can have unexpected effects on employees and be perceived negatively by them. Secondly, we investigated the real-world maternity protection measures implemented by companies and the strategies developed by employees themselves in order to reconcile pregnancy and work. The case studies revealed that the realities within companies were very contrasted. The existence of normative safety and protective measures enshrined in legislation act as a basic resource for managers and their employees. However, their implementation might well run up against the real-world constraints of carrying out a professional activity. Linking protective measures in line with the regulations with pregnant employees’ knowledge and skills with regards to their activities would seem to be an interesting pathway towards better maternity protection in the workplace. To improve knowledge and practices with regards to maternity protection at work, the present thesis reflects on the challenges of implementing current legislation and their limits. Given the shortcomings in the implementation of Switzerland’s maternity protection legislation—revealed at different levels of our analysis— improving protective measures for pregnant employees will only be achieved by adopting a systemic view and by relying on a solid alliance between all the different stakeholders involved

    Soins périnatals gérés par les sage-femmes ::définitions et principes

    No full text
    Les auteures de cet article offrent ici un aperçu du modÚle de soin périnatals gérés par les sage-femmes, et exposent ses particularités, ses principes et ses apports tels que décrits dans la littérature scientifique

    Les futures mÚres sont mal protégées au travail

    No full text
    Une enquĂȘte menĂ©e auprĂšs de 202 entreprises romandes montre que les prescriptions lĂ©gales en matiĂšre de protection des travailleuses enceintes ne sont que peu appliquĂ©es

    Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on maternity services in Europe ::a mixed methods systematic review protocol

    No full text
    Objective: This review will synthesize and integrate the best available evidence on the changes caused by the COVID-19 pandemic in access to and the provision of maternity services in Europe. The review will also consider health care professionals’ experiences in providing maternity care during the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe. Introduction: Governments and maternity services have introduced various protective sanitary and organizational measures to reduce the spread of COVID-19 and protect the global population, including health care professionals. Since March 2020, the number of publications on this topic has soared, yet little is known about the effect of the pandemic and the accompanying measures on access to and the provision of maternity care in Europe. Inclusion criteria: The review will consider quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods studies on the impact of COVID-19 on European maternity services. For the quantitative component, the review will consider studies evaluating maternity services outcomes across all types of maternity care settings. For the qualitative component, the review will consider studies exploring maternity health care providers’ experiences and perceptions of the impact of the pandemic on care provided to women and their babies. Methods: Six bibliographic databases will be searched for published and unpublished studies since March 2020. Study selection, critical appraisal, data extraction, and data synthesis will follow JBI's segregated mixed methods approach. The quantitative component will be adapted to follow the JBI requirements for systematic reviews of etiology and risk. Systematic review registration number: PROSPERO CRD4202128387
    corecore