May
5
Mon
2025
5. Student Midwife Support Circles: connecting with ourselves, each other and our profession
May 5 @ 02:00 – 02:50
5. Student Midwife Support Circles: connecting with ourselves, each other and our profession @ Zoom

Speaker: Jessie Johnson-Cash

Facilitator: Mutiara Dien Safitri

Background: Midwifery students juggle academic pressures, personal obligations, and the transition to clinical practice, often leading to burnout and stress. Activities that build resilience are beneficial in facilitating student engagement and promoting emotional wellbeing.

Objectives: This study evaluates the effectiveness of Student Midwife Support Circles (SMSC) as a co-curricular peer support activity, in building a sense of belonging and professional identity, and developing emotional wellbeing.

Methods: Participants were recruited from past and current midwifery students at a regional Australian university. A mixed-method approach used a cross-sectional online survey and individual interviews. Quantitative data (n=31) was reported as descriptives and compared based on attendance at the SMSCs. Qualitative data from both the survey (n=31) and interviews (n=3) was analysed using thematic analysis.

Results: Compared to students (n=9) who had not attended SMSCs, students who attended any number of SMSCs (n=22) reported greater compassion satisfaction and slightly higher self-efficacy. In addition, attendance significantly improved students’ views that support groups reduced stress whilst on placements, improved belonging to the profession and in becoming a better midwife, and increased student well-being. The thematic analysis confirmed these results, and the value of an academic run the support group.

Conclusions: Students who have been to any number of SMSCs have much more favourable views of the usefulness of these groups and there is some improvement in the satisfaction of care they provide and their confidence in dealing with challenges. 

13. Collaborative Approaches to Bereavement Care
May 5 @ 10:00 – 10:50
13. Collaborative Approaches to Bereavement Care @ Zoom

Speaker: Nonkululeko Shibula

Facilitator: Rizka Ayu Setyani

As a bereaved parent, I bring a unique perspective to the essential connections midwives foster during perinatal loss. This presentation explores the intersection of family support systems, community networks, and cultural connections in bereavement care, highlighting how midwives can play a transformative role in these deeply personal and communal experiences.

This session aims to inspire midwives to recognize the power of connection in their work, ensuring that bereaved families receive compassionate, culturally sensitive, and comprehensive holistic support. By embracing these relationships, midwives can help shape healing narratives for families while fostering a more interconnected approach to care.

Drawing on lived experiences and collaborative initiatives, the session emphasizes the importance of integrating parent voice advocates into bereavement care. These advocates provide crucial insights that help midwives navigate cultural sensitivities, break taboos, and create environments of trust and healing.

Through personal stories and case studies, we demonstrate how midwives, alongside parents and communities, can foster meaningful connections that promote emotional, spiritual, and cultural understanding. Initiatives such as peer support programs and culturally sensitive frameworks offer pathways for midwives to build bridges between clinical care and the relational aspects of family and community.

 

21. The Connected Curriculum: promoting midwifery educational excellence
May 5 @ 18:00 – 18:50
21. The Connected Curriculum: promoting midwifery educational excellence @ Zoom

Speakers: Helen Bedford, Mike Parker and Amy Coates

Facilitator: Elisa Segoni

Our presentation showcases the design and implementation of a dynamic, co-created curriculum which integrates and optimises excellence for midwifery education. The Connected Curriculum (Fung 2017) underpins two distinctive UK midwifery pre-registration programmes (a three year undergraduate [BMidHons] and an integrated 4 year Masters [MMid]), founded on global evidence (Renfrew et al 2014) and meeting rigorous national (Nursing &; Midwifery Council 2019) and global (International Confederation of Midwives 2021) midwifery education standards.

Fung’s (2017) Connected Curriculum is values based. Learning through research and inquiry forms the central core, linked to six dimensions which enable connectivity to midwifery as follows a through line of research activity, supporting students to:

  • connect with researchers/institutional research,
  • make connections across subjects/out to the world,
  • connect academic learning with workplace learning,
  • produce outputs (assessments) directed at an audience,
  • connect with each other, across phases/ with alumni.

This presentation has relevance and utility for a global audience of clinicians, educators and students within and beyond midwifery. It will also illustrate how an inclusive midwifery curriculum is operating within an institution characterised by:

  • Gold/Sustainability recognition of embedding Baby Friendly Standards (UK Unicef BFI 2024)
  • nationally rated Gold for teaching excellence (Office for Students 2024)
  • high quality research (Research Excellence Framework 2024)
  • strategic vision as a university for public good for local, national and international communities (University of York 2024)

The presentation/discussion will feature transferable implementation ideas for impact, showcasing a connected midwifery curriculum which enriches individual/collective student experience for midwifery excellence.

24. Présentation des sages-femmes dans la littérature francophone professionnelle
May 5 @ 21:00 – 21:50
24. Présentation des sages-femmes dans la littérature francophone professionnelle @ Zoom

Speaker: Yvonne Meyer

Facilitator: Celine Lemay

Sages-femmes dans certaines publications. C’est le cas pour l’inscription de notre activité professionnelle au patrimoine immatériel UNESCO où, dans l’annonce en français, le mot sage-femme est absent du titre. Comment sont présentées les sages-femmes ailleurs ? Neuf documents ont été repérés qui ont pour titre l’art, les soins, la pratique, les sciences ou la profession de sage-femme. Les résumés de ces documents seront présentés, ainsi que l’analyse réalisée, basée sur les critères de soins centrés sur le patient (Rycroft-Maloine, 2004). Les résultats montrent que toutes ces formulations sont polysémiques et qu’elles n’ont pas exactement la même portée. Par contre, toutes présentent haut et fort les sages-femmes et ce qui les caractérise. Si UNESCO avait titré «  Les soins de sage-femme : connaissances, savoir-faire et pratiques », les sages-femmes seraient visibles partout dans le monde francophone.

 

The theme of the intervention is motivated by a regrettable problem of visibility of midwives in certain publications. This is the case for the inclusion of our professional activity in UNESCO’s intangible heritage list, where, in the French announcement, the word sage-femme is absent from the title. How are midwives presented elsewhere? Nine documents have been identified that deal with the art, care, practice, science or profession of midwifery. Summaries of these documents will be presented, along with the analysis carried out, based on the criteria of patient-centred care (Rycroft-Maloine, 2004). The results show that all these formulations are polysemous and do not have exactly the same scope. However, they all make a strong case for midwives and what characterises them. If UNESCO had published the title « Les soins de sage-femme: connaissances, savoir-faire et pratiques » (‘Midwifery: knowledge, skills and practices’), midwives would be visible throughout the French-speaking world.

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