Findings from a UK feasibility study of the Centering Pregnancy® model

A. Gaudion, Y. Menka, J. Demilew, C. Walton, K. Yiannouzis, J. Robbins, S.S. Rising, Debra Bick

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

18 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

CenteringPregnancy® is a model of group antenatal care which was devised and developed in the United States. A feasibility study was conducted in South East London from 2008 to 2010, to assess if the model could be introduced into NHS settings, if women would be prepared to join a group model of care and to explore the views of the women, their partners and midwives who participated. This was the first time the model had been implemented in the UK. Six antenatal groups, attended by 60 women and their partners and facilitated by 12 midwives, were established for the feasibility study with a seventh group of 8 women and their partners established later to bring the learning together and inform an operational guidance document (Gaudion and Menka, 2011). Women whose pregnancies were classed as low or high risk could opt for group antenatal care at the study site after discussion with a midwife at their antenatal booking visit. Integral components of the CenteringPregnancy model are the evaluations of care which women and their partners are asked to provide in late pregnancy and at one month after the birth of their baby. The midwives who facilitate the groups are also required to complete evaluation forms and to contemporaneously reflect and enhance the care they offer, if this is appropriate. Feedback from these sources, together with an evaluation of the means of learning in the development process, was very positive and has informed the ongoing roll-out of the model at the study site. The potential to conduct randomized controlled trials in the UK to assess the clinical utility and cost-effectiveness of group antenatal care compared with individual antenatal care for women in low- and high-risk obstetric populations should now be considered.
Original languageEnglish
Article numberN/A
Pages (from-to)796-802
Number of pages7
JournalBritish Journal of Midwifery
Volume19
Issue number12
Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2011

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