The women interviewed described several aspects to the birth experience, including
their experiences of both midwifery and medical interactions. However, the scope of
this article will outline the results specific to the paramedic interaction. Overall
twenty-two women were interviewed, participants’ ages ranged from 20-42 years and
they were geographically located throughout the state of Queensland, Australia. All
women had received the minimum Queensland standard of recommended antenatal care;
four women were primipara (first time mothers) and eighteen were multigravida (having
their second or third baby). As interviews progressed ongoing analysis of the data
occurred to recognise emerging themes and identify when saturation had been reached.
Recruitment was discontinued at twenty-two interviews as no further themes were identified.
The women’s narratives described both positive and negative interactions with paramedics;
in these episodes of care issues arose concerning clinical skills and interpersonal
communication (Table 1).
Insert table 1: Themes and sub themes arising from women’s narratives
It became evident that a woman’s positive birth experience related to the paramedic’s
interpersonal skills and empathy, in addition to their clinical competence. Women
who described the paramedic to be disrespectful, lacking empathy or possessing poor
interpersonal skills, communicated a negative birth experience. Conversely, women
who described positive birth experiences described the paramedic as skilled, responsive
and respectful of their care needs.
Communication
Women in this research provided examples of positive experience concerning paramedics’
communication during their unplanned out-of-hospital birth:
Respondent 20 stated:
‘So, what made him amazing? His voice, he just kept on talking to me, kept on talking
me through everything and when I got in the ambulance I was alone with them but not
with anyone that I knew and it was just his voice was very calm and he just kept on
talking and reassuring me.’
In contrast, ineffective communication which included paramedics not listening to
the woman’s wishes, particularly when she said she was pushing, were also shared.
For the women, ‘not listening’ was understood as not being believed or respected.
Respondent 11 stated:
‘I had to sort of raise my voice, be angry before they would listen to me.’
Respondent 9 stated:
‘I tried to get across that I wasn’t going to make it and when she was coming… I just
don’t think that he believed what I was saying.’
Some women felt the paramedic kept themselves at a distance and would not emotionally
engage with them; that the paramedics’ approach was too clinical and technical or;
that paramedics were just following steps in a policy or protocol instead of providing
professional yet empathetic care.
Respondent 11 stated:
‘Just no communication… I felt he was there to do his job.’
Instead of paramedics using attentive, interpersonal communication skills, some women
felt they were patronised and scolded whilst others felt a sense of guilt as they
felt the paramedic blamed them for getting themselves into such a position.
Respondent 12 stated:
‘He starts shouting orders and then he sits back there for quite some time holding
my legs open, wouldn’t let me move, just holding them open… I was just like shocked
at his behaviour.’
Respondent 8 stated:
‘When they arrived at my home, “Was this intentional, that you know, you had this
baby at home or had you planned to go to the hospital?” … like they seemed almost
annoyed that it looked like it was intentional.’
Some women in this study stated that they had an expectation for open communication
and involvement in decision-making. However, these findings revealed that some women
felt a lack of participation in the patient-paramedic relationship, a lack of mutual
respect and the failure of some paramedic’s listening to the woman's views. In other
words a failure to provide patient-centred care.
Consent
During pregnancy, women are provided with information from their healthcare professionals
regarding birth options, risk and benefits of pain relief and care of the newborn.
This information is necessary for women to make informed decisions during pregnancy
about their birth and postpartum care.
In this research, some women identified specific areas of concern in relation to the
provision of informed consent. The word ‘consent’ was not specifically used; however,
their descriptions denoted a lack of consent. Some women were aware that permission
should have been sought from them prior to procedures being conducted or prior to
physical assessments; this also extended to procedures being carried out on the baby
without parental consent. In addition, some women reported a lack of information provided
by paramedics for them to make informed decisions about their care. Some women reported
that at times they implied consent when they believed adhering to paramedic procedures
for managing birth was a requirement, as no choice or discussion of options were presented.
Some women were distressed – even angry – when care options progressed without actual
discussion or input as to what they preferred or had considered as part of their birth
plan were not regarded or valued.
Respondent 5 stated:
‘I got in the ambulance, contraction started and she started strapping up my arm to
put in an IV and I didn’t know what she was doing. And I looked at her and I’m like,
“What are you doing?” She goes, “I’ve got to put this in?” I said, “Well, can you
at least wait until my… contraction has stopped?”’
A lack of consent - while assessing the woman for signs of imminent birth - was a
theme that emerged from the women’s narratives. While paramedics are not authorised
to perform any type of vaginal examination to assess progress, a visual assessment
for signs of imminent birth is sometimes required. This can be undertaken with maternal
consent; particularly if the woman is pushing and a decision to transport or stay
on-scene and birth the baby safely is required.
Two respondents described a lack of privacy and feeling violated because of a lack
of consent before this assessment took place.
Respondent 11 stated:
‘It was sort of really uncomfortable and [the paramedic] was feeling down there… And
I mean at the heat of the moment I didn’t really think anything of it because I was
like in labour, but after giving birth and sort of thinking about what happened I
sort of felt like I’d been to the vet, if that makes any sense… I felt yuck… I still
feel violated because I think that he violated like my trust in an ambulance officer…
I didn’t know how to react. I didn’t know what to do about it but I just felt like
someone was perving on me. That’s how I honestly felt for months.’
Feeling violated was a term used by some women, this was in relation to the actions
taken without consent and how the paramedic made them feel during the interaction.
A trust relationship between women and healthcare professionals is reliant on the
ability of healthcare professionals to communicate effectively. A trusting relationship
between the woman and the paramedic involved the woman being seen and heard so that
they could receive support and care on their own terms.
Respondent 11 stated:
‘I felt like that my trust was abused because obviously, I thought the paramedic was
doing what he was supposed to be doing but nobody knows what they’re supposed to be
doing really… So, in your head it’s like... your brain is just confused as hell because
it’s like this is an ambulance officer, I should be trusting this person.’
Some women also expressed some concerns over a lack of consent in relation to procedures
performed on the baby.
Respondent 5 stated:
‘They took the baby’s blood sugar levels and didn’t tell me.’
Some women seemed well-informed about practices such as delayed cord-clamping: this
particular procedure is recommended in the relevant clinical practice guideline for
paramedics in this setting [21]. However, several women reported that this was not
adhered to regardless of the woman’s expressed wishes.
Respondent 1 stated:
‘They never asked me…it was kind of clamp; do you want to cut it? … I don’t recall
being asked.’
Although in the minority, there were positive stories where women’s wishes were respected.
Respondent 17 stated:
‘They were absolutely fantastic. We wanted delayed cord-clamping… when they said they
were going to cut bub’s cord… I asked them not to and they were really accommodating.’
Consent is a critical component of paramedic practice as it is within all fields of
healthcare. However, the commentary provided by women in this research reveal that
consent is infrequently sought when dealing with a maternity case.
Respect and empathy
For paramedics, responding to sick and emotionally distressed patients creates a working
environment characterised by high emotional load that may be conflicted by organisational
priorities. For example, the need to minimise response and scene times. In maternity
cases, woman-centred care is the practice of caring for women and their families in
ways that are meaningful and valuable to the individual. This includes listening to,
informing and involving women in their care.
This study identified that there is a recurring theme of a need for respect, recognition
and acceptance of the importance of involvement in decision-making. The most widely
cited element of respect, mentioned in some form by most women, was simply paying
attention to their individual needs and valuing their opinion.
Respondent 2 stated:
‘They were really kind and they listened to everything we wanted.’
For the women, allowing for autonomy showed professional respect. These women explicitly
indicated that respect involved recognising them as autonomous by allowing them to
make or participate in their own decisions.
Respondent 5 stated:
‘The biggest thing is mum knows what’s happening… Just listen to what the mother wants.’
‘I think my biggest thing is not – and this is clearly any medical professional –
not feel like you’re being told what to do even if they think it’s in your best interest.’
Women’s narratives also provided some examples of negative experience when women felt
their embodied or intuitive knowledge was disregarded.
Respondent 12 stated:
‘I said she’s coming and he said, “No she’s not”…and that’s what he just kept saying
to me every time I had a contraction; just breathe. And then that uncontrollable feeling
of you know pushing... I could feel her crowning.’
Some women in this research had both negative and positive experiences that involved
having their needs heard and respected. When the experience was positive, some women
felt confident that all considerations were made to prioritise them and their babies.
Respondent 9 stated:
‘The guy that came in … who actually delivered her … I don’t know how to explain it
but he’s just my hero, he was absolutely amazing. He came in and told me what was
going to happen, what he was going to do, what stage I was at and so it wasn’t going
to be long… it could have been incredibly scary… because it happened too quickly but
also they gave us absolutely no need to [worry].’
The experience of unplanned out-of-hospital birth was unexpected for all women interviewed
in this study. The intention for all women was that they would birth in a hospital
or birthing centre setting. This unexpected change of experience created anxiety for
some, and some women stated they required reassurance and confidence in the care being
provided. In a short space of time a relationship between the paramedic and woman
was established, the women felt they needed this, they wanted the paramedic to do
more than look after their physical needs, they wanted empathy.
Respondent 11 stated:
‘I think a paramedic sort of just does, you know just does the steps, necessities
to keep you alive and the baby alive. Like the other things are not important… if
you were to sit there and … ask an ambulance officer like what is your main goal if
you arrive at a lady in labour’s house, it would be to get her to hospital in one
piece… it wouldn’t be to support her during her labour... emotion would not be involved
in it.’
The need for paramedics’ to be aware of and respect women’s birth choices while executing
clinical skills in a way that didn’t violate mothers’ rights was an expressed need
of many women. This premise is associated with the woman’s need to have control over
her birth and the care which is provided.
Respondent 20 stated:
‘So just being able to preserve those things that were special to me in my birth made
me really happy and I wouldn’t have expected that they would have known things like
that but they were already doing it for me which was amazing.’
Confidence and trust in paramedic care
Women expressed mixed feelings about being confident in paramedics’ ability to manage
their birth or birth complications, if they occurred. Some women expressed complete
confidence in paramedics because the paramedic appeared confident in their own abilities
and demeanour.
Respondent 14 stated:
‘(Paramedics) made me feel comfortable and I wasn’t scared at all ever while I was
birthing, I always felt very safe.’
Yet others lacked confidence in the care provided by paramedics. Some women stated
the paramedics not only appeared to be unsure of how to manage a birth, they explicitly
told the women they were inexperienced and made attempts to transport them to hospital
as soon as possible. This resulted in a negative interaction with paramedics and anxiety
for the family.
Respondent 3 stated:
‘One of the ambulance workers on an iPad or something…I don’t know, it looked like
an App that might tell them or guide them... one had delivered two babies before and
one had never delivered a baby before… I was thinking, you know, do they know what
they’re doing.’
Perceptions of education and training for paramedics relating to unplanned out-of-hospital
birth was also a concern for some women. Some women not only expressed doubt in paramedics’
abilities, they also expressed concern for a perceived lack of training.
Respondent 2 stated:
‘They had never delivered a baby before and they told us that and they knew what they
were supposed to do by the textbook, the basics of it.’