When policy makes safety worse

Three strikes and you are out! How a guideline meant to make maternity care safer undermined good communication.

Three strikes and you are out! How a guideline meant to make maternity care safer undermined good communication.

A recent study examined intermittent auscultation during labor in various UK birth settings. It found that local policies exist in most units, but training and competency assessments were inconsistently implemented. The reliance on certain fetal monitoring devices and practices raises concerns, as does the use of outdated training programs and practices.

Words have power. I know this – the approach I used for my doctoral research requires you to look closely at how language shapes the social world. If you have hung around the birth world for a bit, you have probably made some conscious choices about whether you use the words “patient” and “delivery”. I spend most of my working week choosing which words work best to get the job […]

From time to time, I get feedback from people who are surprised / disappointed / angry / annoyed that I’m not a member of a guideline writing group taking on fetal monitoring guidelines. It is true – I’m not. It seems like a reasonable thing to expect me to do, right? I’m across the evidence and I often write about what is wrong with existing guidelines. Why would I not […]