Otago study links midwifery experience to survival chances of babies
University of Otago researchers have found strong evidence that levels of midwifery experience in New Zealand are
associated with baby mortality. The study has been published today in the International Journal of Gynecology and
Obstetrics.
On the strength of these findings, the study’s lead author, Associate Professor Beverley Lawton, of the Women’s Health
Research Centre, University of Otago, Wellington, is asking the Government to urgently review New Zealand’s maternity
training system and consider implementing mandatory clinical supervision for newly-graduated midwives for up to two
years in hospital followed by a supervised year in the community for independent midwives.
She estimates that this year, there could be some 1500 pregnant women for whom their Lead Maternity Caregiver (LMC) is
an independent midwife with less than one years’ experience post-graduation.
The two-year study examined Ministry of Health data and set out to determine whether the level of experience of midwives
was related to mortality of babies at and around the time of birth (perinatal mortality).
Associate Professor Lawton and colleagues from Otago and Illinois University matched the years of experience of midwives
to the life/death outcomes of 233,215 babies born in New Zealand from January 2005 to December 2009; with 83,043 of
those births cared for by midwife-only-trained midwives, and 150,172 births receiving care from nurse-midwives.
Of those, a total of 10573 pregnancies over this five year period were looked after by midwifery-only trained LMCs who
were in their first year out of training.
Researchers looked at the number of baby mortalities (totaling 86 deaths) within this specific group with less than one
year’s experience and calculated there was a 30% higher likelihood that the perinatal outcome could be death of the
baby, compared to the rate of baby mortality for other nurse/midwifery trained midwives, and those midwives with 5-9
years’ experience.
“The chance of the baby dying equaled two extra deaths per 1000 births compared to the pregnancies cared for by the more
experienced midwife-only trained midwives with 5 to 9 years’ experience. With the raw figure for this group of less
experienced midwives being 86 baby deaths – that amounted to 21 more deaths over this five-year period than can be
expected of more experienced midwives (5-9 years) over the same period,” says Associate Professor Lawton.
“The extra two deaths of babies per 1000 born is high and, statistically and clinically, this figure is significant, as
is the positive trend for increasing safety as years of experience increase for midwives.”
Associate Professor Lawton says the study found a significant trend of decreased mortality in babies as years of
midwifery experience among midwives increased. For midwives who were nurses first, no association between experience and
perinatal mortality was found.
“It’s important to stress that this study points to a training issue for New Zealand midwives and the need for a system
change to reduce unsupervised practice for junior midwives. It is not about midwives as practitioners. Midwives are
expert clinicians giving quality care and are the backbone of the NZ maternity system,” she says.
“However this finding for first-year direct-entry midwives is concerning and we need to be prepared to critique the
training, and ensure we have a maternity system where mothers can have faith that the system they trust is the best it
can possibly be.”
In New Zealand, there is no requirement for supervision in the first years after graduation for midwife-only midwives,
although a mentorship programme was introduced from 2011. Due to well publicised deaths of babies, the mentorship
programme has been strengthened but the researchers believe that until this is changed to supervision this is unlikely
to make a substantial difference.
The researchers conclude: “Midwife-only trained midwives may need additional training and/or supervision in their first
year of practice. Therefore increased hospital experience and/or supervision before midwifery-only LMC practice may be
appropriate.”
On the other hand, the study also shows the additional training that nurse-midwives receive may contribute to improved
outcomes for mothers and babies.
The study notes that a strong recommendation from the 2008 Wellington Maternity Quality Review was that “to ensure
safety for women and their babies, and appropriate support for new graduate midwives, there needs to be mandatory
supervision (physical oversight) and mentoring for midwives in their first year of practice. This has been supported by
reviews of deaths undertaken by New Zealand coroners and the New Zealand Health and Disability Commissioner.”
In 2009, the Ministry of Health introduced the Maternity Quality Initiative which includes a National Quality and Safety
Programme for maternity services, including maternity standards, clinical indicators, referral guidelines and improved
maternity information systems.
The Otago study notes that these changes may contribute to increased safety, “although increased supervision and support
for junior staff, ” was left out of these 2009 changes.
Australia has introduced an “eligible midwife registration standard” that requires the midwife to complete the
equivalent of three years full-time post registration experience as a midwife and give evidence of current competence to
provide pregnancy, labour, birth and postnatal care.
The researchers also said that the Dutch model of maternity care, which is similar to New Zealand’s, has come under
recent pressure due to possible increased perinatal mortality for low risk births cared for by autonomous midwives,
compared to other European countries.
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