Getting Your Own doctor is “A Stab in the Dark”: Exploring the Presence Of On-Call Doctors at Hospital Births and Potential Implications for Nursing Practice
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Published:2006
Heather Dillaway, Sonica Rehan, 2006. "Getting Your Own doctor is “A Stab in the Dark”: Exploring the Presence Of On-Call Doctors at Hospital Births and Potential Implications for Nursing Practice", Access, Quality and Satisfaction with Care, Jennie Jacobs Kronenfeld
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Frequently women are attended by someone other than their chosen doctor during labor and delivery, that is, an “on-call” doctor. This chapter draws from interviews with 19 women who gave birth in a Mid-Atlantic state during late 1995 and early 1996. Of these women, 13 received care from an on-call doctor. Using existing social–psychological perspectives, the authors analyze situations in which an on-call doctor was present, and how this provider influenced women's birth experiences as well as satisfaction with those experiences. In general, women do not expect or desire on-call doctors’ presence. As a result, they may rely on obstetric nurses, rather than these unfamiliar doctors, when they need information or support.
