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Assessment of Prenatal Care Providers' Competencies From the Perspective of Pregnant Women: An Iranian Study.

Fatemeh NahidiMahboubeh HajifoghahaMasoumeh SimbarMalihe Nasiri
Published in: Journal of patient experience (2022)
Background: Pregnant women have expectations from their providers; sometimes their expectations are somewhat different from the current situation. Objective: to assess of competencies of prenatal care providers according to the views of pregnant women in Iran. Method: This is a descriptive-analytical study. Sampling were 300 pregnant women. A researcher-made questionnaire with appropriate validity and reliability was used. These competencies were divided into 4 dimensions of professional skills, communication skills, individual characteristics of prenatal care providers, and the characteristics of pregnancy and childbirth centers. Results: The percentage of the expected status of professional skills' score of prenatal care providers (97.17) did not significantly differ from the current status (96.07). Nevertheless, there was a significant difference between the percentages of scores of expected (95.61) and the current statuses (90.89) of communication skills. The percentage of expected status (94.74) and the current status (84.17) scores of individual characteristics of prenatal care providers. The percentages of the expected status scores (95.24) and the status quo (89.61) of characteristics of pregnancy and childbirth centers were a significant difference. Conclusion: It is needed to upgrade some competencies of prenatal care providers. So, providers should focus their efforts on strengthening the expected skills of their pregnant women.
Keyphrases
  • pregnant women
  • healthcare
  • pregnancy outcomes
  • palliative care
  • quality improvement
  • current status
  • pain management
  • affordable care act
  • mass spectrometry