Antenatal preparation as care: birth stories and collective learning at work
Leah De Quattro

TL;DR
This paper explores how collective antenatal practices, like storytelling, help birthing people prepare for childbirth and challenge harmful norms.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel template analysis approach to examine how group-led antenatal sessions foster care and knowledge.
Findings
Group-led antenatal sessions use storytelling to create care-full spaces for birthing people.
Collective practices challenge dominant narratives and support emotional and material care.
Findings offer practical insights for midwives, educators, and policymakers to improve antenatal care.
Abstract
Distressing and harmful birth experiences are the norm even in well-resourced countries, and conventional antenatal education struggles to adequately prepare birthing people. Drawing on previous research in support of participant-led antenatal education, a recent UK-based ethnographic study asks how birthing people use collective practices to produce birth knowledge. Data comes from participant observation at 24 antenatal sessions (n = 201) including conventional classes and community-based groups, plus 5 interviews with session leaders. The researcher analysed data using a novel application of template analysis, framed by feminist technoscience, ethnography and socio-narratology. Findings show how group-led sessions, storytelling and other collective knowledge practices take care of birthing people. Several facets of care emerge from this inquiry, such as materiality, emotionality,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMaternal and Perinatal Health Interventions · Grief, Bereavement, and Mental Health · Qualitative Research Methods and Ethics
