# Experiences of group antenatal care in the context of the NHS in England: what are the mechanisms by which it functions in this context?

**Authors:** Christine McCourt, Anita Mehay, Octavia Wiseman, Jalana Lazar, Ruth Ajayi, Thomas Hamborg, Vivian Holmes, Rachael Maree Hunter, Ekaterina Mishareva, Pearl Safo Sobre, Meg Wiggins, Angela Harden, Cathy Salisbury, Bethan Hatherall

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fgwh.2025.1625785 · Frontiers in Global Women's Health · 2025-10-24

## TL;DR

Group antenatal care, called Pregnancy Circles, improves care experiences and outcomes by fostering social support, education, and empowerment in the UK's NHS.

## Contribution

This study explores how group antenatal care functions in the UK's NHS context, identifying mechanisms like social support and midwife empowerment.

## Key findings

- Group antenatal care enhances social support and community building among participants.
- Midwives report increased professional satisfaction and development through facilitating group care.
- Empowerment of both participants and midwives is a key mechanism of the care model.

## Abstract

Group antenatal care is a model where care is provided in groups of around 6–12 women/birthing people, integrating healthcare with information and learning in a participatory approach. There is international evidence of improved care experiences and outcomes; however, the approach (here called Pregnancy Circles) had not been trialled in the United Kingdom in the context of a universal health system with midwife-led care. We aimed to understand the experience of care and any mechanisms by which group care functions for the different people involved.

This study comprised a qualitative process evaluation nested within a randomised controlled trial. The mixed qualitative methods used in this study included observations of care, interviews with participants, survey open-text responses and written feedback, and a review of relevant documents. Inductive thematic analysis was conducted using a framework of theorised mechanisms based on a realist review. The trial’s clinical and psychosocial outcomes and lessons for implementation are reported elsewhere.

We found a high level of concordance with the framework of mechanisms derived from the literature. The key mechanisms were social support and community building, a critical pedagogy (combining peer learning, an interactive and participatory approach, and health education), satisfaction and engagement with care, and the health professionals’ satisfaction and development. Building on these, the empowerment of participants and midwives formed an overarching mechanism. Relational continuity and time for care were the key underpinning components.

Pregnancy Circles address key deficits in contemporary maternity care, including the lack of time and relational or informational continuity of care, the lack of informed choice, and loss of opportunities to enhance empowerment through health knowledge, social support, and confidence in caring for one's own health, in decision-making, and in seeking support. Importantly, midwives felt that facilitating group care enhanced their professional satisfaction and development and collaboration across boundaries, features associated with service safety and resilience. Fidelity in terms of the midwives' skills and confidence in using a facilitative approach was important and was underpinned by continuity. Midwives' and women's empowerment were found to be mutually supportive rather than in tension. Scaling up Pregnancy Circles as a standard care option in the National Health Service may support positive care experiences; however, further research is needed to monitor the longer-term impact and service and public health implications.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

38 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12592168/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12592168