Author
Carmel Bagness
Bio: Carmel Bagness is an academic researcher. The author has contributed to research in topics: Workforce & Nursing standard. The author has an hindex of 1, co-authored 1 publications receiving 2 citations.
Topics: Workforce, Nursing standard
Papers
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Journal Article•
TL;DR: The challenge is focused not only on skills and knowledge to enhance practice, but also to enthuse midwives to be actively committed and resourceful, as well as being politically sensitive to current and future service provision challenges.
Abstract: The Midwifery 2020: Delivering expectations vision is that midwives will be members of a highly skilled workforce, acting as lead professionals and coordinators of care as they deliver innovative, cost-effective, quality care across integrated health and social care contexts. They will embrace an evolving public health role and initiate and respond to change. There is, based on the key messages, an opportunity for midwifery educationalists to enhance their collaboration with service colleagues and researchers across the four U.K. countries to further develop appropriate curricula. The relationship between service and education colleagues needs, perhaps more than ever, to continue to be collaborative. The challenge is focused not only on skills and knowledge to enhance practice, but also to enthuse midwives to be actively committed and resourceful, as well as being politically sensitive to current and future service provision challenges.
2 citations
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TL;DR: This paper attempts a discourse on issues affecting midwifery as a profession using the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM) global standards.
Abstract: Advances in health care system are a challenge to the professional midwife in the quality of midwifery workforce. The three pillars of quality midwifery workforce need to meet the changing health needs of both the rural and modern highly industrialized society. Insisting on the traditional ways of doing things in midwifery seems inadequate in meeting these challenges. New and creative approaches are needed if midwifery as a prominent profession in health care delivery will professionally remain competitive and contribute effectively and maximally to the demands of nation’s health care services. Midwife leaders will be taking a step in the right direction in fostering the climate that promotes creativity in midwifery. Midwifery in Nigeria had witnessed many changes, given the challenges of a low/poor resource setting. This paper attempts a discourse on issues affecting midwifery as a profession using the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM) global standards.
Key words: Quality issues, midwifery, International Confederation of Midwives (ICM) global standards.
15 citations
4 citations