Women and Birth
Volume 21, Issue 3 , Pages 119-125, September 2008

Developing a review process for Australian midwives: A report of the Midwifery Practice Review project process

  • Marnie Griffiths

      Affiliations

    • Australian College of Midwives-Midwifery Practice Review Project, Australia
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author at: PO Box 3269, Victoria Point West, Brisbane, Qld 4165, Australia. Tel.: +0412 117 415.
  • ,
  • Caroline Homer

      Affiliations

    • Australian College of Midwives-Midwifery Practice Review Project, Australia
    • Centre for Midwifery, Child and Family Health, Faculty of Nursing, Midwifery and Health, UTS, Australia

Received 23 December 2007; received in revised form 14 April 2008; accepted 23 May 2008.

Summary 

Objective

To develop a formal, robust and transparent process that supports and enables midwives to reflect on their own midwifery practice in relation to recognised professional standards and to identify, prioritise and act upon individual professional development and learning needs for the provision of safe, high quality care to women and their families within the full scope of midwifery practice. This process was part of a national project commissioned by the Australian College of Midwives and funded by the Australian Council for Safety and Quality in Health Care and is part of the Continuing Professional Development, MidPLUS program developed by the Australian College of Midwives.

Approach

A multi-method, staged approach was used to develop the national Midwifery Practice Review process. Data to inform the development of the Midwifery Practice Review process was collected through a literature review, workshop consultations, written submissions and the pilot testing of a draft process. Finally, a national training workshop was undertaken to train reviewers to carry out reviews and to ensure the final process was validated and was feasible and acceptable to midwives and consumers.

Setting

Maternity care settings in each state and territory throughout Australia.

Participants

Midwives, other health professionals and consumers of midwifery care.

Findings

The Midwifery Practice Review process was developed through research and national consultation prior to being validated in practice.

Key conclusions

The Midwifery Practice Review process is currently being implemented and evaluated in Australia.

Implications for practice

The Midwifery Practice Review Project established a national validated process for assessing the ongoing competence of midwives. The resulting program helps to reinforce responsibility and accountability in the provision of quality midwifery care through safe and effective practice.

Keywords: Midwifery peer review, Midwifery Practice Review, Professional practice review, Credentialling, Clinical competence

 

PII: S1871-5192(08)00049-8

doi:10.1016/j.wombi.2008.05.001

Women and Birth
Volume 21, Issue 3 , Pages 119-125, September 2008