Effectiveness of interventions on occupational stress, health and well-being, performance, and job satisfaction for midwives: A systematic mixed methods review

Zoe Anchors, Rachel Arnold, Sara Burnard, Catherine Bressington, Annette Moreton, Lee Moore

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

1 Citation (SciVal)

Abstract

Background: Work-related stress is high in midwifery with negative implications for midwives’ health and performance. This systematic review therefore examined which stress management interventions (SMIs) are most effective at reducing occupational stress and improving midwives’ health and well-being, performance, and job satisfaction.

Methods: A systematic review included studies if they were: investigating midwives or student midwives; examining an individual- or organisation-level intervention; reporting the intervention effects on at least one outcome (e.g., job performance); peer-reviewed; and published in English. Methodological quality was assessed using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool. A narrative synthesis was conducted and data were presented by SMI level (i.e., individual vs. organisation) and modality type (e.g., mindfulness, care model). Sum codes were used to compare the effects of individual- and organisation-level SMIs on outcomes.

Findings: From 2605 studies identified, 30 were eligible (18 individual- and 12 organisationlevel SMIs). Eight studies were deemed low quality. While individual- and organisation-level SMIs were equally effective in improving job satisfaction and performance, there was a trend for organisation-level SMIs more effectively reducing work stress and improving health and well-being. Specific individual- (i.e., mindfulness, simulation training) and organisation-level (i.e., reflective groups, midwifery care models) SMIs were most beneficial.

Conclusion: It is recommended that health practitioners and policy makers implement interventions that target both individual- and organisation-levels to optimally support midwives’ work stress, health, well-being, and performance. Notwithstanding these findings and implications, some studies had poor methodological quality; thus, future research should better follow intervention reporting guidelines.
Original languageEnglish
Article number101589
JournalWomen & Birth
Volume37
Issue number5
Early online date4 Apr 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Sept 2024

Funding

This project was funded by NIHR Research Capability Funding (RCF) from the Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust, awarded to Dr Rachel Arnold and Dr Lee Moore.

FundersFunder number
National Institute for Health and Care Research
Royal United Hospitals Bath NHS Foundation Trust
Dr Lee Moore

    Keywords

    • Midwifery
    • Occupational stress
    • Stress management intervention

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • Obstetrics and Gynaecology
    • Maternity and Midwifery

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