Understanding the relationship between maternity care providers and middle-class Chinese migrant women in the Netherlands: A qualitative study

Haiyue Shan, Sawitri Saharso, Nandy van Kroonenburg, Jens Henrichs

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Objective
This study aims to provide insights into the formation and the quality of the maternity care provider-woman relationship between midwives, maternity care assistants and middle-class Chinese migrant women in the Netherlands.

Design
online in-depth interviews addressing interpersonal trust, women's autonomy in shared decision making and culturally sensitive care

Participants
46 middle-class Chinese migrant women, 13 midwives and 12 maternity care assistants in the Netherlands

Findings
Midwives and maternity care assistants reported challenges interpreting the needs of middle-class Chinese migrant women in care practices while Chinese migrant women experienced receiving insufficient emotional support. Midwives and maternity care assistant tended to attribute women's different preferences for care to culture which reinforced difficulties of addressing women's needs. Middle-class Chinese migrant women experienced a lack of responsive care, feelings of being overlooked, being uncomfortable to express different opinions and challenges in developing autonomy in the shared decision-making process.

Conclusions
A trusting relationship, effective communication with maternity care providers, and a culturally sensitive and safe environment could be beneficial for middle-class migrant mothers. Chinese migrant women held ambivalent attitudes towards both traditional Chinese health beliefs and Dutch maternity care values. Each individual woman adopted the practice of the “doing the month” tradition to a different extent. This indicated the need for maternity care providers to recognize women's various needs for more responsive and individualized care, especially for first-time migrant mothers to negotiate their ways through the new healthcare system.

Implications for practice
We suggest a more proactive role for maternity care providers addressing the individual's subjectivity and preferences. Our findings are relevant and applicable for maternity care professionals conducting shared decision making with middle-class and highly educated migrant women living in Western contexts.
Original languageEnglish
Article number103775
JournalMidwifery
Volume125
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2023

Funding

This study was supported by the China Scholarship Council.

FundersFunder number
China Scholarship Council

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