1. The International Confederation of Midwives' study of essential competencies of midwifery practice.
- Author
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Fullerton J, Severino R, Brogan K, and Thompson J
- Subjects
- Adult, Africa, Aged, Americas, Asia, Europe, Female, Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice, Humans, International Cooperation, Male, Middle Aged, Nursing Education Research, Pilot Projects, Research Design, Societies, Nursing, Clinical Competence, Midwifery methods, Midwifery standards, Nurse's Role
- Abstract
Objective: To delineate the knowledge, skills, and behaviours that would characterise the domain of competencies of the midwife who is educated according to the international definition of the profession., Design: Phase I: a qualitative Delphi study; Phase II: a descriptive survey research process., Participants: A stratified random sample of member organisations of the International Confederation of Midwives (ICM) and regulatory representatives from these same countries., Findings: A list of basic (essential) and additional competencies for midwives who have been educated in keeping with the ICM/WHO/FIGO international definition of the midwife was developed through an interative Delphi process, and then affirmed, using a survey research method. The final list includes 214 individual task statements within six domains of midwifery practice., Implications for Practice: This list of competencies can serve as a basis for educational curriculum design, as a guideline for regulatory policy development, as a reference document for individual practitioners in an assessment of their initial and continued competency and by the ICM and its member associations as a resource for advocating for the role of midwifery within health-care systems world-wide.
- Published
- 2003
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