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WORKING AS A COORDINATOR MIDWIFE IN A TERTIARY ...

WORKING AS A COORDINATOR MIDWIFE IN A TERTIARY ...

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Abstract<br />

This phenomenological study has been conducted to reveal midwives’<br />

experiences working as coordinator/charge midwives in tertiary hospital<br />

delivery suite settings. The methodology is informed by Heidegger’s<br />

interpretive phenomenological, hermeneutic philosophy (1927/1962). Data<br />

analysis is based on van Manen’s (1990) research methodology.<br />

Five coordinator/charge midwives who work at three tertiary hospitals were<br />

interviewed. These interviews were tape recorded, transcribed and analyzed<br />

to uncover commonality of themes which revealed what it felt like ‘being’ a<br />

coordinator/charge midwife. The three themes which emerged and are<br />

discussed in the data analysis chapters are: “The performing art of<br />

leadership”, “Time as lived” and “In the face of the ‘known’ and the<br />

‘unknown’”.<br />

The findings of this study reveal coordinators are the ‘hub’ or the ‘pivot’ at<br />

their workplace with their art and soul of midwifery at the very core of their<br />

‘being’. They ‘know’ the unpredictability of childbirth and are regularly<br />

challenged by ‘lived time’ as they ‘leap in’ to situations and ‘leap ahead’.<br />

Their ability to facilitate teamwork and their resilience in the face, at times, of<br />

seemingly insurmountable obstacles shines through.<br />

viii

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