ASPIRE COVID-19 Work Package 2: Babies Born Better Survey, United Kingdom and the Netherlands, 2020

DOI

This is a collection of data undertaken by the members of Work Package 2 (WP2), of the ASPIRE COVID-19 project, funded by the Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), as part of UK Research and Innovation’s rapid response to COVID-19 [grant number ES/V004581/1]. The collection contains two datasets: 1) Anonymised Babies Born Better survey responses (quantitative only) recorded between 18th June 2020 and December 31st 2020 for women who gave birth to their most recent baby between 2017 and December 2020 in the UK and the Netherlands(available under standard Safeguarded access); 2) Anonymised Babies Born Better survey responses (qualitative only) recorded between 18th June 2020 and December 31st 2020 for women who gave birth to their most recent baby between 2017 and December 2020 in the UK and the Netherlands (available under Permission Only Saefguarded access).UK policy is for safe, personalised maternity care. However, during COVID-19 tests and visits have been reduced in some places, and some women with worrying symptoms are not going to hospital. Other places are trying new solutions, including remote access technologies. Some Trusts have reduced community maternity services, including home and birthcentre births; barred birth companions in early labour; and separated mothers, babies, and partners during labour, and in neonatal units. There are reports of women giving birth at home without professional help, possibly due to fear of infection, or of family separation. In contrast, the Netherlands has a policy of increased community maternity services during COVID-19. We want to find out how best to provide care for mothers, babies, and partners during and after a pandemic. We will look at what documents and national leads say about service organisation in the UK and the Netherlands, and at women's and parents experiences. We will also look in detail at what happened in 8 UK Trusts during the pandemic. We will find out how their services have been organised during COVID-19, what parents and staff think, and what the outcomes are, including infections. We will then share the findings with key stakeholders to agree a final organisational model that can be used to ensure safe, personalised routine and crisis maternity care, now, and in future. This will include useful resources and links relating to innovative best practices that we find out about during the study.

Anonymised responses were recorded between 18th June 2020 and December 31st 2020 for women who gave birth to their most recent baby between 2017 and December 2020 in the UK and the Netherlands. The survey was accessible on the BBB survey website (https://www.babiesbornbetter.org/surveyportal) and was disseminated by researchers, maternity care organisations, service-user organisations, hospitals and midwifery practices through social media from June till September 2020. Responses from women who gave birth in the UK and the NL were collected, but the survey was translated and available in 24 languages, so women could complete the survey in their preferred language. Survey captures demographics such as age, parity, self-determined standard of life and clinical factors such as type of birth and problems during pregnancy. Women are asked to rate their overall birth experience.

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.5255/UKDA-SN-855862
Metadata Access https://datacatalogue.cessda.eu/oai-pmh/v0/oai?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=oai_ddi25&identifier=a533a52b6177f77174b71f7525e4c345d1c9bcd2a7b93d29f69fc603817a87b1
Provenance
Creator Thomson, G, University of Central Lancashire; Balaam, M, University of Central Lancashire; van den Berg, L, Amsterdam University Medical Centre; Akooji, N, University of Central Lancashire; de Jonge, A, Amsterdam University Medical Centre; Topalidou, A, University of Central Lancashire; Downe, S, University of Central Lancashire
Publisher UK Data Service
Publication Year 2022
Funding Reference ESRC
Rights G Thomson, University of Central Lancashire. S Downe, University of Central Lancashire; The Data Collection is available for download to users registered with the UK Data Service.
OpenAccess true
Representation
Language English
Resource Type Numeric; Text
Discipline Social Sciences
Spatial Coverage UK and Netherlands; United Kingdom; Netherlands