Birthplace Choices
Research to help improve women’s access to the birth choices they want
Current clinical guidelines and national policy in England support offering ‘low risk’ women a choice of birth setting, but despite an increase in provision of midwifery units in England the vast majority of women still give birth in obstetric units
The aim of the Birthplace Choices project is to generate evidence that can inform decisions about the commissioning and delivery of maternity services that support choice.
The first phase of the project has three components:
- A systematic review and narrative synthesis of the quantitative literature on women’s birth place preferences in the UK.
- A systematic review and synthesis of the qualitative literature on women’s birth place decision-making and preferences and the factors that facilitate or hinder choice.
- Qualitative research involving focus groups with pregnant women to explore the attributes of maternity services that influence ‘low risk’ women’s preferences and decisions about birth place, and identify factors that facilitate or hinder access to their preferred birth setting.
Phase 2 of the project started in January 2017. This will involve a discrete-choice experiment to explore preferences and preference heterogeneity of place of birth. The aims of the study are:
- To extend our understanding of women's relative preferences for attributes associated with different birth settings.
- To determine whether there are subgroups of women with distinct patterns of preferences, estimate the relative size of these subgroups and to explore the extent to which these subgroups map onto available birth settings.
View the Birthplace Choices publications.