Midwifery professionalisation and practice: Influences of the changed registration standards in Australia

Women and Birth : Journal of the Australian College of Midwives
Michelle GrayMargaret Barnes

Abstract

In June 2010 the Australian Health Practitioner Agency unified the national registration of health professionals in Australia and introduced a separate register for midwives. Standard registration renewal requirements aimed to provide safe, competent practitioners. These new conditions created the impetus for practitioners to consider how they meet the re-registration standards for either their nurse or midwifery register/s. How are midwives responding to the changed re-registration conditions for registration renewal? Longitudinal case study design. A purposive sample of 24 midwives from five states was recruited. 20 took part in individual interviews over two re-registration periods. 4 midwives were interviewed in a focus group to verify the findings. Three themes captured issues and tensions about registration and midwifery practice. They are Rotation, Restriction and Extension. This paper has shown how the re-registration conditions and standards post 2010 have generated discourse around registration renewal. The simultaneous introduction of regulatory and legislative changes has resulted in the construction of categories within contemporary midwifery practice that do not necessarily align with the Nursing and Midwifery Boa...Continue Reading

References

Sep 11, 2002·Australian Journal of Midwifery : Professional Journal of the Australian College of Midwives Incorporated·Karen Lane
Nov 28, 2006·Midwifery·Caroline S E HomerPat M Brodie
Sep 4, 2008·Statistical Methods in Medical Research·Joseph A 'Chris' Delaney, Samy Suissa
Aug 28, 2009·Australian Dental Journal·UNKNOWN Australian Research Centre for Population Oral Health, The University of Adelaide, South Australia
Aug 29, 2012·Midwifery·Ivy Lynn BourgeaultJacquelyne Luce

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