Dutch midwives’ views on father-involvement practices

Publication date

2025

Authors

Aarntzen, LianneORCID 0000-0003-3835-8123ISNI 0000000493208635
Seijmonsbergen-Schermers, Anna
Blom, RutgerISNI 0000000507745766
Henrichs, Jens
Derks, BelleISNI 0000000399441078

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Background Midwives are uniquely positioned to engage fathers already prenatally and facilitate an equal transition into parenthood for both parents. However, they may face barriers hindering their investment in involving fathers. Aim The aim was to investigate barriers and facilitators midwives experience when implementing two father-involvement practices 1) involving fathers in antenatal and postnatal care and (2) encouraging parental conversations about future work/care divisions. Methods Study 1 utilized a World Café with twelve midwives to identify barriers and facilitators, across motivation, opportunity, and ability. Study 2 used a Q-methodology with 31 midwives to assess these factors' relative importance and identify distinct viewpoints. Findings The World Café revealed that midwives are motivated to involve fathers, primarily because they anticipate positive outcomes for parents and infants. Key barriers included a lack of time, finances, and educational resources. The Q-study identified that midwives could be clustered in two profiles reflecting different perspectives on the ranking of barriers to involving fathers in prenatal care. The "Educationally Constrained Midwife” lacks knowledge, educational materials, and training, while the "Resource Constrained Midwife" is hindered by time and financial constraints. For encouraging parents to discuss the future task division, only one profile was identified showing that midwives were motivated to incorporate this extra task if they receive additional time, finances, training, and educational materials to share with parents. Conclusion Addressing educational and resource barriers is crucial for enhancing father-involvement by midwives. Interventions tailored to these profiles can support midwives in adopting practices promoting father-involvement, potentially improving family outcomes and advancing gender equity in caregiving responsibilities.

Keywords

Father-involvement, Fathering, Involved fatherhood, Midwifery, Q-methodology, World café

Citation

Aarntzen, L, Seijmonsbergen-Schermers, A, Blom, R, Henrichs, J & Derks, B 2025, 'Dutch midwives’ views on father-involvement practices', Midwifery, vol. 145, 104371. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.midw.2025.104371