A Year in Review - 2023

Hornsby student midwives with expectant mum Nika

Student midwives give Hornsby families extra choices A unique program led by student midwives giving expectant women more choice in their care options at Hornsby Ku-ring-gai Hospital. The Students with Women

spare time, even though it is not a requirement. “We learn from the mums and the mums learn from us,” said Emma. “I really appreciate the relationship with the rest of the SWIM team: we collaborate as a team and we build rapport with the mothers.” Mum Nika is pregnant with her second child and is full of praise for the program. “In this program, I see the same midwife, familiar faces and this makes me feel more comfortable, more confident and more involved,” she said. The program has been running at Hornsby since 2007.

midwife through their pregnancy, birth and post-birth. Student midwife Gaby Sposari said the program allowed her to create a special bond with the families, as well as other midwives. “It is such a privilege to be part of a woman and her family’s special moment in their life,” she said. Gaby and her colleague Emma Roberts run their own clinics with the women every Friday as part of their placement to meet requirements to provide continuity of care to about 10 women in a year. They share on-call and attend the women’s births in their

Innovative Model with Midwifery Education (SWIM) program is the only one of its kind in the district and enables women to receive continuity of care throughout their pregnancy. The SWIM clinic is run by student midwives who provide antenatal care with the supervision of a senior midwife. The small team cares for the women and shares an on-call roster to attend the birth, in addition to a midwife and medical team. In return, women receive continuity of care by the same midwives, longer appointments with the midwife, and care from both the student and a senior

23 NSLHD 2023 Year in Review

Made with FlippingBook - professional solution for displaying marketing and sales documents online