References
- Care Quality Commission. (2013). National findings from the 2013 survey of women’s experiences of maternity care. London: Care Quality Commission.
- Green, J. M. (2012). Integrating women’s views into maternity care research and practice. Birth, 39, 291–295.
- Kowlessar, O., Fox, J. R., & Wittkowski, A. (2015). First-time fathers’ experiences of parenting during the first year. Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology, 33. E-pub 27 Oct 2014.
- Lee, C. (2012). ‘She was a person, she was here’: The experience of late pregnancy loss in Australia. Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology, 30, 62–76.
- Marrs, J., Cossar, J., & Wroblewska, A. (2014). Keeping the family together and bonding: A father’s role in a perinatal mental health unit. Journal of Reproductive and Infant Psychology, 32, 340–354.
- McKinnon, L., Prosser, S., & Miller, Y. (2014). What women want: Qualitative analysis of consumer evaluations of maternity care in Queensland, Australia. BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, 14, 366.
- Miller, Y. D., Thompson, R., Porter, J., & Prosser, S. J. (2011). Findings from the Having a Baby in Queensland Survey, 2010: Queensland Centre for Mothers & Babies. Brisbane: The University of Queensland.
- Mills, T. A., Ricklesford, C., Cooke, A., Heazell, A. E., Whitworth, M., & Lavender, T. (2014). Parents’ experiences and expectations of care in pregnancy after stillbirth or neonatal death: A metasynthesis. British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 121, 943–950.
- Redshaw, M. & Heikkila, K. (2011). Ethnic differences in women’s worries about labour and birth. Ethnicity and Health, 16, 213–223.
- Redshaw, M., Rowe, R., & Henderson, J. (2014). Listening to parents after stillbirth or the death of their baby after birth. Oxford: NPEU.
- Redshaw, M., Rowe, R., Hockley, C., & Brocklehurst, P. (2007). Recorded delivery: A national survey of women’s experience of maternity care. Oxford: NPEU.
- Rudman, A. & Waldenström, U. (2007). Critical views on postpartum care expressed by new mothers. BMC Health Service Research, 7, 178.
- Waldenström, U. & Schytt, E. (2009). A longitudinal study of women's memory of labour pain –From 2 months to 5 years after the birth. British Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 116, 577–583.