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Featured researches published by Carrie Klima.


Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health | 2009

Introduction of CenteringPregnancy in a Public Health Clinic

Carrie Klima; Kathleen F. Norr; Susan C. Vonderheid; Arden S. Handler

CenteringPregnancy is a promising group visit prenatal care innovation that provides substantial health promotion content. Elements unique to group care include peer support and self-management training and activities. CenteringPregnancy was introduced at a large public health clinic serving predominantly low-income African American pregnant women. All prenatal care at this clinic was provided by certified nurse-midwives, and all providers were trained in the CenteringPregnancy model. One hundred and ten women received prenatal care in CenteringPregnancy groups. Focus groups of pregnant women, providers, and health center staff reported that the program benefited women despite implementation challenges such as scheduling changes. Compared to women in individual care, women in CenteringPregnancy had significantly more prenatal visits, increased weight gain, increased breast feeding rates, and higher overall satisfaction. This pilot project demonstrated that CenteringPregnancy can be implemented in a busy public health clinic serving predominantly low-income pregnant women and is associated with positive health outcomes.


Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health | 2003

Centering pregnancy: a model for pregnant adolescents

Carrie Klima

Recent exploration of the experiences of pregnant and parenting adolescents has uncovered the need to address the unique developmental, social, and cultural aspects of adolescent pregnancy. Many adolescents, especially those from urban areas, live in communities with limited opportunities, poverty, violence, and a lack of support. Programs that help young women discover their inner strength, create environments for empowerment, and build community may help adolescents to achieve goals and parent successfully. Centering Pregnancy is a model of group prenatal care that provides for the assessment, education, and support of pregnant women and may be particularly useful in adolescent populations. The model is described and the ways adolescents may benefit from Centering Pregnancys unique design is discussed.


Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health | 2001

Women's health care: A new paradigm for the 21st century

Carrie Klima

Oppression based on gender exists in all aspects of womens lives and transcends contemporary cultures, economic systems, and even health care services. Radical feminism provides an alternative philosophic framework of health care that is based on a women-centered viewpoint, with the experiences of women as its unifying philosophy. Midwifery is a means to apply this new philosophic approach to the health care of women. A partnership between midwifery and feminist philosophy will allow womens voices to be heard, while guiding research in womens health care in new directions, and illuminating new approaches to current health problems. The new millennium provides an opportunity to explore an alternative framework and philosophy that will change the current paradigm of womens health care.


Midwifery | 2013

CenteringPregnancy-Africa: a pilot of group antenatal care to address Millennium Development Goals.

Crystal L. Patil; Elizabeth T. Abrams; Carrie Klima; Chrissie P.N. Kaponda; Sebalda Leshabari; Susan C. Vonderheid; Martha Kamanga; Kathleen F. Norr

BACKGROUND severe health worker shortages and resource limitations negatively affect quality of antenatal care (ANC) throughout sub-Saharan Africa. Group ANC, specifically CenteringPregnancy (CP), may offer an innovative approach to enable midwives to offer higher quality ANC. OBJECTIVE our overarching goal was to prepare to conduct a clinical trial of CenteringPregnancy-Africa (CP-Africa) in Malawi and Tanzania. In Phase 1, our goal was to determine the acceptability of CP as a model for ANC in both countries. In Phase 2, our objective was to develop CP-Africa session content consistent with the Essential Elements of CP model and with national standards in both Malawi and Tanzania. In Phase 3, our objective was to pilot CP-Africa in Malawi to determine whether sessions could be conducted with fidelity to the Centering process. SETTING Phases 1 and 2 took place in Malawi and Tanzania. Phase 3, the piloting of two sessions of CP-Africa, occurred at two sites in Malawi: a district hospital and a small clinic. DESIGN we used an Action Research approach to promote partnerships among university researchers, the Centering Healthcare Institute, health care administrators, health professionals and women attending ANC to develop CP-Africa session content and pilot this model of group ANC. PARTICIPANTS for Phases 1 and 2, members of the Ministries of Health, health professionals and pregnant women in Malawi and Tanzania were introduced to and interviewed about CP. In Phase 2, we finalised CP-Africa content and trained 13 health professionals in the Centering Healthcare model. In Phase 3, we conducted a small pilot with 24 pregnant women (12 at each site). MEASUREMENTS AND FINDINGS participants enthusiastically embraced CP-Africa as an acceptable model of ANC health care delivery. The CP-Africa content met both CP and national standards. The pilot established that the CP model could be implemented with process fidelity to the 13 Essential Elements. Several implementation challenges and strategies to address these challenges were identified. KEY CONCLUSIONS preliminary data suggest that CP-Africa is feasible in resource-constrained, low-literacy, high-HIV settings in sub-Saharan Africa. By improving the quality of ANC delivery, midwives have an opportunity to make a contribution towards Millennium Development Goals (MDG) targeting improvements in child, maternal and HIV-related health outcomes (MDGs 4, 5 and 6). A clinical trial is needed to establish efficacy. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE CP-Africa also has the potential to reduce job-related stress and enhance job satisfaction for midwives in low income countries. If CP can be transferred with fidelity to process in sub-Saharan Africa and retain similar results to those reported in clinical trials, it has the potential to benefit pregnant women and their infants and could make a positive contribution to MGDs 4, 5 and 6.


MCN: The American Journal of Maternal/Child Nursing | 2010

Perinatal Grief in Latino Parents

Claudia Whitaker; Karen Kavanaugh; Carrie Klima

Extensive research exists that describes the meaning of perinatal loss to some parents, but the experience of loss from the perspective of Latino parents is not clearly understood. Additionally, current perinatal bereavement practices used often to facilitate memory making for parents (such as viewing or holding the baby, taking photographs, or collecting mementos) are based on research done primarily with non-Latino families. Are these common practices appropriate for this population? Because there is a paucity of research on this topic, this article describes what has been written over the past 30 years on the topic of grief and perinatal loss in Latino culture.


International Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics | 2017

Implementation challenges and outcomes of a randomized controlled pilot study of a group prenatal care model in Malawi and Tanzania

Crystal L. Patil; Carrie Klima; Alana D. Steffen; Sebalda Leshabari; Heather Pauls; Kathleen F. Norr

To identify implementation challenges associated with conducting a randomized controlled trial (RCT) of group prenatal care (PNC) and report outcomes of the pilot.


Obstetrics & Gynecology | 2003

Group prenatal care and preterm birth weight: Results from a matched cohort study at public clinics

Jeannette R. Ickovics; Trace Kershaw; Claire Westdahl; Sharon Schindler Rising; Carrie Klima; Heather Reynolds; Urania Magriples


Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health | 2004

Redesigning prenatal care through CenteringPregnancy

Sharon Schindler Rising; Holly Powell Kennedy; Carrie Klima


Journal of Midwifery & Women's Health | 2002

Adolescent emergency contraception: attitudes and practices of certified nurse-midwives

Elizabeth P Kettyle; Carrie Klima


Archive | 2011

Group Prenatal Care and Doula Care for Pregnant Women

Susan C. Vonderheid; Rieko Kishi; Kathleen F. Norr; Carrie Klima

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Kathleen F. Norr

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Crystal L. Patil

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Susan C. Vonderheid

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Alana D. Steffen

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Heather Pauls

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Amy Levi

University of New Mexico

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Chang G. Park

University of Illinois at Chicago

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Elizabeth T. Abrams

University of Illinois at Chicago

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