Aim. We regard consultations as cocreated communicatively by the parties involved. In this paper on verbal communication\r\nin midwife-led consultations, we consequently focus on the actual conversation taking place between the midwife and the\r\npregnant woman with diabetes, especially on those sequences where the pregnant woman initiated a topic of concern in the\r\nconversation. Methods. This paper was undertaken in four hospital outpatient clinics in Norway. Ten antenatal consultations\r\nbetween midwives and pregnant women were audiotaped, transcribed to text, and analyzed using theme-oriented discourse\r\nanalysis. Two communicative patterns were revealed: an expert�s frame and a shared experts� frame. Within each frame, different\r\ncommunicative variations are presented. The topics women initiated in the conversations were (i) delivery, time and mode; (ii)\r\nprevious birth experience; (iii) labor pain; and (iv) breast feeding, diabetes management, and fetal weight. Conclusion. Different\r\nways of communicating seem to create different opportunities for the parties to share each other�s perspectives. Adequate responses\r\nand a listening attitude as well as an ambiguous way of talking seem to open up for the pregnant women�s perspectives. Further\r\nstudies are needed to investigate the obstacles to, and premises for, providing midwifery care in a specialist outpatient setting.
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