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PEOPLE@HES-SO – Directory and Skills inventory

PEOPLE@HES-SO
Directory and Skills inventory

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Kaech Christelle

Kaech Christelle

Assistante HES

Main skills

Midwifery

Human milk banking

Mixed-methods research

Lactation

Midwifery Education

Breastfeeding

  • Contact

  • Teaching

  • Publications

Main contract

Assistante HES

Desktop: CR19/20/20.01

HESAV - Haute Ecole de Santé Vaud
Avenue de Beaumont 21, 1011 Lausanne, CH
HESAV
Faculty
Santé
Main Degree Programme
Sage-femme
European MSc en Midwifery - HESAV - Haute Ecole de Santé Vaud
  • Diversity Friendly Midwifery: Breastfeeding
  • Diversity Friendly Midwifery: Language barrier and role of community interpreters
BSc HES-SO de Sage-femme - HESAV - Haute Ecole de Santé Vaud
  • Post-partum
  • Projet de Travaux de Bachelor
  • Travaux de Bachelor

2024

Manuel Oxford en sciences sage-femme
Book ArODES

Janet Medforth, Linda Ball, Angela Walker, Sue Battersby, Sarah Stables, Claire De Labrusse, Alessia Abderhalden-Zellweger, Murielle Caldelari, Patricia Perrenoud, Mélanie Picavet, Pauline Thomas, Julie Flohic, Marielle Schmied, Diane Waller, Christelle Kaech, Léo Pomar, Magali Bonzon, Maëva Pretalli, Clémence Haydar, Franziska Schläppy Muntwyler, Maria-Pia Politis Mercier, Lucia Floris, Fabienne Salamin, Bénédicte Michoud, Yvonne Meyer, Harriet Thorn-Cole

2024,  Chêne-Bourg : RMS éditions / Médecine & Hygiène,  1168 p.

Link to the publication

Summary:

Le Manuel Oxford en sciences sage-femme est une ressource unique, qui fournit aux sages-femmes tout ce dont ils et elles ont besoin dans leur pratique. Il réunit des informations concises, pratiques et spécialisées sur tous les aspects du rôle de sage-femme, allant des conseils pré-conceptuels à l’examen postnatal final de la mère et du bébé. Cette version traduite a été adaptée à la francophonie au niveau des actes, de la médication et des rôles des soignants, coordonnée par Claire de Labrusse et Alessia Abderhalden-Zellweger, et validée par la Filière Sage-femme de la Haute École de Santé Vaud, en Suisse.

Reconstructing a niche sociality during the postpartum period :
Scientific paper ArODES
a qualitative study about the experience of becoming a mother as an immigrant in Switzerland

Patricia Perrenoud, Rachel Demolis, Eva Ferec, Mélodie Galvez Broux, Fanny Perret, Caroline Chautems, Christelle Kaech

SSM - Mental health,  2024, 5, art.100303

Link to the publication

Summary:

Epidemiological studies conducted in high-income countries have shown that immigrant mothers and their children suffer from an augmented morbidity and mortality, including with regard to their mental health. Drawing on the “niche sociality” concept (Manning et al., 2023) as an analytic tool, our paper aims to analyze the postpartum experience of immigrant mothers in Switzerland as well as the circumstances to which these mothers connect their experience and often their distress. This qualitative study included semidirected interviews with immigrant mothers (n=20) and with the health and social care professionals who cared for them (n=26) as well as ethnographic observations. We conducted a thematic analysis and triangulated the data produced with mothers themselves and professionals. Immigrant mothers shared mixed feelings regarding their experience. They often lived their maternity while experiencing a gendered loneliness. As members of transnational families, they dearly missed their relatives living abroad. Their position as new mothers and as immigrant persons comprised complex sociomaterial ordeals related to their (un)employment, housing, and sociality. Drawing from their practice in the community, professionals’ narratives completed mothers’. Professionals critiqued the unequal access to quality health care as well as the petty measures that interfered with mothers’ and infants’ safety that were taken by street-level bureaucrats (Lipsky, 2010 (1980)). Reflexive and engaging, mothers shared sensible and nuanced narratives about their experience and initiatives to rebuild their niche sociality.

2022

Factors that influence the sustainability of human milk donation to milk banks :
Scientific paper ArODES
a systematic review

Christelle Kaech, Catherine Kilgour, Céline J.? Fischer Fumeaux, Claire De Labrusse, Tracy Humphrey

Nutrients,  December 2022, vol.14(24), no. 5253, art. 5253

Link to the publication

Summary:

Donor human milk is the recommended alternative for feeding preterm or low birth weight infants when the mother’s own milk is unavailable or not in sufficient quantity. Globally, the needs of vulnerable infants for donor human milk exceed the supply. This review aimed to identify the factors impacting the sustainability of human milk donation to milk banks. A systematic review of the literature was performed on eight databases to retrieve articles published until December 2021. The study protocol is available in PROSPERO (#CRD42021287087). Among the 6722 references identified, 10 studies (eight quantitative observational and two qualitative) met the eligibility criteria for a total of 7053 participants. Thirty factors influencing the sustainability of the donations to milk banks were identified and categorized as follows: (1) donation duration, (2) donors’ infant features (e.g., gestational age, birth weight), (3) donors’ features (e.g., socio-demographic characteristics, milk donation history), and (4) factors related to the milk bank and health care systems (awareness and support). The available evidence suggests that larger volumes of donated milk are associated with a longer duration of donation, as are early donation, previous milk donation, and donors with an infant of smaller weight and gestational age. Supporting and encouraging early donation and recruiting donors with infants of low birth weight and low gestational age could support longer donation times and greater volumes of milk donated. To identify efficient strategies and to draw appropriate recommendations to improve donor milk access, future studies should further explore the issues of the sustainability of human milk donation to milk banks.

Immigrant women looking for information about the perinatal period on digital media :
Scientific paper ArODES
a qualitative study

Patricia Perrenoud, Christelle Kaech, Caroline Chautems

Women and Birth,  May 2023, vol. 36, no. 3, pp. e341-e352

Link to the publication

Summary:

Background Smartphones’ development has allowed continuous access to information about the perinatal period on digital media. Knowing about immigrant women’s experience on digital media may help health and social care professionals to fine-tune their care. Aim Our primary aim is to analyse how immigrant women experience information about the perinatal period on digital media. Our secondary aim is to discuss how health and social care professionals perceive the experiences of these women. Methods A qualitative study conducted in Switzerland encompassing semi-directed interviews with immigrant women (n = 20), health and social care professionals (n = 30) and interpreters (n = 12) completed with ethnographic observations and interviews. Findings and discussion Immigrant women form a diverse social group. They consequently use an array of social media to find information about the perinatal period depending on their linguistic and digital skills. Reflexively, they expect information found online to be of unequal quality and value information provided by professionals. They adapt their practices to their experience and may avoid media that negatively affects them. Their experience with digital media reflects the overall perinatal experience, providing clues for carers. Professionals worry about the difficult situations some immigrant women live in and stress that digital portals form barriers to services. Professionals may overlook immigrant women’s use of digital media and their need for guidance. Conclusions Immigrant women use digital media to find information about the perinatal period to prepare for birth and the post-partum. They rely on unequal capabilities to do so and need translated information and holistic woman-centred support.

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on maternity services in Europe :
Scientific paper ArODES
a mixed methods systematic review protocol

Harriet Thorn-Cole, Claire De Labrusse, Alessia Abderhalden-Zellweger, Christelle Kaech, Raphaël Hammer

JBI Evidence Synthesis,  September 2022, vol. 20, no. 9, pp. 2303-2311

Link to the publication

Summary:

Objective: This review will synthesize and integrate the best available evidence on the changes caused by the COVID-19 pandemic in access to and the provision of maternity services in Europe. The review will also consider health care professionals’ experiences in providing maternity care during the COVID-19 pandemic in Europe. Introduction: Governments and maternity services have introduced various protective sanitary and organizational measures to reduce the spread of COVID-19 and protect the global population, including health care professionals. Since March 2020, the number of publications on this topic has soared, yet little is known about the effect of the pandemic and the accompanying measures on access to and the provision of maternity care in Europe. Inclusion criteria: The review will consider quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods studies on the impact of COVID-19 on European maternity services. For the quantitative component, the review will consider studies evaluating maternity services outcomes across all types of maternity care settings. For the qualitative component, the review will consider studies exploring maternity health care providers’ experiences and perceptions of the impact of the pandemic on care provided to women and their babies. Methods: Six bibliographic databases will be searched for published and unpublished studies since March 2020. Study selection, critical appraisal, data extraction, and data synthesis will follow JBI's segregated mixed methods approach. The quantitative component will be adapted to follow the JBI requirements for systematic reviews of etiology and risk. Systematic review registration number: PROSPERO CRD42021283878

“Whatsapping” the continuity of postpartum care in Switzerland :
Scientific paper ArODES
a socio-anthropological study

Patricia Perrenoud, Caroline Chautems, Christelle Kaech

Women and birth,  May 2022, vol. 35, no. 3, pp. e263-e274

Link to the publication

Summary:

Background: Digital media such as Apps, Internet and social networks have become integral parts of the maternity experience for more than a decade. These media can support or undermine women’s experiences as has been shown in digital sociology research. Using Immediate Messaging Applications to provide information and support to women during the perinatal period is an emerging practice. Aim : This article analyses how health and social care professionals – with a focus on community midwives – and women communicate between postpartum home visits through Immediate Message Applications in Switzerland. Methods : A socio-anthropological study that relied on qualitative methods including semi-directed interviews with midwives and health and social care professionals (n = 30) and immigrant women (n = 20). Findings: Since the introduction of Immediate Messaging Applications, women and their carer converse more regularly between post-partum home visits. Women send questions, pictures and videos to them, often allowing swift responses to their concerns. Midwives encounter difficulties answering women’s questions when they cannot be solved through quick communication (e.g. infant crying). To them, texting frequency forms a clinical clue to women’s mental health. Not all women contact their carer through digital messages; immigrant women are less likely to know and use this service. Discussion and conclusion: Immediate Messaging Applications form a promising communication tool, complementary to home visits, and contribute to woman-centered care and continuity of care. As an emergent practice, it has not been framed by a guideline yet. Policy makers and practitioners should ensure that its use does not contribute to unequal access to care.

Accès au lait de donneuses en Suisse et création de la première banque de lait maternel romande au CHUV :
Scientific paper ArODES
enjeux et perspectives

Céline J. Fischer Fumeaux, Jacqueline Barin, Michel Prudent, Carole Richard, Agathe Martin, Isabelle Henriot, Hélène Legardeur, Christelle Kaech, Héloïse May, Joëlle Vuignier, Jean-François Tolsa

Revue médicale suisse,  Janvier 2022, vol. 18, no. 764-765, pp. 59-63

Link to the publication

Summary:

Mother’s own milk (MOM) is ideal for infant growth and health. When MOM is unavailable, donor human milk (DHM), rather than infant formula, is recommended for at-risk, preterm or sick neonates (NN), in view of its protective effects. Human milk banks (HMB) collect, secure, process and distribute DHM. In Switzerland, there is insufficient and unequal access to DHM in the absence of a national policy framework. With the support of the State of Vaud, the CHUV and the Interregional Blood Transfusion of the Swiss Red Cross will open the first HMB in Romandy in 2022. This HMB offers an innovative system in Switzerland, based on complementary expertise, in order to guarantee the quality and safety of DHM and to support the promotion of breastfeeding and human milk donation.

2019

Human papillomavirus infection and vaccination :
Scientific paper ArODES
knowledge, attitude and perception among undergraduate men and women healthcare university students in Switzerland

Emilien Jeannot, Manuela Viviano, Marie-Christine Follonier, Christelle Kaech, Nadine Oberhauser, Emmanuel Kabengele Mpinga, Pierre Vassilakos, Barbara Kaiser, Patrick Petignat

Vaccines,  2019, vol. 7, no. 4, art. 130

Link to the publication

Summary:

Background: Human Papillomavirus is a common sexually transmitted infection, representing the main cause of genital warts and cervical cancer. The objective of this study was to evaluate basic knowledge and beliefs regarding HPV infection and HPV vaccine among undergraduate healthcare men and women students, as well as their attitudes towards HPV vaccine. Methods: Undergraduate women and men (nursing and midwifery curses) attending three Schools of Health Sciences located in Switzerland. A total of 427 women and 223 men have completed the web questionnaire, which included questions on their socio-demographic background and about basic knowledge and attitudes toward the HPV infection and vaccination. Results: Women undergraduate students have a better knowledge of HPV infection than their men counterparts, although there was a significant gap in knowledge of the disease’s mode of transmission and prevention. Among women, 72.6% of respondents reported having received at least one dose of HPV vaccines versus 31.4% for men respondents. Conclusion: The results of this study revealed a poor understanding among undergraduate healthcare men and women students about the HPV infection, its mode of transmission and its prevention. Our findings highlight the need to improve education on HPV for undergraduate healthcare students in order to increase the awareness of the disease.

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