Rosalind Haddrill
rosalind haddrill

Dr Rosalind Haddrill

Lecturer

Biography

Dr Roz Haddrill trained and worked clinically as a midwife in Sheffield. She has taught at a number of universities in the North of England and, most recently, at Edinburgh Napier. She has been involved in teaching and supporting both undergraduate and postgraduate healthcare students, across a variety of programmes, and the development of pre-registration midwifery curricula. Her PhD focused on late booking for antenatal care. Her research interests include women's perceptions and experiences of maternity care, including access to and uptake of antenatal care and gestational diabetes care, and student midwife care.

Themes

Esteem

External Examining/Validations

  • External Examiner, University of Manchester

 

Invited Speaker

  • Speaker at National Diabetes in Pregnancy Conference
  • ICM presentation: Understanding delayed access to antenatal care

 

Membership of Professional Body

  • Fellow of Higher Education Academy
  • Registered Midwife, Midwife Teacher

 

Reviewing

  • Reviewing for following journals: Midwifery, Women and Birth, BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, BMC Public Health, PLOS One, Diabetic Medicine

 

Date


8 results

North-East & North Cumbria student midwife care survey

Presentation / Conference
Haddrill, R., Boag, C., Wall, S., & Smith, V. (2022, March)
North-East & North Cumbria student midwife care survey. Presented at Royal College of Midwives Education and Research Conference, Coventry

Women’s  perspectives on a subsequent pregnancy after gestational diabetes - preliminary findings from a qualitative study

Presentation / Conference
Haddrill, R., Scott, E., & Zoe, D. (2018, November)
Women’s  perspectives on a subsequent pregnancy after gestational diabetes - preliminary findings from a qualitative study. Presented at National Diabetes in Pregnancy Conference, 2018, Birmingham

Exploring the Feasibility of Use of An Online Dietary Assessment Tool (myfood24) in Women with Gestational Diabetes

Journal Article
Gianfrancesco, C., Darwin, Z., McGowan, L., Smith, D., Haddrill, R., Carter, M., …Cade, J. (2018)
Exploring the Feasibility of Use of An Online Dietary Assessment Tool (myfood24) in Women with Gestational Diabetes. Nutrients, 10(9), https://doi.org/10.3390/nu10091147
myfood24 is an online 24 hr dietary recall tool developed for nutritional epidemiological research. Its clinical application has been unexplored. This mixed methods study expl...

A tale of two pregnancies: A Critical Interpretive Synthesis of women’s perceptions about delayed initiation of antenatal care

Journal Article
Haddrill, R., Jones, G. L., Anumba, D., & Mitchell, C. (2018)
A tale of two pregnancies: A Critical Interpretive Synthesis of women’s perceptions about delayed initiation of antenatal care. Women and Birth, 31(3), 220-231. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wombi.2017.09.017
Background Delayed access to antenatal care in high income countries is associated with poor maternal, fetal and neonatal outcomes. The aim was to synthesise the diverse body ...

The Role of a Smartphone App for Providing Feedback on Midwifery Training

Journal Article
Gray, T. G., French, L., Haddrill, R., & Farrell, T. (2016)
The Role of a Smartphone App for Providing Feedback on Midwifery Training. International Journal Of Medical Science And Clinical Invention, 3(8), 2071-2078. https://doi.org/10.18535/ijmsci/v3i8.08
Background: Student midwives currently provide feedback at the end of a placement. Smartphone technology allows student midwives to provide specific daily feedback on their pl...

Midwifery PALS: a case study

Book Chapter
Malone, C., & Haddrill, R. (2015)
Midwifery PALS: a case study. In Compendium of effective practice in directed independent learning (79-81). Higher Education Academy

Understanding delayed access to antenatal care: a qualitative interview study

Journal Article
Haddrill, R., Jones, G. L., Mitchell, C. A., & Anumba, D. O. (2014)
Understanding delayed access to antenatal care: a qualitative interview study. BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth, 14(1), https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2393-14-207
Background Delayed access to antenatal care ('late booking’) has been linked to increased maternal and fetal mortality and morbidity. The aim of this qualitative study was to ...

Why do women attend late for antenatal booking? a qualitative interview study exploring the perspectives of service users and stakeholders. part 1: the service users

Journal Article
Hadrill, R., Jones, G., Mitchell, C., & Anumba, D. (2012)
Why do women attend late for antenatal booking? a qualitative interview study exploring the perspectives of service users and stakeholders. part 1: the service users. Archives of disease in childhood. Fetal and neonatal edition, 97(Suppl 1), A113.3-A113. https://doi.org/10.1136/fetalneonatal-2012-301809.370
Introduction: Delayed access to antenatal care (“late booking”) is linked to increased mortality and morbidity for mother and baby: 17% of recent direct and indirect maternal ...

Pre-Napier Funded Projects

  • Funded project: Women's experiences of subsequent pregnancy after gestational diabetes