University of Birmingham, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, Birmingham, United Kingdom.
Qual Health Res. 2020 Jan;30(1):133-145. doi: 10.1177/1049732319870270. Epub 2019 Sep 16.
Miscarriage is common, affecting one in five pregnancies, but the psychosocial effects often go unrecognized and unsupported. The effects on men may be subject to unintentional neglect by health care practitioners, who typically focus on biological symptoms, confined to women. Therefore, we set out to systematically review the evidence of lived experiences of male partners in high-income countries. Our search and thematic synthesis of the relevant literature identified 27 manuscripts reporting 22 studies with qualitative methods. The studies collected data from 231 male participants, and revealed the powerful effect of identities assumed and performed by men or constructed for them in the context of miscarriage. We identified perceptions of female precedence, uncertain transition to parenthood, gendered coping responses, and ambiguous relations with health care practitioners. Men were often cast into roles that seemed secondary to others, with limited opportunities to articulate and address any emotions and uncertainties engendered by loss.
流产较为常见,每五例妊娠中就有一例会发生流产,但流产的心理社会影响往往未被认识到,也未得到支持。男性所受影响可能会被医疗保健从业者无意中忽视,因为从业者通常专注于女性的生物症状。因此,我们着手系统地综述高收入国家男性伴侣的真实体验的相关证据。我们对相关文献的搜索和主题综合分析确定了 27 篇报告 22 项研究的手稿,这些研究采用了定性方法。这些研究从 231 名男性参与者收集数据,揭示了男性在流产背景下所承担和表现的身份,或为他们构建的身份的强大影响。我们发现了对女性优先的看法、向父母身份转变的不确定性、性别化的应对方式,以及与医疗保健从业者的模糊关系。男性往往被置于次要地位,几乎没有机会表达和处理因失去孩子而产生的任何情绪和不确定性。