University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Department of Maternal and Child Health, Carolina Global Breastfeeding Institute, CB-7445, Gillings School of Global Public Health, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, USA.
Columbia University, School of Professional Studies, New York, NY, 10027, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2020 Jan;244:112648. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2019.112648. Epub 2019 Oct 31.
The prevalence of infants born before 37 weeks of gestation continues to rise in the United States. Advances in neonatology have led to improved survival rates among preterm infants, including those born at a very-low-birth-weight (VLBW). Exclusive human milk feeding is a therapeutic intervention for VLBW preterm infants, and mothers are encouraged to provide their own milk. Yet, it is well-established that mothers and infants may face extraordinarily complicated lactation and infant feeding challenges in NICU settings, many of which emanate from birth trauma. The purpose of this study is to gain a deeper understanding of the ways in which the hyper-medicalized management of preterm birth and infant feeding in NICU environments affect mothers' postpartum health and well-being. Seventeen mothers of VLBW preterm infants were interviewed August 2016-June 2017 within three years of their infant's NICU discharge about their feeding decisions and experiences. Narrative analysis yielded five themes: (1) the physical and emotional trauma of giving birth prematurely impacted mothers' lactation experiences; (2) separation from their infants intensified mothers' suffering and disrupted lactation; (3) mothers experienced being marginalized in their infant's NICU care; (4) mothers practiced embodied forms of resistance to cope with both trauma and marginalization; and (5) skilled support was central to mothers' positive lactation experiences in the NICU. We draw upon feminist theory in the anthropology of reproduction to examine the fundamental hierarchies of power in U.S. neonatal critical care systems that fracture mothers' interembodied relationships to their newborns, exacerbate lactation failure, and engender traumatic postpartum neglect. Moreover, we theorize mothers' expressions of suffering in the context of preterm birth and lactation insufficiency as idioms of distress engendered by the violence of neglectful care. Narrative inquiry is instrumental to designing structural transformations in the systems of care available to mothers of preterm infants who are admitted to a NICU.
美国早产儿(妊娠未满 37 周即分娩的婴儿)的比例持续上升。新生儿学的进步提高了早产儿的存活率,包括极低出生体重儿(VLBW)。母乳喂养是 VLBW 早产儿的治疗干预措施,鼓励母亲提供自己的乳汁。然而,众所周知,母亲和婴儿在新生儿重症监护病房(NICU)中可能会面临极其复杂的哺乳和婴儿喂养挑战,其中许多挑战源于分娩创伤。本研究旨在深入了解 NICU 环境中早产儿出生和婴儿喂养的高度医疗化管理方式如何影响母亲产后的健康和幸福。2016 年 8 月至 2017 年 6 月,在婴儿离开 NICU 后的三年内,对 17 名 VLBW 早产儿的母亲进行了访谈,内容涉及她们的喂养决策和经历。叙事分析产生了五个主题:(1)早产带来的身体和情感创伤影响了母亲的哺乳体验;(2)与婴儿分离加剧了母亲的痛苦并扰乱了哺乳;(3)母亲在婴儿的 NICU 护理中感到被边缘化;(4)母亲采取了具体的反抗形式来应对创伤和边缘化;(5)熟练的支持是母亲在 NICU 中获得积极哺乳体验的关键。我们借鉴生殖人类学中的女性主义理论,考察了美国新生儿重症监护系统中基本的权力等级制度,这些制度破坏了母亲与其新生儿之间的身体关系,加剧了哺乳失败,并导致产后创伤性忽视。此外,我们将母亲在早产和哺乳不足背景下表达的痛苦理论化为忽视性护理暴力产生的痛苦成语。叙事研究对于设计早产儿母亲在 NICU 接受护理的系统结构转型至关重要。