School of Psychology, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, South Australia.
South Australian Health and Medical Research Institute, Adelaide, South Australia.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2021 Jan 7;21(1):29. doi: 10.1186/s12884-020-03514-6.
Historically, men's experiences of grief following pregnancy loss and neonatal death have been under-explored in comparison to women. However, investigating men's perspectives is important, given potential gendered differences concerning grief styles, help-seeking and service access. Few studies have comprehensively examined the various individual, interpersonal, community and system/policy-level factors which may contribute to the intensity of grief in bereaved parents, particularly for men.
Men (N = 228) aged at least 18 years whose partner had experienced an ectopic pregnancy, miscarriage, stillbirth, termination of pregnancy for foetal anomaly, or neonatal death within the last 20 years responded to an online survey exploring their experiences of grief. Multiple linear regression analyses were used to examine the factors associated with men's grief intensity and style.
Men experienced significant grief across all loss types, with the average score sitting above the minimum cut-off considered to be a high degree of grief. Men's total grief scores were associated with loss history, marital satisfaction, availability of social support, acknowledgement of their grief from family/friends, time spent bonding with the baby during pregnancy, and feeling as though their role of 'supporter' conflicted with their ability to process grief. Factors contributing to grief also differed depending on grief style. Intuitive (emotion-focused) grief was associated with support received from healthcare professionals. Instrumental (activity-focused) grief was associated with time and quality of attachment to the baby during pregnancy, availability of social support, acknowledgement of men's grief from their female partner, supporter role interfering with their grief, and tendencies toward self-reliance.
Following pregnancy loss and neonatal death, men can experience high levels of grief, requiring acknowledgement and validation from all healthcare professionals, family/friends, community networks and workplaces. Addressing male-specific needs, such as balancing a desire to both support and be supported, requires tailored information and support. Strategies to support men should consider grief styles and draw upon father-inclusive practice recommendations. Further research is required to explore the underlying causal mechanisms of associations found.
与女性相比,男性在妊娠丢失和新生儿死亡后经历的悲伤体验在以往研究中一直被低估。然而,考虑到悲伤风格、寻求帮助和服务获取方面可能存在的性别差异,研究男性的观点很重要。很少有研究全面考察了可能导致悲伤的各种个体、人际、社区和系统/政策层面的因素,尤其是对于男性。
至少 18 岁的男性(N=228),其伴侣在过去 20 年内经历过异位妊娠、流产、死产、因胎儿异常终止妊娠或新生儿死亡,他们对一项在线调查做出了回应,该调查探讨了他们的悲伤体验。多元线性回归分析用于检验与男性悲伤强度和风格相关的因素。
男性在所有的失独类型中都经历了显著的悲伤,平均得分高于被认为是高度悲伤的最低临界值。男性的总体悲伤得分与失独经历、婚姻满意度、社会支持的可获得性、家庭/朋友对他们悲伤的认可、怀孕期间与婴儿的亲密相处时间以及感到自己的“支持者”角色与处理悲伤的能力相冲突有关。导致悲伤的因素也因悲伤风格而异。直觉型(情感聚焦)悲伤与来自医疗保健专业人员的支持有关。工具型(活动聚焦)悲伤与怀孕期间与婴儿的相处时间和质量、社会支持的可获得性、女性伴侣对男性悲伤的认可、支持者角色对悲伤的干扰以及自力更生的倾向有关。
在妊娠丢失和新生儿死亡后,男性可能会经历高度的悲伤,这需要所有医疗保健专业人员、家庭/朋友、社区网络和工作场所的认可和验证。满足男性的特定需求,如平衡支持和被支持的愿望,需要有针对性的信息和支持。支持男性的策略应考虑悲伤风格,并借鉴包含父亲的实践建议。需要进一步研究来探讨发现的关联的潜在因果机制。