Centre for Childbirth, Women's and Newborn Health, Department of International Public Health, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, UK.
Centre for Childbirth, Women's and Newborn Health, Department of International Public Health, Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, UK.
Women Birth. 2023 Feb;36(1):e25-e35. doi: 10.1016/j.wombi.2022.04.006. Epub 2022 Apr 16.
Communication and interaction with healthcare workers at the time of stillbirth remain in parents' long-term memories and impact on emotional and psychological well-being. Cultural attitudes and norms influence how stillbirth is acknowledged and discussed in society. There is limited evidence on how women from sub-Saharan Africa became aware of the death of their babies. This research explored how women perceived the approach adopted by healthcare workers when the news of their stillbirth was disclosed to them.
Grounded theory study. Women (n = 33) who had birthed a stillborn baby in the preceding 12 months were purposively sampled and participated in in-depth interviews (9 in Zambia, 16 in Tanzania and 8 in Malawi). Informed consent was gained from all participants. Data were analysed via a coding process using constant comparative analysis.
Women sacrificed individualized and personal grieving strategies to conform and behave according to what was expected within their community. An overarching theme of cultural conformity overrides personal grief incorporated four sub-themes: perceiving something was wrong, the unexpected outcome, experience contrasting emotions, bonding with the baby.
Most participants embarked on a negative 'emotion work' to adapt and suppress emotions and grief due to cultural expectations. Inability to voice the trauma of losing a baby may lead to perinatal mental health issues and needs addressing. Maternity healthcare workers should encourage women to express their feelings and grief. Appropriate training in perinatal bereavement care including good communication, appropriate attitudes and provision of meaningful information to grieving women is recommended.
在胎儿死亡时与医护人员的沟通和互动仍然留在父母的长期记忆中,并影响他们的情绪和心理健康。文化态度和规范影响着社会如何承认和讨论胎儿死亡。关于撒哈拉以南非洲的妇女是如何意识到她们的婴儿死亡的,这方面的证据有限。本研究探讨了妇女如何看待医护人员在向她们透露胎儿死亡的消息时所采取的方法。
扎根理论研究。在过去 12 个月内生过死胎的妇女(n=33)被有目的地抽取并参与深入访谈(赞比亚 9 人,坦桑尼亚 16 人,马拉维 8 人)。所有参与者都获得了知情同意。数据通过使用常数比较分析的编码过程进行分析。
妇女牺牲了个性化和个人的悲伤策略,以符合并表现出她们所在社区所期望的行为。文化一致性的首要主题凌驾于个人悲伤之上,包含四个子主题:感知到有些不对劲、意外的结果、体验到矛盾的情绪、与婴儿建立联系。
由于文化期望,大多数参与者开始进行消极的“情绪工作”,以适应和抑制情绪和悲伤。由于无法表达失去婴儿的创伤,可能会导致围产期心理健康问题,需要加以解决。产妇保健工作者应鼓励妇女表达自己的感受和悲伤。建议对围产期丧亲护理进行适当的培训,包括良好的沟通、适当的态度和向悲痛的妇女提供有意义的信息。