Rana Limbo1, Jo K Glasser, Maria E Sundaram. 1. Rana Limbo is Associate Director, Resolve Through Sharing, Gundersen Health System, La Crosse, WI. The author can be reached via e-mail at rklimbo@gundersenhealth.org Jo K. Glasser is Research Scientist (retired), Gundersen Health System, La Crosse, WI. Maria E. Sundaram is Research Epidemiologist, Marshfield Clinic, Marshfield, WI.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To extend understanding of women's experience of miscarriage by exploring their approach to decisions about what to do after learning a miscarriage was likely. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: Using dimensional analysis, a technique generic to grounded theory, we analyzed interview transcripts of 23 women who experienced miscarriage (before 14 weeks gestation) at a midwestern medical center. We explored women's experiences by focusing on (1) how they came to know they were having a miscarriage and (2) how they decided what to do next. Both are key, yet relatively unexplored, constructs of early miscarriage. RESULTS: Being Sure emerged as the central process for women as they made decisions about what was happening to them, and about their treatment options. Participants needed to be sure that they were having a miscarriage (that the pregnancy was truly over), and also be sure that they were choosing the right treatment option for them (surgical, medical, or expectant management). CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS: Nurses caring for women in the throes of an inevitable miscarriage can use the information in this article to support women in their quest toward Being Sure. Helping women thusly encompasses assisting women to understand their symptoms, come to terms with the inevitability of the pregnancy loss, and be comfortable with which treatment they choose for the miscarriage.
PURPOSE: To extend understanding of women's experience of miscarriage by exploring their approach to decisions about what to do after learning a miscarriage was likely. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: Using dimensional analysis, a technique generic to grounded theory, we analyzed interview transcripts of 23 women who experienced miscarriage (before 14 weeks gestation) at a midwestern medical center. We explored women's experiences by focusing on (1) how they came to know they were having a miscarriage and (2) how they decided what to do next. Both are key, yet relatively unexplored, constructs of early miscarriage. RESULTS: Being Sure emerged as the central process for women as they made decisions about what was happening to them, and about their treatment options. Participants needed to be sure that they were having a miscarriage (that the pregnancy was truly over), and also be sure that they were choosing the right treatment option for them (surgical, medical, or expectant management). CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS: Nurses caring for women in the throes of an inevitable miscarriage can use the information in this article to support women in their quest toward Being Sure. Helping women thusly encompasses assisting women to understand their symptoms, come to terms with the inevitability of the pregnancy loss, and be comfortable with which treatment they choose for the miscarriage.
Authors: Ruth Farrell; Christina Collart; Caitlin Craighead; Madelyn Pierce; Edward Chien; Richard Frankel; Brownsyne Tucker Edmonds; Uma Perni; Marissa Coleridge; Angela C Ranzini; Susannah Rose Journal: JMIR Form Res Date: 2022-03-30