| Literature DB >> 26614620 |
Julie M Hennegan1, Jane Henderson1, Maggie Redshaw1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To collate and critically appraise extant evidence for the impact of contact with the stillborn infant on parental mental health, well-being and satisfaction.Entities:
Keywords: bereavement; infant contact; stillbirth; systematic review; touch
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26614620 PMCID: PMC4663431 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008616
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Study flow chart.
Characteristics of included studies
| Study ID | Study type | Date data collected | Location/setting | Time since stillbirth | N | Inclusion criteria | Stillbirth gestations |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bennett | Cross-sectional retrospective telephone survey | 2007 | Four hospitals in the Boston area, USA | 0–5 years | 55 | Women identified by maternity care providers as eligible for inclusion. Women <18 years who lost a child to SIDS or had an elective abortion were not recruited | Perinatal loss (from 20 weeks’ gestation to 1 month postpartum) |
| Type of contact assessed | Holding the infant. Taking photos of the infant | ||||||
| Eligible outcomes assessed | Perinatal grief scale (PGS | ||||||
| Blood and Cacciatore | Cross-sectional retrospective online survey | October 2011–April 2012 | Primarily US participants | 1–54 years (75% within past 6 years) | 123 | Study included parents of children who had died. Mothers and fathers both included (96% female respondents) | 36 ‘late miscarriage’ (15–26 weeks) 87 ‘stillborn or perinatal death’ (27 weeks to 6 days) |
| Type of contact assessed | Post mortem photography | ||||||
| Eligible outcomes assessed | Satisfaction with decision to have post mortem photography | ||||||
| Cacciatore | Cross-sectional retrospective online survey | February 2004–September 2005 | USA (72%), UK (11%), Australia (9%), Canada (5%) | <1–3+ years | 2292 | Volunteers recruited from relevant organisation websites and forums | From 20 weeks’ gestation |
| Type of contact assessed | Holding, dressing/washing the stillborn infant | ||||||
| Eligible outcomes assessed | Anxiety and depression (25-item Hopkins Symptom Check List, HSCL | ||||||
| Crawley | Cross-sectional retrospective online survey | February 2010–July 2010 | UK | 0–10 years | 162 | Women who were at least 18 years old and gave birth in the UK in the past 10 years to a stillborn baby of at least 20 weeks gestation | From 20 weeks gestation |
| Type of contact assessed | Making memories (analyses by ‘number of memory-making activities’). Activities included: seeing baby, holding, naming, holding a funeral, creating memory box, taking photos, scattering ashes, family seeing baby, hand/footprints, taking a lock of hair, dressing the baby, others seeing the baby, bathing the baby, taking the baby home | ||||||
| Eligible outcomes assessed | Depression and anxiety in the past month (Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale; DASS-21 | ||||||
| Fink | Cross-sectional retrospective online survey | March 2008–December 2008 | Primarily US participants | 0–2 years | 498 | Women at least 18 years of age who had experienced a stillbirth in the past 2 years | Not reported |
| Type of contact assessed | Given the opportunity to hold the baby (actual holding not reported). Memory box or received other mementos | ||||||
| Eligible outcomes assessed | Perinatal Grief Scale (PGS | ||||||
| Gravensteen | Cross-sectional retrospective postal survey | 2008–2009 | Norway (women from 2 hospitals) | 5–18 years | 101 | Women who had a verified diagnosis of stillbirth (≥23 weeks’ gestation or ≥500 g) in a singleton or twin pregnancy between 1 January 1990 and 31 December 2003 | From 23 weeks’ gestation |
| Type of contact assessed | Holding the infant. Other memory-making activities assessed and proportion engaged in, reported by number of comparisons conducted (activities included: photographs, hand/footprint, naming, memorial or funeral, having the baby buried in a grave) | ||||||
| Eligible outcomes assessed | Post-traumatic Stress Symptoms (Impact of Event Scale, IES | ||||||
| Hughes | Longitudinal (although still retrospective with regard to holding), interview and survey | Time 1: not reported | UK (women from 3 district general hospitals) | T1: 10 months–5 years (Median gap between loss and expected delivery date 18.5 months) | T1: 65 | Pregnant women (who had subsequent live birth), who had no previous live children Excluded women in treatment for physical or mental illness and those whose stillbirth was the result of elective termination for abnormality | From 18 weeks’ gestation |
| Type of contact assessed | Holding the infant. Other contact assessed but comparisons not reported. | ||||||
| Eligible outcomes assessed | Postnatal depression (Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale, EPDS | ||||||
| Kuti and Ilesanmi | Cross-sectional retrospective interviewer-administered questionnaire | January–June 2009 | Nigeria (University teaching hospital) | 6 months–16 years | 45 | Women registered for prenatal care who had a previous stillborn infant | Not explicitly reported (Nigerian definition of stillbirth: >1 kg or 28 weeks’ gestation) |
| Type of contact assessed | Holding the infant. Other memory-making activities including: taking photos, obtaining mementos, naming infant. | ||||||
| Eligible outcomes assessed | Maternal self-assessment of ‘recovery’ from stillbirth. Satisfaction with decision to see/hold infant. | ||||||
| Lasker and Toedter | Longitudinal interview and survey | 1984–1989 | Pennsylvania, USA | Interviews at T1: 2 months | 138 mothers (56 partners) | Women who had attended public or private service provider and who had experienced a pregnancy loss or neonatal death | From 16 weeks’ gestation |
| Type of contact assessed | Holding the infant. Other memory making activities including: taking and keeping pictures, holding a funeral or memorial service | ||||||
| Eligible outcomes assessed | Perinatal Grief Scale (PGS | ||||||
| Rådestad | Cross-sectional retrospective nationally representative postal questionnaire | October–November 1994 | Sweden | 3 years post-stillbirth | 314 | Women who had a singleton stillbirth in Sweden in 1991 | From 28 weeks’ gestation |
| Type of contact assessed | Holding the infant. Other memory-making activities included: time with the baby, kissed/caressed, dressed the baby, had photo taken, kept token of remembrance | ||||||
| Eligible outcomes assessed | Anxiety (assessed using both state and trait aspects of the Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, STAI | ||||||
| Rådestad | Cross-sectional retrospective postal questionnaire | 2001 | Stockholm, Sweden | 3 months after discharge | 33 | Nordic-born women who had a singleton stillbirth | From 22 weeks gestation |
| Type of contact assessed | Holding the infant | ||||||
| Eligible outcomes assessed | Fear, regret, tenderness, warmth, pride, insecurity, discomfort, grief assessed on a Likert-scale from 0 (not at all) to 4 (very much) | ||||||
Risk of bias in included studies
| Study ID | Sample representa tiveness* | Adequacy of exposure measurement† | Completeness of outcome data‡ | Selective outcome reporting | Other bias | Comparability of exposed and non-exposed participants | Adequacy of statistical methods and confounder adjustment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bennett | High | Low | Low | Unclear | – | Unclear | High |
| Blood and Cacciatore | High | Low | Low | Unclear | – | Unclear | High |
| Cacciatore | High | Low | Low | Unclear | – | High | Low |
| Crawley | High | Low | Low | Unclear | High | Unclear | Moderate |
| Fink | High | High | Low | Unclear | – | Unclear | High |
| Gravensteen | High | Low | Low | Unclear | – | Unclear | Moderate |
| Hughes | High | Low | Low | High | – | Unclear | High |
| Kuti and Ilesanmi | High | Low | Low | Unclear | – | Unclear | High |
| Lasker and Toedter | High | Low | Low | Unclear | High | Unclear | High |
| Rådestad | Low | Low | Low | Unclear | – | Moderate | Low |
| Rådestad | High | Low | Low | Unclear | – | Unclear | High |
*Reflected through adequate recruitment, exclusion criteria, response rates and comparability to wider birthing or stillbirth population.
†Adequacy of the assessment of contact with the stillborn infant. ‡Attrition bias.
Impact of holding the stillborn baby on primary and secondary outcomes
| Study ID | N | Time since stillbirth | Outcomes assessed | Measure of effect* | Adjustment for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bennett | 55 | 0–5 years, mean=35 months | Complicated Grief (ICG) | d=−0.02 (−0.66 to 0.62)† | None |
| PTSD symptoms (PCL) | d=0.17 (−0.47 to 0.81)† | ||||
| Depression/anxiety (combined PGS, Brief Symptom Inventory) | d=0.17 (−0.47 to 0.81)† | ||||
| Satisfaction with decision to hold baby | Of the 78% of the sample who held their baby, 85% of women reported this to be extremely helpful | ||||
| Cacciatore | 2292 | <1–3+ years | Anxiety (HSCL) | Not currently pregnant: OR 0.68 (0.49 to 0.95) | Gestation of stillbirth (by trimester) |
| Depression (HSCL) | Not currently pregnant: OR 0.72 (0.51 to 1.02) | ||||
| Satisfaction with decision to hold baby | 99.5% of 2035 mothers who held their baby were glad they did | None | |||
| Crawley | 162 | 0–10 years, median 18.5 months | Depression in the past month (DASS-21) | Authors collapsed comparisons across holding the infant and memory-making activities (including photographs, hand/footprints, creating memory box) as a single variable. Authors reported no relationship between memory-making and mental health outcomes. Data not shown and proportions/effect sizes not reported | |
| Anxiety in the past month (DASS-21) | |||||
| PTSD symptoms in the past month (PSSS) | |||||
| Gravensteen | 101 | 5–18 years | Post-traumatic Stress Symptoms (IES) | OR 0.17 (0.05 to 0.56) | Maternal age, parity, induced abortion prior to stillbirth |
| Satisfaction with decision to hold baby | 86% of mothers who held their baby reported ‘it felt good’ | None | |||
| Hughes | T1: 65 | T1: 10 months to -5 years (median 18.5 months) | Depression (EPDS >14)/(EPDS continuous) | T1: OR 4.18 (1.19 to 14.69)/d=0.48 (−0.009 to 0.98)‡ | None |
| Anxiety (STAI state >44)/(continuous) | T1: OR 2.67 (0.87 to 8.17)/d=0.51 (0.01 to 1.00)‡ | None | |||
| PTSD-1 interview (diagnosis met)/(continuous)§ | T1: OR 4.35 (0.84 to 22.63)/d=0.59 (0.05 to 1.09)‡§ | None | |||
| Marital separation | T3: OR 4.50 (1.23 to 16.49)‡ | None | |||
| Kuti and Ilesanmi | 45 | 6 months to 16 years | Maternal self-assessment of ‘recovery’ from stillbirth | No mothers were given the opportunity to hold the baby and thus comparisons could not be conducted | |
| Satisfaction with decision to hold infant | 8 (17.8%) of women wished they had had the opportunity to hold their infant | ||||
| Lasker and Toedter | 138 | T1: 2 months | Postnatal grief (PGS) | Postnatal grief outcome was only evaluated using a combined variable representing the total number of interventions, thus the individual impact of any single intervention cannot be determined | |
| Satisfaction with decision to hold infant (time 1) | Early fetal death (16–28 weeks): no significant difference in satisfaction with decision | None, results split by gestation of stillbirth | |||
| Rådestad | 314 | 3 years | Anxiety (STAI state) | 28–37 weeks’ gestation: OR 0.70 (0.30 to 1.66) | None (only education significantly differed between those who held and those who did not) |
| Depression (CES-D) (dichotomous, scores above 90th centile) | 28–37 weeks’ gestation: OR 0.50 (0.20 to 1.30) | ||||
| Backache, stomach problems, headache, tachycardia, chest pressure, panic attacks, nausea or fainting, weakness, sleep disturbances, situation in home and family, situation at work, health, leisure time, physical fitness, appetite, temper, energy, patience, self-confidence | No significant differences with the exception of: 28–37 weeks’ gestation: stomach problems: OR 0.10 (0.02 to 0.94) | ||||
| Rådestad | 33 | 3 months | Fear, regret, tenderness, warmth, pride, insecurity, discomfort, grief | 94% of 33 women held their baby | None—follow-up comparisons according to gestation of stillbirth |
*Where possible standardised mean differences (d) or ORs and 95% CIs were calculated.
†Calculated using study reported frequencies and correlations.
‡Calculated using study reported mean and SD for continuous outcomes, and study reported frequencies for dichotomous outcomes.
§Based on proportions reported in Hughes et al20 (proportions for time 1 and 2 PTSD differ between refs 3 and 20).
BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; CES-D, Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale; DASS-21, Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale; DSM, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; EPDS, Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale; HSCL, 25-item Hopkins Symptom Check List; ICG, Inventory of Complicated Grief; IES, Impact of Event Scale; PCL, PTSD Checklist; PGS, perinatal grief scale; PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder; SCID, Structured Clinical Interview for DSM Disorders; STAI, Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventor.
Impact of other contact with the stillborn baby on primary and secondary outcomes
| Study ID | N | Time since stillbirth | Outcomes assessed | Measure of effect* | Adjustment for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bennett | 55 | 0–5 years, mean=35 months | Complicated grief (ICG) | Taking pictures of infant: d=−0.29 (−0.97 to 0.40)† | None |
| PTSD symptoms (PCL) | Taking pictures of infant: d=−0.16 (−0.84 to 0.53)† | ||||
| Depression/anxiety (combined PGS, BSI) | Taking pictures of infant: d=0.08 (−0.61 to 0.76)† | ||||
| Satisfaction with decision to take pictures of the baby | Of the 82% of the sample who had photos taken of their baby, 75% reported this was extremely helpful | ||||
| Blood and Cacciatore | 123 | 1–54 years (75% within past 6 years) | Satisfaction with decision to have post mortem photography | Only 9 of 123 parents did not have post mortem photography. Only 1 of the 9 was content not having post-mortem photographs | None |
| Cacciatore | 2292 | <1–3+ years | Anxiety (HSCL) | Dressed or washed baby: not currently pregnant: OR 0.88 (0.68 to 1.13) | Gestation of stillbirth (by trimester), Maternal age |
| Depression (HSCL) | Not currently pregnant: OR 1.02 (0.80 to 1.30) | ||||
| Satisfaction with decision to wash or dress baby | 98.3% of 473 mothers who dressed or washed their stillborn baby were glad they did | None | |||
| Crawley | 162 | 0–10 years, Median 18.5 months | Authors collapsed comparisons across holding the infant and memory-making activities (including photographs, hand/footprints, creating memory box) as a single variable. Authors reported no relationship between memory making and outcomes | ||
| Fink | 498 | 0–2 years | Postnatal grief (PGS) | Being given the option to hold the baby was not significantly correlated with PGS (0.04, p>0.05) | Stepwise regression included: living children, race, pregnancy history, autopsy, hospital disposal, opportunity to talk about baby, clear communication from care providers |
| Gravensteen | 101 | 5–18 years | Post-traumatic Stress Symptoms (IES) | Having an arranged memorial was not significantly associated with IES scores | |
| Kuti and Ilesanmi | 45 | 6 months–16 years | Maternal self-assessment of ‘recovery’ from stillbirth | No mothers were given the opportunity have other contact with the infant | |
| Satisfaction with other contact with the infant | 2 (4.4%) of the women reported wished they had the opportunity to take photos of their infant | ||||
| Lasker and Toedter | 138 | T1: 2 months | Postnatal grief (PGS) | Postnatal grief outcome was only evaluated using a combined variable representing the total number of interventions, thus the individual impact of any single intervention cannot be determined | |
| Satisfaction with decision to have contact with infant (time 1) | Mothers who were given a picture of the baby were more satisfied with this decision, as were those who had a death certificate, and those who named the baby for both those who had an early or late fetal death (proportions not reported) | None, results split by gestation of stillbirth | |||
| Rådestad | 314 | 3 years | Depression (CES-D) (dichotomous, scores above 90th centile) | Not being with the baby as long as wished: RR 6.9 (2.4 to 19.8) | Maternal education, employment and marital status |
*Where possible standardised mean differences (d) or ORs and 95% CIs were calculated.
†Calculated using study reported frequencies and correlations.
BSI, Brief Symptom Inventory 18; CES-D, Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale; HSCL, 25-item Hopkins Symptom Check List; ICG, Inventory of Complicated Grief; IES, Impact of Event Scale; PCL, PTSD Checklist; PGS, perinatal grief scale; PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder.
Summary of included moderators/subgroup comparisons
| Study ID | Time since stillbirth | Women pregnant at outcome assessment | Subsequent live birth/s | Gestation of stillbirth | Time from antepartum death to birth/ or condition of infant | Level of support for contact provided by staff |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bennett | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Blood and Cacciatore | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Cacciatore | – | + | / | / | + | / |
| Crawley | – | * | – | – | – | – |
| Fink | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Gravensteen | – | * | – | – | – | – |
| Hughes | + | † | ‡ | – | – | – |
| Kuti and Ilesanmi | – | – | – | – | – | – |
| Lasker and Toedter | – | – | – | + | – | – |
| Rådestad | – | / | / | + | / | / |
| Rådestad | – | – | – | + | – | – |
+, Subgroup comparison or moderation analysis provided. /, variable measured but no subgroup comparison or moderation analysis. –, variable not measured.
*None pregnant at outcome assessment.
†All pregnant at outcome assessment.
‡All women had a subsequent live birth.