Tommy Carlsson1, Gunnar Bergman2, Anna-Malin Karlsson3, Barbro Wadensten4, Elisabet Mattsson5. 1. Department of Public Health and Caring Sciences, Uppsala University, SE-75122, Uppsala, Sweden. Electronic address: tommy.carlsson@pubcare.uu.se. 2. Department of Women's and Children's Health, Karolinska Institutet, SE-17176, Stockholm, Sweden. 3. Department of Scandinavian Languages, Uppsala University, SE-75120, Uppsala, Sweden. 4. Department of Public Health and Caring Sciences, Uppsala University, SE-75122, Uppsala, Sweden. 5. Department of Public Health and Caring Sciences, Uppsala University, SE-75122, Uppsala, Sweden; Department of Health Care Sciences, Ersta Sköndal University College, SE-10061, Stockholm, Sweden.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: to explore experiences described by posters in Swedish virtual communities before, during and after termination of pregnancy due to a fetal anomaly. DESIGN: cross-sectional qualitative study of messages in virtual communities. The messages were purposefully selected in 2014 and analyzed with inductive qualitative manifest content analysis. SETTING: two large and active Swedish virtual communities. SAMPLE: 1623 messages from 122 posters (112 females, 1 male, and 9 did not disclose their sex), written between 2008 and 2014. The majority of the posters were females (91%) with recent experience of termination of pregnancy following different prenatal diagnoses (63% less than one year since the termination). MEASUREMENTS AND FINDINGS: before the termination, posters experienced an emotional shock and a difficult decision. During the termination, they needed compassionate care from present caregivers, experienced intense emotional and physical pain, lacked an understanding about the abortion, and expressed varied feelings about the option to view the fetus. After the termination, posters used different strategies to come to terms with and accept the decision, experienced a perinatal loss, expressed fears of recurrence, and longed for a new child. KEY CONCLUSIONS: spanning across the time before, during and after the abortion, women who terminate a pregnancy due to a fetal anomaly express considerable physical and emotional pain, with psychosocial and reproductive consequences. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: information and preparation, including the decision whether or not to view the fetus, are important aspects to consider when caring for individuals who have decided to terminate a pregnancy for a fetal anomaly. The findings indicate a need for structures that offer support to women who suffer from fears of recurrence in future pregnancies.
OBJECTIVE: to explore experiences described by posters in Swedish virtual communities before, during and after termination of pregnancy due to a fetal anomaly. DESIGN: cross-sectional qualitative study of messages in virtual communities. The messages were purposefully selected in 2014 and analyzed with inductive qualitative manifest content analysis. SETTING: two large and active Swedish virtual communities. SAMPLE: 1623 messages from 122 posters (112 females, 1 male, and 9 did not disclose their sex), written between 2008 and 2014. The majority of the posters were females (91%) with recent experience of termination of pregnancy following different prenatal diagnoses (63% less than one year since the termination). MEASUREMENTS AND FINDINGS: before the termination, posters experienced an emotional shock and a difficult decision. During the termination, they needed compassionate care from present caregivers, experienced intense emotional and physical pain, lacked an understanding about the abortion, and expressed varied feelings about the option to view the fetus. After the termination, posters used different strategies to come to terms with and accept the decision, experienced a perinatal loss, expressed fears of recurrence, and longed for a new child. KEY CONCLUSIONS: spanning across the time before, during and after the abortion, women who terminate a pregnancy due to a fetal anomaly express considerable physical and emotional pain, with psychosocial and reproductive consequences. IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: information and preparation, including the decision whether or not to view the fetus, are important aspects to consider when caring for individuals who have decided to terminate a pregnancy for a fetal anomaly. The findings indicate a need for structures that offer support to women who suffer from fears of recurrence in future pregnancies.
Authors: Tommy Carlsson; Ulla Melander Marttala; Barbro Wadensten; Gunnar Bergman; Ove Axelsson; Elisabet Mattsson Journal: Interact J Med Res Date: 2017-09-12