| Literature DB >> 29940827 |
Anna C Meyer1, Constance Opoku2, Katherine J Gold3.
Abstract
Despite the high rate of infant mortality in Ghana, few studies have explored the maternal experience of infant loss and the perinatal grieving process. As part of a larger study that interviewed 153 mothers with a sick infant, this 1-year follow-up study reinterviewed eight mothers from the original cohort whose infant died since the study began. Mothers were queried about mental health, coping, and cultural issues related to the loss. Mothers were often discouraged from speaking or thinking about the death due to fear of psychological harm and impact on fertility. Primary coping mechanisms involved seeking support within the community and accepting the loss as God's will. Mothers desired more communication from health-care providers at the time of death. Despite the cultural norm of silent acceptance in the face of perinatal loss, intense maternal grief and desire to mourn may allow more opportunities for health-care workers to support bereaved mothers.Entities:
Keywords: Ghana; bereavement; death and dying; infant loss; infant mortality; low-resource country; perinatal death; qualitative research
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 29940827 DOI: 10.1177/0030222816629165
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Omega (Westport) ISSN: 0030-2228