| Literature DB >> 31406896 |
Erfina Erfina1,2,3, Widyawati Widyawati1,4, Lisa McKenna3, Sonia Reisenhofer3, Djauhar Ismail1,5.
Abstract
A woman experiences heightened vulnerability and faces tremendous challenges when transitioning to motherhood. This is exacerbated for young mothers and studies have shown that adolescent mothers experience an increased burden of responsibility during the transition to motherhood. Recent research addressing the experiences of adolescent mothers has increased. However, the current literature on this topic is still fragmented. The aim of this study was to conduct an integrative review of the literature to explore adolescent mothers' experiences of transition to motherhood and identify associated factors. The literature was searched using electronic databases: Medline, Cumulative index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), ProQuest, Scopus and PubMed. Relevant articles published in English from February 2005 to 2018 were included. Eighteen articles were included in the analysis. Based on this review, factors influencing a successful to transition to motherhood for adolescents included physical problems related to birth and breastfeeding, psychological well-being, ability to care for their baby, social support, education and economic strain and the provision of healthcare. The literature indicated a relationship between social supports and the development of positive maternal identity in the transition period for adolescent motherhood. Future healthcare interventions for adolescent mothers during the transitional period should aim to provide social support and the increase ability of adolescent mothers to manage the physical and psychological challenges of young motherhood, and enhance new mothers' knowledge about caring for babies.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent; Motherhood; Role; Social support
Year: 2019 PMID: 31406896 PMCID: PMC6608651 DOI: 10.1016/j.ijnss.2019.03.013
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Nurs Sci ISSN: 2352-0132
Fig. 1The Flow chart describing details of literature search and selection strategy.
Details of studies in this review.
| Authors (Year) | Country | Aim of the study | Design and methods | Sample and settings | Key findings | Quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mohammadi N et al. (2016) [ | Iran | To explore the experience of pregnancy in Iranian teenage women | An interpretive phenomenological study | 11 adolescent mothers aged 15–17 years | Fast development Dual self-perception positive self- perception on becoming pregnant, negative self- perception such as feeling doubt to manage responsibilities as mothers | High |
| Ngum Chi Watts M et al. (2015) [ | Australia | To solicit lived experiences of African Australian young refugee women who had experienced early motherhood in Australia | Qualitative study | 16 African Australian teenagers who had refugee backgrounds | Mixed feelings and experiences, positive feelings: sense of maturity and responsibility, Complete their school education, Social economy strain, Feeling stress and regret, Family support, support from friends and wide community | High |
| Mangeli M et al. (2017) [ | Iran | To explore the challenges encountered by Iranian adolescent mothers during the transition to motherhood | Qualitative study | 16 adolescent within ages of 14–18 at the time of childbirth | Increasing burden of responsibility Experiencing physical problems, Receiving insufficient support, Inefficiency in maternal role, Emotional and mental distress; Role conflict | High |
| Sheeran N et al. (2016) [ | Australia | To explicate the experience of being a mother for adolescent women who experienced a preterm or term birth in Australia. | Interpretative phenomenological study | 14 primiparous women aged 15–19 years | Birth status did not meaningfully differentiate on being a mother Transforming to be good mother | High |
| Copeland R et al. (2017) [ | Costa Rica | To gain a better understanding of the lived experiences of mothers, as well as the kinds of support they received during and after the pregnancy | Qualitative study | 22 women who had become pregnant in adolescence (before the age of 18 years) | Family support was the most important factor in mitigating adolescent experiences of stress Feeling positive towards baby Negative feeling about their choices related to the pregnancy | High |
| Malette J et al. (2015) [ | USA | To explain the relationships between prenatal and post birth father involvement, inter-parental relationship quality, and maternal identity. | Cross-sectional study | 125 mothers aged from 14 to 19 years | Father's involvement associated with adolescent mothers' maternal identity | Average |
| Sheeran N et al. (2015) [ | Australia | To understanding of the daily experience of being a young mother for Australian young women who had preterm infants | Qualitative interpretive phenomenological | 14 primiparous women aged 15–19 years | Joy and delight: Love their infant Infant need and behaviors Emotional rollercoaster and lack of embodied interaction with preterm birth because of “absence of baby” Economy strain Social support | High |
| Harrison ME et al. (2017) [ | Canada | To share pregnant and parenting youths' experiences with health care to inform recommendations for promoting youth- friendly medical encounters | Qualitative descriptive study | 26 mothers aged 19 years or younger | Negative and positive health care encounters | High |
| Hunter L et al. (2015) [ | UK | To explore how the inpatient experiences of a group of young women who gave birth as teenagers influenced their feeding decisions and experiences, and ascertain their ideals for breastfeeding support | Qualitative study | 15 women aged 16–20 years | Feeling tired after birth, Need relation support Discomfort | High |
| Gyesaw N et al. (2013) [ | Ghana | To explores the experiences of adolescent mothers during pregnancy, childbirth, and care of their newborns | Qualitative study | 54 teenage mothers aged 14–19 years | Reasons for becoming pregnant, Caring for baby Physical problem (Pain after birth) | High |
| Salusky I et al. (2013) [ | Dominican Republic | To understand the experience of becoming a mother at an early age in a group of marginal young women | Qualitative study | 21 young mothers who became pregnant before aged 18 years. | Motivational forces resulting in early motherhood (partner and educational barriers) Feelings surrounding pregnancy and childbirth (mixed emotions) Motherhood was a mark of pride Challenges of economic and educational attainment Unconditional love for baby | High |
| Wilson-Mitchell et al. (2014) [ | Jamaica | To explore the experiences and impact of pregnancy on pregnant adolescents' psychological health | Mixed method | 30 pregnant adolescent 16 years and older | Social support from family, partner and friend Community support system Psychological distress Positive and negative perceptions of health services | High |
| Klingberg-Allvin et al. (2008) [ | Vietnam | To explores married Vietnamese adolescents' perceptions and experiences related to transition into motherhood and their encounter with health care service | Qualitative study | 22 women younger than 20 who were either pregnant or had newly delivered | Ambivalence in the transition to motherhood Support from husband and extended family Lacking power with regard to decisions in relation to pregnancy, delivery, and contraceptive usage | High |
| DeVito J. (2010) [ | USA | To explore and better understand first-time adolescent mothers' meanings and experiences of parenting during the 4-to-6 week postpartum period | Qualitative study | 126 adolescent mothers | Struggle with between their development and being new mother, isolation and despair to maternal role, growing up | Average |
| Roberts S et al. (2011) [ | Australia | To explore the lived experiences and social context prior to becoming pregnant, of women who became mothers during adolescence in rural Victoria | Qualitative interpretive phenomenological | Four mothers aged between 16 and 20 years | Feeling isolated, Feeling dissatisfied Life change: Transition into adulthood understanding in sexual relationship | Average |
| Wahn E et al.(2005) [ | Sweden | To describe the perspectives, experiences, and reasoning about becoming and being a teenage mother by Swedish teenage girls. | Qualitative study | 20 pregnant and parenting girl aged 15–19 years | Becoming teenage mother (Social economy problem, family pattern) Positive transition (feel maturity) Supportive relationship (relevant support from families, friends and society) | High |
| Ngai FW et al. (2015) [ | Hong Kong | To explore Chinese women's perceptions of maternal role competence and factors contributing to maternal role competence during early motherhood. | Exploratory descriptive study | 26 mothers at six weeks postpartum aged 18 years or above | Lack knowledge and experiences of infant care Social support Contradictory information Commitment to caring for physical and emotional well-being of child | High |
| DeVito J. (2007) [ | USA | To investigate factors that may contribute to self-perceptions of parenting in adolescent mothers during the 4- to 6-week post-partum period | Descriptive correlational design | 126 adolescent mothers under 20 years of age, 4–6 weeks postpartum | Social support from her mother and the baby's father. Education attainment in the future | High |
Fig. 2Factors that influence the motherhood transition of adolescent women.