| Literature DB >> 31856748 |
Marcos Camacho-Ávila1, Cayetano Fernández-Sola2,3, Francisca Rosa Jiménez-López4, José Granero-Molina4,5, Isabel María Fernández-Medina6, Laura Martínez-Artero7, José Manuel Hernández-Padilla4,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Perinatal grief is a process that affects families in biological, psychological, social and spiritual terms. It is estimated that every year there are 2.7 million perinatal deaths worldwide and 4.43 deaths for every 1000 births in Spain. The aim of this study is to describe and understand the experiences and perceptions of parents who have suffered a perinatal death.Entities:
Keywords: Perinatal death; Perinatal grief; Qualitative research; Stillbirth
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31856748 PMCID: PMC6923983 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-019-2666-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Socio-demographic data of the sample
| Participant | Nationality | Education | Employment | Time of death | Baby’s age | Time since death of baby | Place of interview |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P-1 | Colombian | Secondary | Employed | Intrapartum | 40 weeks | 12 months | Health Centre |
| P-2 | Colombian | Secondary | Unemployed | Antepartum | 30 weeks | 36 months | Health Centre |
| P-3 | Spanish | Secondary | Employed | Intrapartum | 24 weeks | 48 months | Health Centre |
| P-4 | Spanish | University | Employed | Intrapartum | 24 weeks | 48 months | Health Centre |
| P-5 | Spanish | Secondary | Employed | Antepartum | 34 weeks | 60 months | Health Centre |
| P-6 | Spanish | University | Employed | Postpartum | 6 days | 5 months | Health Centre |
| P-7 | Spanish | University | Employed | Postpartum | 6 days | 5 months | Health Centre |
| P-8 | Spanish | Primary | Employed | Postpartum | 3 days | 18 months | Home |
| P-9 | Spanish | Primary | Employed | Postpartum | 3 days | 18 months | Home |
| P-10 | Ecuadorian | Secondary | Unemployed | Antepartum | 28 weeks | 24 months | Health Centre |
| P-11 | Spanish | Primary | Employed | Antepartum | 40 weeks | 18 months | Home |
| P-12 | Spanish | Primary | Unemployed | Antepartum | 40 weeks | 18 months | Home |
| P-13 | Spanish | Secondary | Employed | Intrapartum | 24 weeks | 30 months | Health Centre |
| P-14 | Spanish | University | Employed | Antepartum | 36 weeks | 6 months | Health Centre |
| P-15 | Spanish | Primary | Employed | Antepartum | 34 weeks | 24 months | Health Centre |
| P-16 | Spanish | Secondary | Unemployed | Antepartum | 38 weeks | 36 months | Home |
| P-17 | Spanish | Primary | Employed | Antepartum | 38 weeks | 36 months | Home |
| P-18 | Spanish | Primary | Employed | Antepartum | 37 weeks | 3 months | Hospital |
| P-19 | Spanish | Secondary | Employed | Antepartum | 37 weeks | 3 months | Hospital |
| P-20 | Spanish | Secondary | Employed | Antepartum | 38 weeks | 36 months | Health Centre |
| P-21 | Spanish | University | Employed | Antepartum | 25 weeks | 15 months | Hospital |
Age range: 26–43 years old. Standard deviation: 4.76 years
Summary of themes, sub-themes and units of meaning
| Theme | Subtheme | Units of meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Perceiving the threat and anticipating the death: “Something is wrong with my pregnancy” | “This could end badly.” Medical history as a threat and a source of uncertainty | Medical history, infertility treatment, high-risk pregnancy, repeated miscarriage, vulnerability of the pregnancy, frequenting emergency services, suspicion |
| Anticipating the death. From suspicion to confirmation | Warning signs, having a hunch, lack of movement, decreased movement, contractions, pain, worry, fear, helplessness | |
| Emotional outpouring: the shock of losing a baby and the pain of giving birth to a stillborn baby | Emotional shock upon notification of the baby’s death | Notification, non-verbal language, silence, serious expression, scarce explanation, hopelessness, disbelief, anguish, anger, emptiness, insurmountable pain. |
| Giving birth to a stillborn baby: a doubly painful labour process for families | Caesarean, inducing labour, vaginal birth, extra suffering, not seeing the stillborn baby, anger about disregard from professionals, reassuring, professionalism | |
| Loneliness and lack of information as aggravating factors in the pain of the loss | Receiving the news alone, lack of information, unclear diagnosis, knowing the reason, demanding information, alleviating the pain, overcoming feelings of guilt | |
| “We have had a baby.” The need to give the baby an identity and legitimacy to the grief | Saying goodbye to the deceased baby, having the baby’s footprint, keeping the memory of the baby alive | Seeing the deceased baby, embracing the baby, having photographs, keeping a footprint, saying final goodbyes, need for identification, need for recognition as a part of the family |
| Mourning rituals. The importance of respecting individual beliefs | Baptism, cremation, burial, spiritual suffering, non-recognition, refusing baptism, keeping the ashes, having a meaningful place to visit the deceased, remembering the experience. | |
| Bureaucracy and administrative language as obstacles in the mourning process. | Administrative slowness, misinformation about administrative processes, inappropriate language, referring to the baby as a foetus, denying registry, denial of the existence, identification as a deceased baby. |