| Literature DB >> 32422977 |
Cayetano Fernández-Sola1,2, Marcos Camacho-Ávila3,4, José Manuel Hernández-Padilla1,5, Isabel María Fernández-Medina1, Francisca Rosa Jiménez-López1, Encarnación Hernández-Sánchez4,6, María Belén Conesa-Ferrer7, José Granero-Molina1,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Perinatal death (PD) is a painful experience, with physical, psychological and social consequences in families. Each year, there are 2.7 million perinatal deaths in the world and about 2000 in Spain. The aim of this study was to explore, describe and understand the impact of perinatal death on parents' social and family life.Entities:
Keywords: disenfranchised grief; parents care; perinatal death; perinatal grief; qualitative research
Year: 2020 PMID: 32422977 PMCID: PMC7277582 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17103421
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Socio-demographic data of the participants (N = 21).
| Participant | Age | Sex | Nationality | Employment | Elder Children (Age Range) | Previous Loss (n) | Moment of Death | Age of Baby |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P-1 | 26 | Female | Colombian | Employed | No | No | Intra-natal 1 | 40 weeks |
| P-2 | 43 | Female | Colombian | Unemployed | Yes | No | Ante-natal 2 | 30 weeks |
| P-3 | 38 | Female | Spanish | Employed | Yes | Yes (2) | Intra-natal | 24 weeks |
| P-4 | 38 | Male | Spanish | Employed | No | Yes (2) | Intra-natal | 24 weeks |
| P-5 | 37 | Female | Spanish | Employed | Yes | No | Ante-natal | 34 weeks |
| P-6 | 43 | Female | Spanish | Employed | Yes | No | Post-natal 3 | 6 days |
| P-7 | 43 | Male | Spanish | Employed | No | No | Post-natal | 6 days |
| P-8 | 33 | Female | Spanish | Employed | No | No | Post-natal | 3 days |
| P-9 | 33 | Male | Spanish | Employed | No | No | Post-natal | 3 days |
| P-10 | 31 | Female | Ecuadorian | Unemployed | Yes | Yes (1) | Ante-natal | 28 weeks |
| P-11 | 26 | Male | Spanish | Employed | No | No | Ante-natal | 40 weeks |
| P-12 | 30 | Female | Spanish | Unemployed | Yes | No | Ante-natal | 40 weeks |
| P-13 | 36 | Female | Spanish | Employed | No | No | Intra-natal | 24 weeks |
| P-14 | 33 | Female | Spanish | Employed | No | No | Ante-natal | 36 weeks |
| P-15 | 37 | Female | Spanish | Employed | No | Yes (1) | Ante-natal | 34 weeks |
| P-16 | 37 | Female | Spanish | Unemployed | Yes | No | Ante-natal | 38 weeks |
| P-17 | 38 | Male | Spanish | Employed | Yes | Yes (1) | Ante-natal | 38 weeks |
| P-18 | 38 | Male | Spanish | Employed | Yes | Yes (1) | Ante-natal | 37 weeks |
| P-19 | 35 | Female | Spanish | Employed | Yes | No | Ante-natal | 37 weeks |
| P-20 | 35 | Male | Spanish | Employed | No | No | Ante-natal | 38 weeks |
| P-21 | 37 | Male | Spanish | Employed | No | No | Ante-natal | 25 weeks |
1 Intranatal death: fetus death during birth. 2 Antenatal death: fetus death between 22 weeks of gestation and birth. 3 Postnatal death: baby’s death between birth and the first week of life.
Interview protocol.
| Stage | Subject | Content/Example Questions |
|---|---|---|
| Introduction | Motives, reasons | Knowing their experiences to be able to help other parents in their situation. |
| Ethical issues | Inform about volunteering, recording, consent, possibility of dropping out. | |
| Beginning | Introductory question | Tell me your experience. What happened to you? |
| Development | Conversation guide | How has your baby’s death affected your family? |
| Closing | Final question | Is there anything else you’d like to tell me? |
| Appreciation | Thank them for taking part. Remind them of how their testimony will be used and tell them we are at their disposition. |
Example of the codification process.
| Quote | Initial Codes | Unit of Meaning | Subtheme | Theme |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Father: encourage, Father: protect, Father: fall apart | Father: Role of protector | The father: struggle between conserving the stereotypical protective role and succumbing to the pain | Perinatal death shakes up the family dynamics | |
| Other children: take greater care of them. Other children: fear of something happening to them. Other children: notice over-protection | Siblings: over-protection | Elder siblings: between over-protection and abandonment |
Themes, subthemes and units of meaning.
| Main Theme | Subtheme | Units of Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| Perinatal death affects family dynamics | The father: struggle between conserving the stereotypical protective role and succumbing to pain. | Masculine figure. Feelings. Father: lack of support. Father: traditional role. Father: protective role. Support. Father: forgetting. |
| Elder siblings: feeling over-protected or abandoned | Siblings: overprotection. Abandonment of children. Affecting siblings. Siblings: concealment. Brothers: self-protection. Siblings: memories. Siblings: making a drawing. | |
| New pregnancies dominated by fear: medicalization and avoidance | Fear of new pregnancy. Avoiding new pregnancy. Medicalization. New pregnancy. Fear. Panic. Repressing desires. | |
| Between strengthening and weakening of the link between the couple. | Marriage. Increase in quarrels. Alteration of sexual relations. Strengthening of bond. | |
| The social environment of the parents is severely affected after perinatal death | Impact of perinatal death on the extended family. | Affecting family. Grief of grandparents. Weeping. Solidarity. Seeing their own children suffering. |
| Work impact: lose a child, lose a job. | Loss of job. Reduction of remuneration. | |
| Social impact: between disallowing grief and remembering pain. | Unrecognized grief. Inappropriate social messages. Social isolation. Avoiding the presence of children. |