| Literature DB >> 34090407 |
Effat Mazaheri1, Akram Ghahramanian2, Leila Valizadeh3, Vahid Zamanzadeh4, Tonia C Onyeka5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Defining the disrupted mothering would contribute to developing strategies to support mothers with breast cancer. The aim of this study was to analyze the concept of mothering disruption using a hybrid model.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; Cancer nursing; Disrupted mothering; Hybrid concept analysis; Iran; Maternal role
Year: 2021 PMID: 34090407 PMCID: PMC8178819 DOI: 10.1186/s12905-021-01346-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Womens Health ISSN: 1472-6874 Impact factor: 2.809
Summary of the literature (N = 27)
| Authors, year | Country | Study design | Sample | Key findings related to the attributes of disrupted mothering |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Billhult and Segesten, 2003 [ | Sweden | Phenomenology | 10 women with no recurrent breast cancer | Balancing between being needed and perhaps not existing Balancing between own demands: Being strong and surviving, and being a good parent Balancing between telling the truth and protecting the children Strategies used by mothers with breast cancer: Gaining strength and support, Turn into positive, and continuing everyday life |
| Power, 2012 [ | USA | Qualitative methodology | 27 women Australia or America | Revealed how illness impacted upon the women‘s maternal lives, mothering activities and treatment decisions Encompasses their experiences with health professionals, as well as the way being hospitalized affected mother’s interaction with children The Supporting Cast ‘makes explicit women‘s main sources of support, namely their partners, female friends and relatives and others Reviewing the Performance’s details the quality of mothering |
| Vallido et al., 2010 [ | Australia | Narrative synthesis | 13 papers | Mechanism of disruption; Reframing the mother role, Protecting the children, Experiencing guilt or shame, Problems with healthcare professionals and living to mother, mothering to live |
| Semple and McCance, 2010 [ | United kingdom | Systematic review | 13 papers | Being a good parent Telling the children Maintaining routine at home |
| Wilson, 2007 [ | Scotland | Narrative analysis | 12 Women | Need of to survive and to protect their children Represented a fundamental re-formulation of their identities as mothers Biographical disruption while paradoxically also containing elements of biographical reinforcement |
| Tavares et al., 2018 [ | Portugal | A mixed‐method systematic review | 21 papers | Decision‐making processes about sharing the diagnosis with their children Mother‐child relationship and parenting after mother's diagnosis |
| Elmberger et al., 2005 [ | Sweden | Grounded theory | 10 mothers | Redefining oneself as a mother’, Interrupted mothering Facing the life-threatening illness and children’s reactions Striving to be a good mother; attempting to deal with moral responsibility as mother |
| Elmberger et al., 2008 [ | Sweden | Qualitative secondary analysis | 9 mothers with breast cancer | Becoming exhausted Facing it Finding meaning Becoming aware of the need for information and support Looking to the future Becoming energized |
| Elmberger et al., 2000 [ | Sweden | Grounded theory | 9 women with breast cancer | The main theme was transforming the exhausting-to-energizing process in being a good parent in the face of cancer |
| Campbell-Enns and Woodgate, 2013 [ | Canada | Grounded theory | 8 mothers with cancer | The meaning that mothers made of decisions maintain the mother child bond The conditions of the mothers’ lives influenced the meaning mothers assigned to decisions Coping strategies to facilitate maintaining the mother child bond in times of distress |
| Portis, 2008 [ | U.S.A | Grounded theory | 7 mothers | coping styles and communication, denial, loss of role/sense of self, communication with children, balance, breast cancer in context biographical disruption, the importance of community support, and living with uncertainty |
| Arida et al., 2019 [ | U.S.A | Secondary analysis of focus groups | 9 women | Evolving self-identities from healthy mother to cancer patient to woman mothering with cancer How motherhood was impacted by symptoms, demands of treatment, and the need to gain acceptance of living with cancer |
| Rashi et al., 2015 [ | Canada | Qualitative, descriptive design | 5 mothers and 7 fathers with a first cancer diagnosis | a Parental self-activated strategies; maintaining child routines, selective disclosure, strength and positivity, adapting to illness-related physical changes, and connecting with others who are similar b Tangible social networks; that meet transportation, child care, meal care, and psych emotional support needs c Suggestions to enhance person- and family-centered care; information to benefit the children, coordination of appointments, optimizing timing for support services, and the need for more tangible support |
| de Castro1 et al., 2018 [ | Brazil | Exploratory qualitative design | 10 mothers | Being afraid of death/cancer recurrence and leaving their child orphan Changing the values/meaning of life after illness Changing the family routine/child routine Having conflict/defeat/ambivalent feelings Having difficulties to attend their children |
| Mazzotti et al., 2012 [ | Italian | Qualitative approach | 8 women | Handle disease as a temporary event Detachment from their children, in an attempt to protect them Sort or long term changes in the life of the mother and family members The behaviors examined, adopted to safeguard children’s wellbeing create or enhance dysfunctional and paradoxical communication strategies |
| Kuswanto et al., 2018 [ | Germany | Systematically review Meta-Analysis | 30 papers | Psychological impact of cancer on mothers Changes in maternal identity and role Relationship changes and concerns for their children Meaning-making in cancer |
| Helseth and Ulfsæt, 2005 [ | Norwegian | Exploratory design | 18 parents | Living in a state of emergency Cancer was consuming their energy, physically and emotionally Striving to be good parents Shift of Priorities and change of values that often brought family members closer together Facing with challenges of illness by making the best of it Putting the needs of the children in focus and trying to maintain normal family life protecting the children and make the illness situation as secure and normal |
| Bekteshi and Kayser, 2013 [ | U.S.A | Grounded theory | 29 mothers | Closer relationships with their daughters, emotions such as fear, anger, or guilt Mothers were able to work through these emotions with their daughters through four relational competencies: a anticipatory empathy sensitivity about the impact of cancer on each other; b authenticity full presence without fear of abandonment; c mutual empathy caring and emotional support; d mutual empowerment capacity to empower one another |
| Baltisberger, 2015 [ | U.S.A | Mixed methods | 31 women | Keeping life the same while weathering cancer treatments; learning, adapting, accepting support, growing and normalcy |
| Öhlén and Holm, 2006 [ | Sweden | Hermeneutic phenomenology | 9 women | Facing Transformative Life Situations Being unreal Seeking and finding rhythm in the family Inability to maintain the role of a women Being confronted with irresolvable dilemmas Meaning in sever suffering Trying to maintain ordinary life Ambivalence: desire to maintain used to be ordinary and to face Changes in life Affirming a yearning for and seeking something new Remaining in the new and widening the perspective on everyday life |
| Bell and Ristovski-Slijepcevic, 2011 [ | Canada | Ethnography | 6 women | Mets and children: the hierarchy of suffering The need to maintain a sense of normalcy ”cram parenting” and “making memories”: Temporal disturbance in women’s of mothering |
| Walsh et al., 2005 [ | U.S.A | Cross- sectional | 204 women with breast cancer | Mother’s relationships with her children Emotional distress Increased closeness Role shift |
| Noorisanchooli et al., 2018 [ | Iran | Qualitative method with conventional content analysis approach | 12 patients with breast cancer | Mutual supports, mutual sufferings, and ambivalent feelings Mutual involvement of the patient and family with the disease |
| Kirsch et al., 2003 [ | U.S.A | Inductive content analysis | 4 couples | To protect their children from being frightened and worried |
| Rayson and Ruedy, 2001 [ | Canada | Case study | A 32-Years-old woman | Resolving the conflict between two moral demands: being strong and surviving, and being a good parent |
| Shrestha et al., 2019 [ | Nepal | Walker and Avant’s method | 25 papers | The antecedences of maternal role; pregnancy, maternal identity, maternal behaviors, and adjustment to child-rearing, and bonding with the child The attributes; considered nurturing, protecting, caretaking, and managing household affairs The consequences; the awareness of neonatal status, balanced fulfillment of multiple roles, maternal role strain, and role conflict |
| Shin et al., 2008 [ | Korea | Rodgers’ method of evolutionary concept analysis | 54 papers | Attributes of maternal sensitivity; dynamic process involving maternal abilities, reciprocal give-and-take with the infant, contingency on the infant’s behavior, and quality of maternal behaviors |
Fig. 1Flowchart of the study selection process of the concept analysis
Fieldwork phase results
| Main categories | Attributes | Open codes | Quotes from participants |
|---|---|---|---|
| Reduced maternal sensitivity | 1. Decline of belief in good mothering ability 2. Doubts about the adequacy of the physical and mental capacity to take care of the child 3. Dual emotions of being able or enable to take care of the child 4. Mother's physical and emotional unavailability 5.Not responding to children's needs | Dissatisfaction with the condition of the children (in the early stages of illness) Confusion about responding to the role expectations The separation of child from mother due to the impatience caused by complications of treatment Frequent referrals to follow up the disease Impatience and the inability to love children Lack of attention to details in care for child Indifference to children's educational affairs | "The disease made me bored to do the children's affair, before my disease I was doing them enthusiastically, but now it seems like a wave is coming and it will disappear my strong sprit." (Participant 7) "At the beginning of the illness, everything was meaningless for me. The joy of taking care of the kids and helping them to do their homework was not interesting for me." (Participant 5) "At the early stages of illness, I was just thinking about myself, I had even forgotten my children, and I was unaware of what they ate, wore, and did at home." (Participant 4) "I am injecting ampoules and I go to the clinic every three months to check on my condition. I am currently under the supervision of a doctor and immunotherapy. This morning I got up at 6 am, then I told my husband that I am tired of this illness and he tried to make me calm.” (Participant 2) “My daughter used to tell me all that happened at school after she came back, but now my impatience has made her unable to talk to me much and she distanced herself from me."(Pparticipant 17) "When I get lethargic and my physical problems overwhelm me, I can't tolerate anyone. After the illness, I didn't have the patience to love others as much as I used to, because I'm not in a good mood due to my illness." (Participant 14) "The importance I assume to some of the details is lessened because of my physical weakness, I'm not obsessed with doing homework and taking care of my children. In past I used to paint and play with my children but now I don’t."( Participant 10) |
| The imbalance between roles | 1. Simultaneously taking care of yourself and your child 2. The difficulty of coordinating self and child-care activities 3. Simultaneous roles with illness | Simultaneous role of illness and being employed The responsibilities of a single parent living simultaneously with the disease Responsibility of providing the expenses of a single parent family simultaneously with the illness The multitude tasks of self and child-care with special circumstances The duties of a woman as a mother and wife simultaneously with illness Interference of disease follow up and care for children affairs | “I worked for patients of welfare state before my illness as a welfare worker, and I am still working for them, and this has made my responsibility much more." (Participant 20) "Shortly after I separated from my husband, I became ill and took on the responsibility of a single-parent family, including expenses of my illness and my family, on the other hand, the burden of illness increased my workload." (Participant 17) "My little son is mentally retarded and it takes a lot of time to look after him since I got sick and went to the doctor regularly, looking after my nutrition, medication and time management for doing my affair is very hard." (Participant 6) "As a mother of two four- and five-year-old children, I have a lot to do for my children, like cleaning up, feeding and taking them to the kindergarten and etc. On the other hand, I have to take care of my husband, and when I get home from work, I don't want to be frustrated, but since I got this problem (breast cancer), my job and taking care of my family have involved me." (Participant 2) "Every three month I have to go to the clinic to check my disease and between these intervals, if I have a problem, I will go to the doctor and this wastes my time and I can't make lunch for my children and husband." (Participant 6) |
| Role failure | 1. Inefficiency in maternal role duties 2. Lack of quality in care for child 3. Failure in playing the role of education and socialization 4. Inability to protect the child 5. Inability to play a caring role 6. Inadequacy in mothering expectations as a good mothering | Decrease of ability to take care of children prior to illness Not completing the works Breaking down child care practices (children's school and recreation programs) Wasting time of childcare that caused by follow-up treatments Lack of interaction with children Not accompanying children in social situations Neglecting the nutrition and hygiene of children Inability to regulate children and home affairs | "I go out with the passion to do what I need to do, but after a while my body gets tired and I feel unable to finish my work even for cleaning the children's bedroom ….” (Participant 9) "The disease has ruined my previous way of life, the cancer has changed my life, I can't use my right hand to do things, because of surgery, I can't do the heavy work and I have to ask for help to do my work… I used to accompany my daughter to the door for going to school, but now I can't ….”(Participant 19) "Getting involved with the illness and hospitalization for surgery and chemotherapy left me unaware of the kids and now I have to waste a lot of time for my disease follow up, because I go to another city for my treatments, so I don't have enough time to be with my children." (Participant 15) "I can't talk to the kids calmly and without fear, and I am unable to provide the time they need to have a normal life. I haven't been able to talk to my kids much since I got sick. I do not have the patience to love the children because I'm not in mood as always due to my illness."(Participant 3) "Sometimes I have a severe headache that I can't go out with my kids for fun or party too much and they complain about it. After my illness I can't spend enough time with my children." (Participant 8) “The drugs I use have made me less energetic, and I can't cook good food for children. Sometimes my kids' affairs and my housework get messed up as if I have no more control over things.”( Participant 13) |
Theoretical, fieldwork, and integration phases results
| Theoretical phase | Fieldwork phase | Integration phase | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Category | Subcategory | ||
| Disturbance in maternal identity and roles | Reduced maternal sensitivity | Disease as threating maternal role and identity | 1. Unbalancing in roles as identity threat of mothering 2. Waiver of duties other roles to achieve balance in mothering role 3. Disease as imposing an unwanted role |
| Maternal insensitivity and unresponsiveness | The imbalance between roles | Inability to interpret and respond to child behavior | 1. Apparently little communication but actually fighting for each other 2. Physical and emotional disrupted 3. Disease as consuming mother’s energy 4. Tired of taking care yourself and children 5. Mothering under negative emotions from fear to shame |
| The career disruption process | Role Failure | Support for transitioning from being patient toward maternal competency | 1. Dependence on role playing 2. Disruption as an opportunity to restore role 3. Decreased capacity role playing 4. Need to support to mother’s role playing 5. The Supporting cast: maintenance of maternal responsibility by supporting their children |
| Biographical disruption | |||