Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
2636392 | Sexual & Reproductive Healthcare | 2010 | 6 Pages |
ObjectivesThe aim was to describe midwives’ and nurses’ experiences when women are diagnosed with a missed miscarriage during a routine ultrasound scan in pregnancy weeks 18–20.Study designsA qualitative content analysis with an inductive approach and 13 semi-structured interviews were used for data collection from these three domains: midwives at an ultrasound department, midwives at a maternity clinic and nurses at a gynecological ward. Content analysis resulted in six codes, four categories and one primary theme.Main outcome measuresThe four categories identified were: the interviewees’ experiences of women’s reactions, support from the midwife and nurse, the interviewees’ experiences of men’s reactions and communication between care providers and women. The main theme focused on the interviewees’ noting that women had a premonition that something was wrong with their pregnancy. This could for example have been in the form of minor bleeding or the fact that pregnancy symptoms had receded and there were no movements by the fetus. The midwives carried out a follow-up with assessment.ConclusionsWomen need confirmation of their premonitions of a missed miscarriage so that a diagnosis can be made as early as possible in their pregnancy. Women and their partners who have suffered a missed miscarriage need extended support on an individual basis in addition to follow-up assistance as assessed by the midwives.