Beate André & Raija Dahlø
Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Norway
Title: Challenges for health professionals when children die in connection with childbirth
Biography
Biography: Beate André & Raija Dahlø
Abstract
Background: Health care personnel’s experiences of grief and painful emotional involvements in situations facing perinatal death has attracted woefully little research and attention. In order to provide high standards of care for patients and their families, health care personnel needs to express their emotions in these situations in an adequate way.
Aim: The main aim of this study is to explore how midwives, obstetricians and nurses experience perinatal death and what characterizes these experiences.
Method: This review study was designed through systematic examination methods to detect articles in English and Scandinavian language that describe midwifes, obstetricians and nurses experiences with perinatal death and factors that characterize these experiences. Only ten articles met these inclusion criteria. A qualitative method was used to describe and comprehend the phenomena.
Findings: The following categories emerged from the data: Emotional implications, change in culture, education and training, hierarchical issues, support and learning from others. Emotional implications when facing perinatal death were reported in all the ten articles.
Conclusion: This study revealed that withdrawal from the situation and denial were common reactions to perinatal death among health care personnel. These reactions may lead to a lower quality of care for the bereaved parents. Findings in this study indicate that the problem is related to culture and to accept this as a problem and challenge. Emotional reactions among health care personnel to perinatal death must be fully acknowledged and normalized.