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Becoming a mother: a study of current and potential response to Perinatal Mental Health
Author(s)
Date Issued
2021
Date Available
2022-05-05T15:59:33Z
Abstract
Background : This research addressed two significant gaps: 1) theoretical framework for conceptualising the phenomena of becoming a mother and 2) significant training needs for midwives in responding to perinatal mental health difficulties experienced by patients. Research question: What is the experience of the midwives working with patients experiencing mental health difficulties during the perinatal period? Aims: --Investigate Irish midwives’ experiences of working with patients experiencing perinatal mental health difficulties --Identify theoretical models and presuppositions used by midwives --Critically assess whether existing presuppositions are relatable to psychoanalytic conceptualisation and whether psychoanalytic theories can bridge the gaps identified. Objectives: --Conduct in-depth interviews with experienced midwives across ROI maternity units --Analyse responses --Provide psychoanalytic perspectives for perinatal mental health difficulties --Develop theoretical framework for conceptualising ‘becoming a mother’ Method: Two-fold methodology. 1) Articulation of theoretical framework provided from psychoanalytic theory 2) Qualitative research with seven Irish midwives and a detailed Interpretive Phenomenological Analysis of the interview data. Results: Major superordinate themes as follows. --Approach, including two major subordinate themes Normal / normalising, instilling hope --Class (socio-economic background of service-users, antenatal education, psycho-education) --Education (training needs of service providers and lack of knowledge of service users) --Identification (making sense through one’s own experience of being mothered and mothering) --Nature vs Nurture (motherhood as inbuilt ability, natural instinct, personality, shaped by upbringing and culture) --Risk groups and factors (reflects contradictory groups/factors, indicting anyone from any background can experience difficulties) --Special cases (self-care, employee support, supervision, debrief) --Support (factors and terminologies) example: ‘hormone’ mentioned by two out of seven participants six and sixteen times, transition mentioned once, ‘change’ implied to lifestyle change among others but not to psychological changes. Conclusion: Lack of theoretical framework evident in qualitative data. Psychoanalytic literature can address this gap.
Type of Material
Doctoral Thesis
Publisher
University College Dublin. School of Medicine
Qualification Name
Ph.D.
Copyright (Published Version)
2021 the Author
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name
102528661.pdf
Size
4.18 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
fc6f0ad960441c350a716e9d949c496d
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