He Tamariki Kokoti Tau: Families of Indigenous Infants Talk about Their Experiences of Preterm Birth and Neonatal Intensive Care
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Aim
2.2. A Kaupapa Māori (by, with, for Māori) Research Inquiry Paradigm
2.3. Institutional Ethics
2.4. Kaupapa Māori Ethics and Governance
2.5. Participant Recruitment
2.6. Interviews
2.7. Whānau Overview
2.8. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Preterm Birth Is ‘An Emotional Roller Coaster’
3.1.1. Temporal Disruption of Preterm Birth
They called me into hospital and I thought it was just another check-up, so just drove myself to the hospital, turned up and then the doctor at the time said, ‘Oh no, we’re going to keep you in overnight.’ And that’s when they gave me a steroid shot because they said… there could be a chance they’ll have to deliver baby early. So I was only 29 weeks when this all happened. And then at the time I was in denial, because I had a good pregnancy with my first daughter.(Takahē, mother)
I went to sleep one night, woke up to go toilet and there was blood everywhere, so my partner rushed me to the hospital, and yeah, baby was born less than an hour later… I freaked out. I was just completely losing it, but my partner was fine, he kept me calm, he kept holding my hand. I nearly broke two of his fingers.(Tūī, mother)
3.1.2. Self-Doubt and Guilt
Why did that have to happen to me?… I think my body can only get to a certain point before it rejects, but then I don’t even know.(Kūaka, mother)
Getting your breastmilk to come through when baby’s early is really, it’s actually one of the most hardest, stressful things, and I noticed a lot of mums stress about it… I was lying in a bed having the midwives come in and play with my boobs to try and encourage it to come through. Dignity really goes out the window and you’re syringing maybe point five of a ml off.(Tōrea, mother)
I really wanna be here too, while she’s critical, but I feel I can’t be… I’ll be leaving here about one o’clock to catch the kids back at three.(Pūkeko, father)
3.1.3. Fear for and of Fragile Infants
At first I was, like, real, scared to hold him ‘cause he, like, had all these tubes and stuff out of him.(Tieke, father)
They were so tiny and so fragile. I didn’t want to break them. I thought they were gonna break ‘cause their bones weren’t that strong. So in that area I neglected their duties, ‘cause they were so small, until they got a bit bigger and a bit stronger.(Kākāriki, mother)
I didn’t want to touch him, and I thought that would be really scary [for daughter], and I liked how the nurse encouraged and supported her.(Toutouwai, grandmother)
At times, it’s been like an emotional roller coaster, you know, trying to absorb so many bits of information.(Kōtuku, mother)
3.2. In the NICU, ‘I Just Wanna Hold My Baby’
3.2.1. Love as Strength
I feel safe when I’m with my daughter, yeah, she just brings, she gives me closure. Like it’s such an amazing feeling, you know, something I had always waited for, like yay, I can’t wait to be a mum. And now I’m a mum, I’m like whoah my gosh, like it’s so amazing. I like looking at her, like oh my gosh, I created her, she came from me.(Kūaka, mother)
3.2.2. Importance of Intimacy
It was like nearly a week before I got to hold her the first time. So that was just killing me, everyday coming in, and like, I just wanna hold my baby.(Kōmako, mother)
So they tell me he’s doing good and then they tell me he’s not doing good. Um, it’s hard. It’s tiring. I just wanna be there for my son, 24/7, like I really just wanna go in there and sit with him.(Kiwi, mother)
Yeah [my breasts are] good, cause I milk them a whole lot, and babies feeding now, and I have a room here now so I can stay, I can stay with baby and do night feeds.(Pītoitoi, mother)
- Mother:
- Yeah and then we went down and took my younger sister with us but they told her that she wasn’t allowed to see him because she’s eight years old so my little sister came all the way down and wasn’t even allowed to see him.
- Grandmother:
- And that was one of our concerns, they said it can only be a direct sibling.
- Mother:
- Yeah, only direct siblings are allowed to see the babies.
- Grandmother:
- To me that’s the White way of thinking, we’re Māori.
- Mother:
- My nanny was very mad.
3.2.3. Celebrating Whakapapa and Wairuatanga
- Mother:
- They’ve been saying that our baby is the baby with no name because we haven’t named him yet. We have named him but we don’t want to share that straight away. It’s important to us, it’s special to us.
- Father:
- You know, it’s also that fear that they’d start making fun of our kid.
- Mother:
- It’s gonna be a Māori name because already two nurses were having a joke about my name not knowing whether they’re pronouncing it right or not.
They asked me if I wanted a priest and I was like, but I want a Māori one… They came in and they did a karakia for him as his farewell journey.(Kākāriki, mother)
They couldn’t find it, they couldn’t find it. We got a call about it not so long ago and then went up to get it and they said that they don’t get them if they’ve been researched cause they sent it away… I think it was just last week my cousin got a phone call telling us to pick it up before twelve days and they told me they didn’t know where they sent it, so I pretty much gave up.(Kea, mother)
3.3. In the NICU, ‘It Does Get Quite Lonely Sometimes’
3.3.1. Isolation
I just feel like it’s been real rough emotionally the last couple of weeks… Well, I just try and keep myself occupied, you know, just by doing her, which is fine, but it does get quite lonely sometimes.(Toroa, mother)
[My partner] looks after our son, cause he’s not allowed in here at all and we had no other way to take care of him. Like they were saying, ‘Ah just get one of your family members to come and look after him,’ but it’s not that easy.(Kea, mother)
No, No, just myself, you were only allowed the patient in the ambulance… But I know that [my mother] was upset because she was a bit lost at what to do and she wanted to come as well but. Yes, it was a bit freaky being on my own but there weren’t really any other options.(Kōtuku, mother)
3.3.2. Inhospitable Spaces
Because they don’t treat you like you’re a person you’re just a paycheck, like they’re rude, you know, they just make you feel uncomfortable.(Pīhoihoi, mother)
And so one of the nurses waited for me and my sister to leave and then she cornered my partner and were saying, ‘Oh do you feel comfortable with her being here? ‘Cause if you don’t feel comfortable, you just let one of us know and we can get her to leave.’ And my partner was like, ‘Well, what are you talking about? She’s my sister and she’s helping’.(Pītoitoi, mother)
Yeah, it happens all the time in here. Yeah, it’s a frustrating thing being told one thing and then, you know, you go do it and then another nurse is like, “No, it’s got to be this way,” you know, it’s like, “Well we just got told that way.” And they’re like, “No you’ve got to do it like that.” And so, it’s really frustrating.(Kūaka, mother)
3.3.3. Lack of Autonomy
There’s lots of babies but their mums aren’t here. Cause sometimes you feel like you’re not really doing anything, cause you just sit on the chair.(Kererū, mother)
3.4. The Importance of Familiarity When ‘Family Is the Best Support Network Most of Us Have’
3.4.1. Importance of Whānau and Peer Support
No I haven’t been alone since I’ve been here. It’s gonna come, I know it’s gonna come, because my kids will go away on holiday with their grandparents. But yeah, no I haven’t been alone yet. I’ve had one of my children with me, and my partner comes up every weekend, so, yeah, that’ll be interesting.(Kōkako, mother)
I think family is the best support network most of us have and I’d love to have more of my family here.(Tōrea, mother)
We introduce ourselves, just let them know that we’ve all been where they’ve been sitting, like the new parents. Until they decide basically what’s going on with their baby, we just tell them, just talk to the nurses.(Pūkeko, mother)
We found out about [travel assistance] through other parents… and we went to reception and started asking questions… it was more the parents that made me feel welcome, not so much the nurses and the doctors, it was the parents.(Kākāriki, mother)
3.4.2. Culturally Safe Care
Nah I feel like they’re really good people here, really nice and caring. I think the only thing, that if I was to change something, I would probably, instead of switching up the nurses so many times, like maybe the same nurses could stay at that same time. Cause there’s just too many swaps.(Pītoitoi, aunt)
- Father:
- There’s definitely some good ones there.
- Mother:
- They’d like to joke around with you and make sure you were alright.
- Father:
- They made Mum quite happy.
- Mother:
- They don’t want to pressure us at all.
- Father:
- You know, the way they treat us, it’s just like human beings.
3.4.3. Becoming Expert
They’re really good with us, they just, it literally is like being at home now aye.(Pīwaiwaka, mother)
- NICU peer:
- ‘Cause, yeah man, we’re experts. We are now.
- Mother:
- It’s like the first thing you’ve got to learn when you actually have your child.
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Category of Preterm | Whānau Pseudonym | Infant/s | Infant/s Age at First Interview | Adult Participants in the First Interview | Siblings |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Extremely preterm (<28+0 weeks gestation) | Kōmako | 1 | 3 weeks | Mother | 0 |
Kiwi | 1 * | 3 weeks | Mother, father | 4 | |
Kererū | 2 | 11 days | Mother | 0 | |
Kea | 1 * | 6 weeks | Mother | 2 | |
Kōkako | 1 * | 2 weeks | Mother | 2 | |
Kākāriki | 2 * | 15 months | Mother | 1 | |
Kōtuku | 1 * | 1 month | Mother | 0 | |
Kūaka | 1 | 4 months | Mother | 0 | |
Very preterm (28+0–31+6 weeks) | Tūī | 1 | 7 weeks | Mother | 3 |
Tieke | 1 | 6 weeks | Mother, father | 0 | |
Tākapu | 1 * | 3 weeks | Mother, father | 0 | |
Toroa | 1 * | 3 weeks | Mother | 0 | |
Takahē | 1 * | 2 weeks | Mother | 1 | |
Toutouwai | 1 * | 3 weeks | Mother, grandmother | 0 | |
Tōrea | 1 * | 3 weeks | Mother | 5 | |
Moderately preterm (32+0–36+6 weeks) | Pūkeko | 1 * | 6 weeks | Mother, father | 5 |
Pīhoihoi | 1 * | 1 month | Mother, NICU peer (mother), NICU peer (father) | 4 | |
Pīwaiwaka | 1 | 10 days | Mother, father | 0 | |
Pītoitoi | 1 | 1 week | Mother, aunt | 0 |
Superordinate Themes | Subordinate Themes |
---|---|
3.1 Preterm Birth Is ‘An Emotional Roller Coaster’ | 3.1.1 Temporal Disruption of Preterm Birth 3.1.2 Self-Doubt and Guilt 3.1.3 Fear for and of Fragile Infants |
3.2 In the NICU, ‘I Just Wanna Hold My Baby’ | 3.2.1 Love as Strength 3.2.2 Importance of Intimacy 3.2.3 Celebrating Whakapapa and Wairuatanga |
3.3 In the NICU, ‘It Does Get Quite Lonely Sometimes’ | 3.3.1 Isolation 3.3.2 Inhospitable Spaces 3.3.3 Lack of Autonomy |
3.4 The Importance of Familiarity When ‘Family Is the Best Support Network Most of Us Have’ | 3.4.1 Importance of Whānau and Peer Support 3.4.2 Culturally Safe Care 3.4.3 Becoming Expert |
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Adcock, A.; Cram, F.; Edmonds, L.; Lawton, B. He Tamariki Kokoti Tau: Families of Indigenous Infants Talk about Their Experiences of Preterm Birth and Neonatal Intensive Care. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2021, 18, 9835. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18189835
Adcock A, Cram F, Edmonds L, Lawton B. He Tamariki Kokoti Tau: Families of Indigenous Infants Talk about Their Experiences of Preterm Birth and Neonatal Intensive Care. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2021; 18(18):9835. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18189835
Chicago/Turabian StyleAdcock, Anna, Fiona Cram, Liza Edmonds, and Beverley Lawton. 2021. "He Tamariki Kokoti Tau: Families of Indigenous Infants Talk about Their Experiences of Preterm Birth and Neonatal Intensive Care" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 18: 9835. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18189835
APA StyleAdcock, A., Cram, F., Edmonds, L., & Lawton, B. (2021). He Tamariki Kokoti Tau: Families of Indigenous Infants Talk about Their Experiences of Preterm Birth and Neonatal Intensive Care. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(18), 9835. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18189835