Paternal Experiences of Perinatal Loss—A Scoping Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
2.2. Search Strategy
2.3. Data Extraction and Charting Process
3. Results
3.1. Characteristics of the Studies
Relevant Topics
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions and Limitations
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Study | Country | Type of Study | Sample | Type of Death | Time of Loss |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lizcano et al., (2019) [5] | Colombia | Qualitative | 15 Spanish-speaking men over 18 years (average age not reported) | Gestational | No more than one year |
Fernández-Solá et al., (2020) [9] | Spain | Qualitative | 8 fathers and 13 mothers of legal age (average age not reported) | Gestational | 3 months to 5 years |
Das et al., (2021) [15] | India | Mixed exploratory | 49 fathers and 50 mothers (average age not reported). | Gestational | 6 to 9 months |
Obst et al., (2021) [16] | Australia | Quantitative | 228 heterosexual males over 18 years | Gestational and neonatal | The past 20 years |
Azeez et al., (2022) [11] | Australia | Qualitative exploratory | 10 men over the age of 18; age ranged from 31 to 42 years (M = 32, SD = 3.4). | Neonatal | From 1 to 12 years |
Tanacıoglu-Aydın & Erdur-Baker (2022) [17] | Turkey | Phenomenological–qualitative | 10 couples, a total of 20 subjects (10 men and 10 women) over the age of 18 | Gestational | 4 months to 6 years |
King et al., (2019) [18] | USA | Qualitative | 8 couples (8 men and 8 women), mean age for women = 29.88, SD = 6.06; for men = 31.63, SD = 6.65 | Gestational | 3 to 6.5 years |
Camacho et al., (2020) [19] | Spain | Qualitative | 21 subjects (13 mothers and 8 fathers), mean age of 35.6 years. | Gestational and neonatal | Not mentioned |
Norton et al., (2020) [20] | United kingdom | Qualitative | 7 participants (4 mothers and 3 fathers) | Neonatal | Not mentioned |
Faleschini et al., (2021) [21] | Canada | Quantitative | 92 dyads (father and mother) = 184. Women had a mean age = 31.19, SD = 4.24; the mean age for men = 33.17, SD = 4.21. | Gestational | Not mentioned |
Farrales et al., (2020) [22] | Canada | Qualitative | 15 women and 12 fathers over 19 years old. The median age was 39 years. | Gestational | 2 months to 20 years |
Martínez-Serrano et al., (2019) [23] | Spain | Qualitative | 7 mothers and 4 fathers over 18 years old. | Gestational | > 18 months |
Study | Objective | Identified Themes |
---|---|---|
Lizcano et al., (2019) [5] | To understand and describe the meaning of perinatal death in a sample of parents from northeastern Colombia. | (1) The experience of loss. (2) The irreparable loss. (3) Overcoming loss. |
Fernández-Solá et al., (2020) [9] | To explore the social and psychological impacts of infant death on the parents and their families in northern India. | (1) The impact on family dynamics. (2) The impact on the social environment. |
Das et al., (2021) [15] | To document the grief and coping experiences of Indian parents after stillbirth and neonatal death. | (1) Anticipation and expression of grief. (2) Impact of grief. (3) Coping mechanisms. (4) Socio-cultural practices and norms. |
Obst et al., (2021) [16] | To determine factors associated with grief intensity afterpregnancy loss and neonatal death, as well as factors associated with intuitive and instrumental grief styles. | (1) Grief intensity is related to gestational age. (2) Social support and the bond with the baby during pregnancy are related to less intense mourning. |
Azeez et al., (2022) [11] | To explore the grieving experiences of fathers following neonatal death. | (1) Grief as a complicated experience. (2) The multidimensionality of grief. (3) Sense of injustice. |
Tanacıoglu-Aydın & Erdur-Baker (2022) [17] | To identify the experiences of pregnancy loss among couples. | (1) The sociocultural context before the pregnancy. (2) The sociocultural context after the loss. |
King et al., (2019) [18] | To understand the hospital experiences of fetal death for parents, particularly men, and to understand how couples experienced it together. | (1) Hospital care. (2) Grief and loss. (3) The relationships with their partner and family. (4) Long-term impacts. |
Camacho et al., (2020) [19] | To describe and understand the experiences of parents in relation to professional and social support after fetal and neonatal death. | (1) Unauthorized grief. (2) Lack of social acknowledgement. (3) Socially, the loss is minimized. |
Norton et al., (2020) [20] | To discover the experiences of parents whose children died in the perinatal period and who used cold cribs for preservation. | (1) Having space and time to be able to adjust to the loss. (2) Being able to care for the baby for a while. (3) Being able to spend family time with the baby. (4) Having the baby close. (5) Creating memories. (6) Social perception of being able to spend time with the deceased baby. |
Faleschini et al., (2021) [21] | To examine associations between perinatal losses, psychological symptoms, and parental stress in mothers and fathers six months after the birth of a subsequent healthy child. | (1) Various losses increase psychological symptoms. (2) Risks may be influenced by gender stigmas, socialization, and biological and physiological differences between men and women. (3) Men reported fewer symptoms than women. |
Farrales et al., (2020) [22] | To explore the experiences of bereaved parents during their interactions with healthcare providers during and after the stillbirth of an infant. | (1) The acknowledgement of the baby as an irreplaceable individual. (2) The acknowledgement of fathers’ paternity and grief. (3) The acknowledgement of traumatic grief. (4) The acknowledgement of the need for specialized support. |
Martínez-Serrano et al., (2019) [23] | To explore the experiences of both mothers and fathers regarding care received during childbirth in cases of stillbirth. | (1) Grief denial. (2) The paradox of life and death. (3) Guilt. (4) The experience and overcoming of loss. |
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Mota, C.; Sánchez, C.; Carreño, J.; Gómez, M.E. Paternal Experiences of Perinatal Loss—A Scoping Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2023, 20, 4886. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20064886
Mota C, Sánchez C, Carreño J, Gómez ME. Paternal Experiences of Perinatal Loss—A Scoping Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2023; 20(6):4886. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20064886
Chicago/Turabian StyleMota, Cecilia, Claudia Sánchez, Jorge Carreño, and María Eugenia Gómez. 2023. "Paternal Experiences of Perinatal Loss—A Scoping Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 20, no. 6: 4886. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph20064886