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Grief reaction and psychosocial impacts of child death and stillbirth on bereaved North Indian parents: A qualitative study

BACKGROUND: Grief following stillbirth and child death are one of the most traumatic experience for parents with psychosomatic, social and economic impacts. The grief profile, severity and its impacts in Indian context are not well documented. This study documented the grief and coping experiences o...

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Autores principales: Das, Manoja Kumar, Arora, Narendra Kumar, Gaikwad, Harsha, Chellani, Harish, Debata, Pradeep, Rasaily, Reeta, Meena, K. R., Kaur, Gurkirat, Malik, Prikanksha, Joshi, Shipra, Kumari, Mahisha
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7840017/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33503017
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0240270
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author Das, Manoja Kumar
Arora, Narendra Kumar
Gaikwad, Harsha
Chellani, Harish
Debata, Pradeep
Rasaily, Reeta
Meena, K. R.
Kaur, Gurkirat
Malik, Prikanksha
Joshi, Shipra
Kumari, Mahisha
author_facet Das, Manoja Kumar
Arora, Narendra Kumar
Gaikwad, Harsha
Chellani, Harish
Debata, Pradeep
Rasaily, Reeta
Meena, K. R.
Kaur, Gurkirat
Malik, Prikanksha
Joshi, Shipra
Kumari, Mahisha
author_sort Das, Manoja Kumar
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Grief following stillbirth and child death are one of the most traumatic experience for parents with psychosomatic, social and economic impacts. The grief profile, severity and its impacts in Indian context are not well documented. This study documented the grief and coping experiences of the Indian parents following stillbirth and child death. METHODS: This exploratory qualitative study in Delhi (India) included in-depth interviews with parents (50 mothers and 49 fathers), who had stillbirth or child death, their family members (n = 41) and community representatives (n = 12). Eight focus group discussions were done with community members (n = 72). Inductive data analysis included thematic content analysis. Perinatal Grief Scale was used to document the mother’s grief severity after 6–9 months of loss. RESULTS: The four themes emerged were grief anticipation and expression, impact of the bereavement, coping mechanism, and sociocultural norms and practices. The parents suffered from disbelief, severe pain and helplessness. Mothers expressed severe grief openly and some fainted. Fathers also had severe grief, but didn’t express openly. Some parents shared self-guilt and blamed the hospital/healthcare providers, themselves or family. Majority had no/positive change in couple relationship, but few faced marital disharmony. Majority experienced sleep, eating and psychological disturbances for several weeks. Mothers coped through engaging in household work, caring other child(ren) and spiritual activities. Fathers coped through avoiding discussion and work and professional engagement. Fathers resumed work after 5–20 days and mothers took 2–6 weeks to resume household chores. Unanticipated loss, limited family support and financial strain affected the severity and duration of grief. 57.5% of all mothers and 80% mothers with stillbirth had severe grief after 6–9 months. CONCLUSIONS: Stillbirth and child death have lasting psychosomatic, social and economic impacts on parents, which are usually ignored. Sociocultural and religion appropriate bereavement support for the parents are needed to reduce the impacts.
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spelling pubmed-78400172021-02-02 Grief reaction and psychosocial impacts of child death and stillbirth on bereaved North Indian parents: A qualitative study Das, Manoja Kumar Arora, Narendra Kumar Gaikwad, Harsha Chellani, Harish Debata, Pradeep Rasaily, Reeta Meena, K. R. Kaur, Gurkirat Malik, Prikanksha Joshi, Shipra Kumari, Mahisha PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Grief following stillbirth and child death are one of the most traumatic experience for parents with psychosomatic, social and economic impacts. The grief profile, severity and its impacts in Indian context are not well documented. This study documented the grief and coping experiences of the Indian parents following stillbirth and child death. METHODS: This exploratory qualitative study in Delhi (India) included in-depth interviews with parents (50 mothers and 49 fathers), who had stillbirth or child death, their family members (n = 41) and community representatives (n = 12). Eight focus group discussions were done with community members (n = 72). Inductive data analysis included thematic content analysis. Perinatal Grief Scale was used to document the mother’s grief severity after 6–9 months of loss. RESULTS: The four themes emerged were grief anticipation and expression, impact of the bereavement, coping mechanism, and sociocultural norms and practices. The parents suffered from disbelief, severe pain and helplessness. Mothers expressed severe grief openly and some fainted. Fathers also had severe grief, but didn’t express openly. Some parents shared self-guilt and blamed the hospital/healthcare providers, themselves or family. Majority had no/positive change in couple relationship, but few faced marital disharmony. Majority experienced sleep, eating and psychological disturbances for several weeks. Mothers coped through engaging in household work, caring other child(ren) and spiritual activities. Fathers coped through avoiding discussion and work and professional engagement. Fathers resumed work after 5–20 days and mothers took 2–6 weeks to resume household chores. Unanticipated loss, limited family support and financial strain affected the severity and duration of grief. 57.5% of all mothers and 80% mothers with stillbirth had severe grief after 6–9 months. CONCLUSIONS: Stillbirth and child death have lasting psychosomatic, social and economic impacts on parents, which are usually ignored. Sociocultural and religion appropriate bereavement support for the parents are needed to reduce the impacts. Public Library of Science 2021-01-27 /pmc/articles/PMC7840017/ /pubmed/33503017 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0240270 Text en © 2021 Das et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Das, Manoja Kumar
Arora, Narendra Kumar
Gaikwad, Harsha
Chellani, Harish
Debata, Pradeep
Rasaily, Reeta
Meena, K. R.
Kaur, Gurkirat
Malik, Prikanksha
Joshi, Shipra
Kumari, Mahisha
Grief reaction and psychosocial impacts of child death and stillbirth on bereaved North Indian parents: A qualitative study
title Grief reaction and psychosocial impacts of child death and stillbirth on bereaved North Indian parents: A qualitative study
title_full Grief reaction and psychosocial impacts of child death and stillbirth on bereaved North Indian parents: A qualitative study
title_fullStr Grief reaction and psychosocial impacts of child death and stillbirth on bereaved North Indian parents: A qualitative study
title_full_unstemmed Grief reaction and psychosocial impacts of child death and stillbirth on bereaved North Indian parents: A qualitative study
title_short Grief reaction and psychosocial impacts of child death and stillbirth on bereaved North Indian parents: A qualitative study
title_sort grief reaction and psychosocial impacts of child death and stillbirth on bereaved north indian parents: a qualitative study
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7840017/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33503017
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0240270
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