Mothers’ Access to Social and Health Care Systems Support during Their Infants’ First Year during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Feminist Poststructural Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design
2.2. Setting
2.3. Participants
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
2.6. Trustworthiness
3. Results
3.1. COVID-19 and the Social Construction of Isolation
There is no support. While text messages and phone calls help, it’s not the same. It took me a while to be less angry at the adage that it takes a village to raise a family; that village is illegal.(Participant 4)
It has been hard to balance my day to keep him busy and thriving. I feel as if I am a bad mum for allowing him independent play time, which often involves his books, we do not watch or use technology. He has become more demanding of my time, and is able to open up all the drawers/cupboards. Meeting with other mums and dads means that I can learn new ways to help him grow and develop.(Participant 13)
I have very little support, sometimes my family FaceTimes, but my husband is at work all day and both of our families live in separate areas. […] I can talk to people on the phone but everyone I know is still working […] Meaning that I feel even more isolated as I have not had a face-to-face conversation with anyone aside from my pharmacist since the state of emergency began.(Participant 13)
I feel the biggest difficulty has been finding social support for my emotional health. I had wanted to find a group of local moms pre-pandemic and had found yoga, stroller fit, pelvic floor physio, music, and swim groups that I wanted to try out for bonding with my daughter and expanding my support circle. That has been the most difficult hole to fill by far and I feel my mental health is suffering because of missing connection with other first-time moms.(Participant 8)
The pandemic has limited our social networks (i.e., friends and other moms/parents) and our in-person support network (i.e., family), and increased the pressure on us as new parents to provide care, support, interaction, socialization, and entertainment for our child and one another.(Participant 16)
3.2. Feeling Forgotten and Dumped: Perpetuating the Invisibility of Mothering
I also feel as if moms are being treated as second class citizens as they no longer offer 6 weeks postpartum checkups meaning that we are left to decide if things seem normal or not after giving birth.(Participant 27)
My 6-week postpartum appointment became over the phone. I had a second-degree tear and my stitches had opened once returning home. Since I had a phone appointment, I had nobody check and tell me if I was healing properly.(Participant 62)
Our daughter had a tongue tie and we were initially connected to public health, lactation consultants, and the collaborative breastfeeding clinic. We had one meeting with public health before they reassigned our nurse to the COVID team and we were dumped. The breastfeeding clinic cut her tongue tie but did a phone follow up instead of in person due to COVID and dumped us even though we were still having feeding issues. The lactation consultants at the [hospital] also closed our file early due to COVID […] I’ve felt very let down by the health care system.(Participant 8)
3.3. Navigating and Negotiating Conflicting Information
It was a hassle trying to figure out who would do my daughter’s 2 months needles [injections] as the public health nurse told me she did not need them, and that she would be protected by herd immunity. Knowing this is not appropriate information to give people, we found someone to immunize her.(Participant 62)
I think the biggest struggle at the moment is finding information related to the risk of sending our son to daycare. To me, it seems preposterous that it is too dangerous for me to go into the office to work but it will be safe to send my 12-month-old son to daycare which is known for being high [risk] for sickness during non-COVID-19 times.(Participant 1)
4. Discussion
Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Characteristics | Frequency (Percent) | Mean/SD or Min-Max 1 |
---|---|---|
Age (years) | 31.6 ± 4.9 | |
<25 | 5 (7) | |
25–35 | 44 (65) | |
>35 | 19 (27.9) | |
Ethnicity | ||
White Black | 63 (97) 0 (0) | |
Mixed | 2 (3) | |
Sexuality | ||
Heterosexual | 56 (93) | |
2SLGBTQ (two-spirit, lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans, queer) | 4 (7) | |
Living status | ||
living with partner | 63 (93) | |
Single parents | 5 (7) | |
Place of residence | ||
City or town | 53 (78) | |
Village or small community | 15 (22) | |
Birth or adoption of baby | ||
Birth | 68 (100%) | |
Adoption | 0 | |
Infants’ age (months) | 6.1 ± 3.1 | |
<6 | 27 (40) | |
≥6 | 41 (60) | |
Multiple child family | ||
Yes | 33 (49) | |
No | 35 (51) | |
Other children’s age (years) | 5.6 ± 3.6 | |
Number of other children in each family | [1–3] | |
Annual household income (CAD) | 95,466 ± 54,983 | |
<50,000 | 11 (18) | |
50,000–100,000 | 27 (43) | |
>100,000 | 24 (39) |
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Benoit, B.; Aston, M.; Price, S.; Iduye, D.; Sim, S.M.; Ollivier, R.; Joy, P.; Nassaji, N.A. Mothers’ Access to Social and Health Care Systems Support during Their Infants’ First Year during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Feminist Poststructural Study. Nurs. Rep. 2023, 13, 412-423. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep13010038
Benoit B, Aston M, Price S, Iduye D, Sim SM, Ollivier R, Joy P, Nassaji NA. Mothers’ Access to Social and Health Care Systems Support during Their Infants’ First Year during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Feminist Poststructural Study. Nursing Reports. 2023; 13(1):412-423. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep13010038
Chicago/Turabian StyleBenoit, Britney, Megan Aston, Sheri Price, Damilola Iduye, S Meaghan Sim, Rachel Ollivier, Phillip Joy, and Neda Akbari Nassaji. 2023. "Mothers’ Access to Social and Health Care Systems Support during Their Infants’ First Year during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Feminist Poststructural Study" Nursing Reports 13, no. 1: 412-423. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep13010038
APA StyleBenoit, B., Aston, M., Price, S., Iduye, D., Sim, S. M., Ollivier, R., Joy, P., & Nassaji, N. A. (2023). Mothers’ Access to Social and Health Care Systems Support during Their Infants’ First Year during the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Qualitative Feminist Poststructural Study. Nursing Reports, 13(1), 412-423. https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep13010038