The Path Is Made by Walking—Mapping the Healthcare Pathways of Parents Continuing Pregnancy after a Severe Life-Limiting Fetal Diagnosis: A Qualitative Interview Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Sampling and Recruitment
2.3. Data Collection
2.4. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Prenatal Diagnosis
It [Prenatal diagnostics] was lousy. What we experienced was absolutely and completely unacceptable. This was the worst of medical art. First she [prenatal diagnostician] says, she [the baby] has an incurable disease and will only survive a few days, if at all. Already five sentences later she says: We can remove her and then you try again. It was completely pathetic (…) It was the beginning of the whole story and at the same time the negative highlight. (Father 8)
The situation was so bizarre. She [prenatal diagnostician] just left. She should have stayed. She should have told us, I see something suspicious. I want to take the time to explain this, and to provide information to help us understand, offer us a framework. (Mother 11)
We would have wished them to disclose all our options. They only said: ‘Most parents in your situation decide to have an abortion’. They did not say: ‘You can carry the pregnancy to term’ and what we have to face afterwards, nobody told us. (Mother 2)
You leave the examination room. You stay in the corridor. In front of the registration desk. At some point, they return you the maternity logbook. You could cry or you compose yourself. People either look at you or ignore you. As if you weren’t there. You don’t know what to do with yourself. You cannot entrench yourself forever in the toilet. You are completely confused. Yet you have to make it outside and see how you manage to continue. (Mother 1).
They told us the diagnosis and sent us home. They should have had something there (…) a room, to collect yourself, where you can recapitulate and think. What did just happen? (Father 11)
3.2. The Care Gap: What Now?
Before that we had an appointment with a human geneticist (…) This was not really instructive or helpful, I would say. She drew some kind of family trees of our parents and grandparents, how this is inherited. However, we already knew this because we did our own research after the diagnosis. (Father 5)
I left the place surrounded by a fog. I knew my child is not doing well. But I was feeling all right. She was moving. My feelings were actually good. I left the place completely confused. I did not know what was happening. Then I called my husband and cried. I said: ‚I do not know anything. My child. Either she is severely disabled or she is doing fine.’ It seems like a mix-up. Honestly, I did not know anything anymore. (Mother 1)
However, in the end, this was the diagnosis and we were standing on the street, confronted with this thing, and thought, what now? I think, what we would have needed acutely, in the first moment, was somebody to collect us. Somebody to answer the first questions that spontaneously crossed our minds. (Father 11)
3.3. Decision-Making: Let My Child Decide
This was my baby. She was in my belly. She was kicking. She was happy (…) and it was like: Whoa! This would be murder (…) I cannot do this. I do not want to. I will not. (Mother 4)
I think, whatever happens, even an unborn child does not have the right to blow up a whole family (…) Just imagine, a handicapped child is born and the family falls apart (…) This would be very bad. (Father 7)
If the child wants to die, it will die on its own. I am not the one who has the right to decide whether the child will live or die (…) I will not do this. Let her decide on her own. (Mother 1)
3.4. Parental Needs and Care Pathways during Pregnancy and Birth
3.5. Parenting: Spending Time with the Child
Then, we just celebrated her birthday each day (…) There was cake and ice cream every day. (Mother 8)
Of course, we had several crises (…) Twice we thought, he was dead. And everybody else thought it too. But then, he came back again. You could tell, he was fighting for his life. (Father 9)
3.6. Farewell Rituals
I did not expect it, but it was important for us to have her home, because you could clearly see how the soul leaves the body. Well, you have seen the child alive before and you have seen it dead one day later, which is not very pleasant, to put it politely. However, as we saw the body and could sense and see and feel how the soul leaves the body, that nobody is home any more in that little body. Seeing this in the course of these days allowed the own soul, the own spirit and mind, the own heart to come along, to comprehend that she has died. (Father 8)
Our children came (…) And we went for a walk. I had a basket (…) There we put her and covered her. Then we went with our three children to a playground near the hospital. We made some pictures, how they played. And I was sitting on a rocker with the basket beside me and thought, what would people say if they knew there is a dead baby in the basket. Crazy, right? But this is family life, right? (Mother 7)
I wrapped her [deceased daughter] up and we went directly home with her, one and a half hours. Exactly. We just held her and went home in our car (…) The only thing was that the hospital administration called us the next day and told us the baby was missing. They said they would sent us the police, because we are not allowed to do this. And we said, okay, we will lock the door. The police will not enter and take away our dead child (Mother 6)
The burial was on Wednesday. We had her at home until then. We had her in a dark and cool room and got her out once a day in the evenings. We took her to the living room and spent time with her. We sat with her, held her, sang to her. We took pictures. Family pictures on the coach with a self-timer (Mother 7)
3.7. Bereavement
It left marks on everybody. Our oldest daughter became vegetarian. She was 13 years old and said, she will never have children on her own. She doubted her faith because of what God puts us through (…) Our next daughter had a breakdown after three years. Her subconscious had been dealing with death the whole time (…) She was afraid to go to bed one day and not wake up the next day (…) My next daughter suddenly had back pain, back pain, back pain (…) One of my sons became very aggressive (…) The youngest had a (…) severe peanut allergy, which is life-threatening (…) now he knows, death is definitive. So he stopped eating at school. He refused snacks at school, because he was afraid. (Mother 10)
4. Discussion
4.1. Main Findings
4.2. Strengths and Weaknesses
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Characteristics | Mothers | Fathers |
---|---|---|
Age (years) Mean Age Range | 42 32–52 | 46 30–63 |
Highest Educational Level Postgraduate Level University (of Applied Sciences) Vocational School | 0 8 3 | 2 6 1 |
Denomination Catholic Protestant Buddhist Undenominational | 5 3 1 2 | 6 1 0 2 |
Family Status at Diagnosis Married Unmarried Partnership | 8 3 | |
Diagnosis of the child Trisomy 18 Anencephaly Turner syndrome with congenital heart defect Encephalocele with congenital heart defect Cytomegalovirus infection with severe CNS and organ manifestations | 5 2 2 1 1 | |
Time of death of the child Intrauterine Death Stillbirth Neonatal death (3 days, 7 days) Death during infancy (4 months, 7 months) | 4 3 2 2 |
Phase | Care Structures | Families Mentioning Use of Service |
---|---|---|
Prenatal Diagnosis | Gynecologist Prenatal Diagnostician Human Geneticist | 11 11 3 |
Decision-Making | Midwife Psychosocial Support Spiritual Support Gynecologist | 3 2 2 1 |
Pregnancy | Midwife Gynecologist Hospital (diverse specialties) Pediatric Palliative Care Team Household Support Psychosocial Support Pediatrician Prenatal Diagnostician Spiritual Support Undertaker Bereavement support Alternative Medicine | 9 8 7 5 4 3 3 3 2 2 1 1 |
Birth | Hospital (diverse specialties) Midwife Spiritual Support Household support Pediatrician | 9 5 2 1 1 |
Spending time with living child | Hospital (diverse specialties) Pediatric Palliative Care Team Nursing services Household support Pediatrician Midwife Spiritual Support | 4 3 2 2 1 1 1 |
Farewell | Undertaker Hospital (diverse specialties) Midwife Spiritual support Bereavement support Pediatric Palliative Care Team Household support | 10 5 3 3 1 1 1 |
Follow up/Bereavement | Midwife Psychosocial support Bereavement support Alternative Medicine Spiritual support | 3 3 3 2 1 |
Care Provider | What Was Helpful? | What Was Unhelpful? |
---|---|---|
Gynecologist | Continuity of care—contact person Parent-centred approach Comprehensive Information Sensitiveness | Directive approach—Paternalism Provider seems overburdened |
Prenatal Diagnostician | Insensitiveness Directive approach—Paternalism Insufficient, inadequate information | |
Human Geneticist | Directive approach—Paternalism Insufficient, inadequate information Unnecessary Information | |
Hospital (diverse specialties) | Comprehensive Information Parent-centred approach Anticipatory guidance and planning Allows privacy, separate room Sensitiveness Helpful referrals Allows participation of siblings Allows visitors | Anonymity—no regular contact person Members of the staff seem overburdened |
Midwife | Continuity of care—contact person Parent-centred approach Sensitiveness Comprehensive information Competent, experienced Self-determination, creative design of rituals Anticipatory guidance and planning | |
Psychosocial support | Competent, experienced Supports decision-making Supports siblings Supports self-care Anticipatory guidance and planning Supports partnership | Inadequate when unplanned consult on physician’s request |
Spiritual support | Continuity of care—contact person Self-determination, creative design of rituals Helpful referrals Competent, experienced | Inadequate when unplanned consult on physician’s request |
Bereavement support | Competent, experienced Self-determination, creative design of rituals Supports siblings | |
Pediatric Palliative Care Team | Continuity of care—contact person when child survives Anticipatory guidance and planning Comprehensive information Parent-centred approach Sensitiveness Enables going home Helpful referrals Competent, experienced Collaboration with other care providers Support dealing with bureaucracy Allows participation of siblings | |
Pediatrician | Continuity of care—contact person when child survives Collaboration with other care providers Anticipatory guidance and planning Parent-centred approach | |
Nursing services | Supports medical care of the child Enables going home | |
Undertaker | Parent-centred approach Self-determination, creative design of rituals | Directive approach—Paternalism No creative design of rituals |
Alternative medicine | Supports self-care | |
Household support | Practical help household Support childcare |
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Hein, K.; Flaig, F.; Schramm, A.; Borasio, G.D.; Führer, M. The Path Is Made by Walking—Mapping the Healthcare Pathways of Parents Continuing Pregnancy after a Severe Life-Limiting Fetal Diagnosis: A Qualitative Interview Study. Children 2022, 9, 1555. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9101555
Hein K, Flaig F, Schramm A, Borasio GD, Führer M. The Path Is Made by Walking—Mapping the Healthcare Pathways of Parents Continuing Pregnancy after a Severe Life-Limiting Fetal Diagnosis: A Qualitative Interview Study. Children. 2022; 9(10):1555. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9101555
Chicago/Turabian StyleHein, Kerstin, Franziska Flaig, Annika Schramm, Gian Domenico Borasio, and Monika Führer. 2022. "The Path Is Made by Walking—Mapping the Healthcare Pathways of Parents Continuing Pregnancy after a Severe Life-Limiting Fetal Diagnosis: A Qualitative Interview Study" Children 9, no. 10: 1555. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9101555
APA StyleHein, K., Flaig, F., Schramm, A., Borasio, G. D., & Führer, M. (2022). The Path Is Made by Walking—Mapping the Healthcare Pathways of Parents Continuing Pregnancy after a Severe Life-Limiting Fetal Diagnosis: A Qualitative Interview Study. Children, 9(10), 1555. https://doi.org/10.3390/children9101555