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Women's experiences of early miscarriage: implications for nursing care

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING
Volume 24, Issue 11-12, Pages 1457-1465

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jocn.12781

Keywords

aftercare; anxiety; depression; early miscarriage; pregnancy loss; women's feelings

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Aims and objectivesTo investigate women's experience of early miscarriage (the first 16weeks of pregnancy) by reviewing the literature since 1990, identifying and exploring critical themes. BackgroundEarly miscarriage loss accounts for 50,000 inpatient admissions per year in the UK reported in 2010. It can result in anxiety, depression, guilt, emptiness and other features of bereavement. DesignA structured literature review of qualitative literature was undertaken to explore the evidence of women's experience of early miscarriage, and elicit common themes emerging. MethodsA systematic electronic database search was conducted using a range of search engines. Nine papers were identified; four from the UK and one paper each from the USA, Australia, Canada, Israel and Sweden. ResultsFour predominant themes were identified from the experiences of 211 women in the nine studies: What I feel', Care for me and communicate with me', Me, my baby and others' and Help me to cope with the future'. ConclusionsEarly miscarriage is a potentially devastating experience, and the diversity of experiences of women must be reflected in the provision of appropriate and sensitive nursing care. Relevance to clinical practiceThe study demonstrated a significant training need for nurses and midwives to provide women with individualised care.

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