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"Where's my baby?" A feminist phenomenological study of women experiencing preventable separation from their baby at caesarean birth. | LitMetric

"Where's my baby?" A feminist phenomenological study of women experiencing preventable separation from their baby at caesarean birth.

Women Birth

Australian Catholic University, School of Nursing, Midwifery & Paramedicine, 22 Main Street, Blacktown, NSW 2148, Australia. Electronic address:

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • When women and babies are separated right after a Caesarean section, it can make the birth experience worse and affect how the mothers feel about becoming a parent.
  • The study interviewed 15 women who experienced this separation to learn more about their feelings and experiences.
  • The main findings showed that the women felt disconnected, had strong emotions, were influenced by their situation, and gained important insights about the lack of support and control they had during this time.

Article Abstract

Problem: Separating women and babies immediately after birth contributes to poor birth experience and reduced satisfaction.

Background: A negative birth experience can impact a woman's transition to motherhood and emotional well-being beyond the newborn period. Separating women from their baby at birth is known to reduce birth satisfaction and is more likely to happen at caesarean section births.

Question: What is the experience of women who are separated from their baby after caesarean section birth without medical necessity?

Methods: Unstructured, in-depth phenomenological interviews were conducted with fifteen women who had been separated from their well-baby at caesarean section birth. Data was analysed using a Modified van Kaam approach. A novel feminist phenomenological framework with two birthing theories was used to explore the experience of the participants.

Findings: Four major themes emerged - Disconnection, Emotional Turmoil, Influence, and Insight. These demonstrated significant trauma that both the separation and perinatal care created.

Discussion: The participants recognised their vulnerability and the lack of power and control they had over themselves and their baby, which was seemingly not acknowledged. Provider and hospital needs were valued above those of the women.

Conclusion: Woman-centred care was not evident in the treatment of these women despite the attendance of a midwife at each birth. This research challenges midwives and other health care providers to support and advocate for those birthing by caesarean section to return power and control and support them to remain in close physical contact with their baby immediately after birth.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.wombi.2024.101828DOI Listing

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