Peer-Reviewed Journal Details
Mandatory Fields
Meaney, S,Gallagher, S,Lutomski, JE,O'Donoghue, K
2015
December
Health expectations : an international journal of public participation in health care and health policy
Parental decision making around perinatal autopsy: a qualitative investigation
Validated
Optional Fields
autopsy decision-making qualitative stillbirth POSTMORTEM EXAMINATION STILLBIRTH EXPERIENCES ATTITUDES RELATIVES VIEWS RATES
18
3160
3171
Background Decades of decline in uptake rates of perinatal autopsies has limited investigation into the causes and risk factors for stillbirth.Aims This study aimed to qualitatively explore perinatal autopsy decision-making processes in parents who experienced antepartum and intrapartum stillbirths.Material and Methods A qualitative semi-structured interview format was utilized. The line of questioning centred on how parents came to decide on consenting or declining to have a perinatal autopsy undertaken. Interpretative phenomenological analysis was employed as the analytic strategy. Purposive sampling was used to recruit 10 parents who either consented or declined autopsy from a large tertiary maternity hospital in Cork Ireland, where there were 30 stillbirths in 2011.Results Findings revealed four superordinate themes influencing parents' decision-making which varied with type of stillbirth experienced. Those parents who experienced antepartum stillbirths were more likely to consent; thus, knowing that the child was stillborn prior to delivery rather than on the day of delivery was associated with consent. In fact, these parents had more time for meaning-making; those consenting wanted to rule out self-blame and were fearful about future pregnancies. Parents who declined autopsy wanted to protect their infant from further harm. Interestingly, parents' knowledge and understanding of the autopsy itself were acquired primarily from public discourse.Conclusion Parents' decision-making regarding autopsy is profoundly affected by their emotional response to stillbirth; clinicians and other health professionals may play a key role, especially if they can address parental concerns regarding the invasiveness of the autopsy procedure.
10.1111/hex.12305
Grant Details