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Articles

Recovering from stillbirth: the effects of making and sharing memories on maternal mental health

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Pages 195-207 | Received 10 Dec 2012, Accepted 09 Apr 2013, Published online: 08 May 2013
 

Abstract

Objective: This study examined whether the experience of creating and sharing memories of their babies is associated with mothers’ mental health after stillbirth, taking account of factors previously shown to be important. Background: Mothers of stillborn babies are usually offered the opportunity to spend time with and create memories of their babies. However, evidence on whether this leads to better mental health outcomes is equivocal. One possible explanation is that the impact of making memories is mediated by the extent to which women subsequently share these memories. Methods: Cross-sectional questionnaire study. Mothers (N = 162) of stillborn babies completed online questionnaires of how memories were made and shared, satisfaction with memory-making and sharing, professional and social support, and symptoms of depression, anxiety and PTSD. Results: The majority of mothers made and shared memories. The number of different memory-making activities was not associated with mental health outcomes. However, the degree to which mothers shared their memories was associated with fewer PTSD symptoms. Regression analyses showed that good mental health was most strongly associated with time since stillbirth, perceived professional support, sharing of memories and less wish to talk more about the baby. Conclusion: This study confirms research showing that time since stillbirth and perceived professional support is associated with better mental health following stillbirth and for the first time shows the importance of opportunities to share memories of the baby. Variation in sharing opportunities may contribute to inconsistencies in the association between making memories and mental health following stillbirth.

Notes

1. Although the UK’s Stillbirth Definition Act (1992) defines stillbirth as 24 weeks gestation and over, we included six women whose babies were born between 20 and 23 weeks. This is because there is no consistent international definition of stillbirth by gestational age (Mullan & Horton, Citation2011; Spong, Reddy, & Willinger, Citation2011) and these mothers identified their births as stillbirths.

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