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1.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ; 23(1): 529, 2023 Jul 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37480006

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Losing a baby during pregnancy can be a devastating experience for expectant parents. Many report dedicated, compassionate healthcare provision as a facilitator of positive mental health outcomes, however, healthcare services have been severely impacted during the COVID-19 pandemic. AIM: To explore women's experiences of healthcare service provision for miscarriage and termination of pregnancy for medical reasons (TFMR) on the island of Ireland during the COVID-19 pandemic. METHODS: Findings combine data from elements of two separate studies. Study 1 used a mixed methods approach with women who experienced miscarriage and attended a hospital in Northern Ireland. Study 2 was qualitative and examined experiences of TFMR in Northern Ireland and Ireland. Data analysed for this paper includes open-ended responses from 145 women to one survey question from Study 1, and semi-structured interview data with 12 women from Study 2. Data were analysed separately using Thematic Analysis and combined for presentation in this paper. RESULTS: Combined analysis of results indicated three themes, (1) Lonely and anxiety-provoking experiences; (2) Waiting for inadequate healthcare; and (3) The comfort of compassionate healthcare professionals. CONCLUSIONS: Women's experiences of healthcare provision were negatively impacted by COVID-19, with the exclusion of their partner in hospital, and delayed services highlighted as particularly distressing. Limited in-person interactions with health professionals appeared to compound difficulties. The lived experience of service users will be helpful in developing policies, guidelines, and training that balance both the need to minimise the risk of infection spread, with the emotional, psychological, and physical needs and wishes of parents. Further research is needed to explore the long-term impact of pregnancy loss during a pandemic on both parents and health professionals delivering care.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Spontaneous , Abortion, Therapeutic , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Abortion, Spontaneous/epidemiology , Abortion, Spontaneous/psychology , COVID-19/epidemiology , Delivery of Health Care , Pandemics , Qualitative Research , Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology
3.
Obstet Gynecol ; 137(1): 170-172, 2021 01 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33278283

ABSTRACT

In an effort to protect patients' reproductive rights, many states prohibit health care proxies from serving as surrogate decision makers for pregnancy termination in patients who lack capacity. We explore the case of a 24-year-old developmentally delayed woman with intractable seizures and complex psychosocial needs who was found to be pregnant. Her older sister was her health care proxy and declared that an abortion would be in her best interest, medically and socially; the patient herself lacked capacity to make this decision. Legally, her sister's judgment alone was insufficient to move forward with the procedure. Here we describe our multidisciplinary medical, ethical, and legal review of this case and how, despite agreeing with the patient's sister, legal barriers hindered our ability to obtain an abortion for this patient. Her situation illustrates the unintended consequences of our current approach to surrogate decision making in pregnancy termination. It highlights the need to reconsider the role of health care proxies in reproductive-choice decisions and emphasizes the value of a holistic evaluation of patients' social circumstances.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Therapeutic/legislation & jurisprudence , Developmental Disabilities/psychology , Mental Competency/legislation & jurisprudence , Proxy/legislation & jurisprudence , Reproductive Rights/legislation & jurisprudence , Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications/psychology , Rape , Seizures/psychology , Young Adult
4.
Z Geburtshilfe Neonatol ; 224(3): 136-142, 2020 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32157675

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To investigate the reasons for decision-making and concerns of patients in the field of prenatal screening, invasive prenatal diagnostic testing (IPDT), and termination of pregnancy (TOP). STUDY DESIGN: This questionnaire-based study consisted of 107 pregnant women who were referred for prenatal screening to the Hacettepe University Hospital. The questionnaire given to patients was prepared from scratch since there is no standard set of questions measuring patients' feelings and concerns regarding prenatal screening/diagnosis, IPDT, and TOP. RESULTS: Our questionnaire results showed that it is possible to classify decision-making factors into 6 groups: psychological, social, fear, religious/faith, support, and trust. The majority of patients were undecided (48.6%) about IPDT if prenatal screening test results were risky. Only 23.4% of patients were willing to accept IPDT. On the other hand, 55.1% of patients were not willing to undergo TOP if the fetal karyotyping results were abnormal. Religious factors seem to be important in refusing IPDT and TOP. CONCLUSION: Physicians should re-evaluate their practice in the field of prenatal screening and diagnosis in light of the high refusal rates of IPDT and TOP. Understanding factors influencing women's decision-making processes provides insight for service providers to help women at high risk of having foetal anomalies to make better-informed choices.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Induced/psychology , Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Pregnant Women/psychology , Prenatal Diagnosis/methods , Choice Behavior , Decision Making , Female , Humans , Mass Screening , Pregnancy , Prenatal Care , Prenatal Diagnosis/psychology
5.
Perspect Psychiatr Care ; 55(4): 618-623, 2019 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31004351

ABSTRACT

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study is to determine the levels of anxiety, depression, social support, and nursing care needed by women undergoing therapeutic abortion. DESIGNS AND METHODS: Sixty women were administered a sociodemographic form, the Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale and the Multidimensional Perceived Social Support Scale. RESULTS: More than half of the women experienced anxiety (61.7%). Anxiety scores were high (10.8 ± 3.7), and most of the women had depression (85.0%). Social support from family and friends of the women decreased the women's anxiety and depression levels significantly; social support from their partners also decreased the women's anxiety levels (P < 0.05). PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: Support from family and friends after therapeutic abortion is a fundamental affective variable on anxiety scores.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Anxiety/psychology , Depression/psychology , Social Support , Abortion, Therapeutic/statistics & numerical data , Adult , Anxiety/epidemiology , Depression/epidemiology , Family/psychology , Female , Friends/psychology , Humans , Pregnancy , Spouses/psychology
6.
Contraception ; 97(6): 520-523, 2018 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29477632

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: We sought to explore the relationship between counseling quality, measured by shared decision making and decision satisfaction, and psychological outcomes (anxiety, grief, and posttraumatic stress) after second-trimester abortion for pregnancy complications. STUDY DESIGN: We conducted a cross-sectional study of women who underwent second-trimester abortion for complications. We recruited participants from Facebook and online support groups and surveyed them about counseling experiences and psychosocial issues. We used multivariate linear regression to evaluate relationships between counseling quality and psychological outcomes. RESULTS: We analyzed data from 145 respondents. Shared decision making and decision satisfaction scores were positively and strongly correlated in bivariate analysis (r=0.7, p<.0001), as were posttraumatic stress and grief scores (r=0.7, p<.0001). In the adjusted analysis, higher decision satisfaction was associated with lower grief and posttraumatic stress scores (p=.02 and p=.01, respectively) and higher shared decision making was associated with lower posttraumatic stress scores (p=.01). CONCLUSIONS: Decision satisfaction and shared decision making have a positive effect on psychological outcomes after second-trimester abortion for pregnancy complications. Counseling quality may be especially important in this setting given the sensitive nature of decisions regarding pregnancy termination for complications. IMPLICATION: These results highlight the importance of patient-centered counseling for women seeking pregnancy termination.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Induced/psychology , Anxiety/therapy , Counseling , Grief , Pregnancy Complications/surgery , Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Adaptation, Psychological , Cross-Sectional Studies , Decision Making , Female , Humans , Patient Satisfaction , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Trimester, Second
7.
Riv Psichiatr ; 53(6): 324-330, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30667399

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: The aim of this work was to identify risk predictors of a negative psychological outcome among personal, situational and systemic characteristics of women who choose to interrupt a pregnancy by elective (e.g., not feeling ready for giving birth) or therapeutic means (e.g., fetal abnormalities). METHODS: A prospective study on two cohorts were conducted and focused on a group of women: the first recurred to elective abortion (VTP) (n=20) and the second recurred to therapeutic abortion (TTP) (n=30). The psychological distress was measured before and after abortion through the administration of two psychometric tests: SCL-90-r and CES-D. Dependent samples t-test was used to evaluate the tendency of the two cohorts' mean scores before and after abortion; repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) was used to analyze the variance of mean scores of subgroups isolated for variables of interest before and after abortion. RESULTS: After the termination of pregnancy, in VTP a significant decrease between t-0 and t-1 mean score (p<0.05) was observed in all SCL-90-r's global scores and subscales: GSI (p=0.036), PST (p=.031), PSDI (p=0.004), SOM (p=0.009), DEP (p=0.032), ANX (p=0.036) and even in CES-D score of DEP (p=0.017) and SOM (p=0.011) subscales. In TTP a relevant decrease was found in SCL-90's SOM (p=0.023) and ANX, (p=0.016) subscales and in CES-D total score (p=0.020), POS (p=0.014) and SOM (p=0.09)subscales. In VTP group presence of partner support and absence of relational problems resulted as protective factors from a worse outcome. CONCLUSION: The results of this study suggest that, following an induced abortion, women experienced a significant improvement in the mood state compared to the period before the event; poor partner support and relational problems related with the abortion emerged as risk factors for a significantly worse psychological outcome compared to other causes interruption of pregnancy.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Induced/psychology , Elective Surgical Procedures/psychology , Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Adult , Female , Humans , Longitudinal Studies , Middle Aged , Pregnancy , Prospective Studies , Retreatment/psychology , Young Adult
9.
Eur J Obstet Gynecol Reprod Biol ; 199: 11-5, 2016 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26878101

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: A wide spectrum of emotions are experienced during abortion, including anxiety, sadness and grief, guilt, pessimism about future pregnancies, disturbed self-perception and loss of confidence in intimate relationships. This study aimed to compare the short-term effects of legal voluntary termination of pregnancy with uterine evacuation for medical reasons on female sexual function. STUDY DESIGN: The study group was comprised of 50 patients admitted to the Family Planning Clinic for legal voluntary termination of pregnancy <10 weeks of gestation, and the control group was comprised of 50 patients who underwent manual vacuum aspiration of the products of conception for medical reasons (e.g. inevitable abortion, incomplete abortion, fetal abnormality and teratogenic drug use). Female sexual function in the two groups was evaluated using the Golombok-Rust Inventory of Sexual Satisfaction (GRISS). GRISS scores immediately before and 3 months after termination of pregnancy were compared within each group and between the two groups. RESULTS: Mean total GRISS scores before and after termination of pregnancy were 5.33 and 8.12 in the study group, and 6.02 and 6.4 in the control group, respectively (p<0.05). The increase in GRISS scores for both groups indicated deterioration in sexual function (p=0.000 and p=0.016, respectively). Three months after termination of pregnancy, the total GRISS score was significantly higher in the study group compared with the control group (8.12 vs 6.4, p<0.05). CONCLUSION: Female sexual dysfunction is a complicated concept that is affected by multiple factors over a woman's lifetime. It is important to consider female sexual function as a part of reproductive health, with a close relationship with contraception. As such, patients should receive counselling about sexual function and contraception as part of comprehensive abortion care.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Incomplete/therapy , Abortion, Induced/psychology , Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Self Concept , Sexual Behavior/psychology , Abortion, Incomplete/psychology , Adult , Anxiety/psychology , Contraception , Counseling , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Young Adult
10.
Prenat Diagn ; 36(1): 92-9, 2016 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26531671

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to explore maternal-fetal medicine specialists' experiences of conducting feticide in late termination of pregnancy. METHODS: Participants were recruited via email. Purposeful sampling resulted in ten maternal-fetal specialists. Semistructured interviews were used to examine their experiences of conducting feticide. Interviews occurred across four English National Health Service hospitals. Interpretative phenomenological analysis was used. RESULTS: An ongoing doctor-patient relationship when conducting feticide facilitated participants' self-image as clinicians rather than technicians. Coping involved rationalisation, with feticide viewed as 'part of the job'. Supportive team relationships helped keep emotional expression within control. Participants were not distressed if they felt, through relationship-based decision-making, that the feticide aligned with their values and legal interpretation. To avoid negative judgements, they disclosed selectively, only telling trusted individuals that they conducted feticides. CONCLUSIONS: Participants experienced conducting feticides as difficult but necessary, eliciting pride from the skills involved. Some noted management of personal distress. Optimal conditions were involvement in the process from the initial decision-making and team support. Providing feticides was deemed as potentially stigmatising, with selective disclosure employed. Training in managing feticides and guidance on providing optimal service conditions may decrease selectivity of disclosures and enhance staff well-being and the quality of feticide provisions. © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Eugenic/psychology , Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Attitude of Health Personnel , Perinatology , Pregnancy Trimester, Second , Abortion, Eugenic/ethics , Abortion, Eugenic/methods , Abortion, Therapeutic/ethics , Abortion, Therapeutic/methods , England , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Male , Physician-Patient Relations , Pregnancy , Qualitative Research
11.
Anesth Analg ; 121(2): 457-64, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26197374

ABSTRACT

Expectant mothers and their spouses spend months preparing to eagerly welcome their much-anticipated baby into their family. Stillbirth or a diagnosis of life-limiting fetal anomalies comes as a devastating turn of events for affected women and their families. From the time of diagnosis to intervention (i.e., induction of labor for stillbirth or late termination of pregnancy for fetal anomalies), affected women often feel vulnerable and abandoned, with many experiencing long-term psychological and emotional effects. Knowledge of obstetric management, ethical and medical challenges, and psychological aspects have evolved in recent years. Familiarity with this emerging knowledge better prepares the obstetric anesthesiologist to deliver effective and empathic care. Encounters with women experiencing stillbirth and life-limiting fetal anomalies prompted this review of current evidence regarding parturient' perspectives on their care as they set out on the road to recovery.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Congenital Abnormalities/psychology , Congenital Abnormalities/surgery , Labor, Induced/psychology , Mothers/psychology , Stillbirth/psychology , Abortion, Therapeutic/adverse effects , Adaptation, Psychological , Adult , Bereavement , Congenital Abnormalities/diagnosis , Female , Hospice Care , Humans , Labor, Induced/adverse effects , Predictive Value of Tests , Pregnancy , Prenatal Diagnosis , Treatment Outcome
12.
Public Health Genomics ; 18(4): 237-41, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26044545

ABSTRACT

Management of sickle cell disease (SCD) in Africa needs to be accompanied by various preventive strategies, including early detection via prenatal genetic diagnosis (PND). Contrary to Cameroonian doctors who considered termination of an affected pregnancy (TAP) for SCD in 36.1%, the majority of parents (62.5%) with affected children accepted TAP in principle. In practice, most women opted for TAP (90%), justified by a huge psycho-social burden. The ethical and legal challenges of PND prompted the need to explore the use of genetics for secondary prevention of SCD. In 610 Cameroonian SCD patients, the genomic variations in two principal foetal haemoglobin-promoting loci were significantly associated with foetal haemoglobin levels. In addition, the co-inheritance of a 3.7-kb α-globin gene deletion and SCD was associated with a late disease onset and possibly improved survival: there was a much higher allele frequency of the 3.7-kb α-globin gene deletion in SCD patients (∼ 40%) than in haemoglobin AA controls (∼ 10%). The data indicate the urgent need to develop and implement policy actions in sub-Saharan Africa on at least four levels: (1) the implementation of SCD screening practices and early neonatal follow-up; (2) the development and incorporating of socio-economic support to alleviate the burden of SCD on affected families; (3) the exploration of the appropriateness of the medical abortion laws for SCD, and (4) the development of national plans for genetic medicine, including research on genomic variants that affect the phenotypes of SCD, in order to potentially use them for anticipatory guidance.


Subject(s)
Anemia, Sickle Cell/genetics , Anemia, Sickle Cell/prevention & control , Genetic Testing , Genetic Variation/genetics , Prenatal Diagnosis , Abortion, Therapeutic/legislation & jurisprudence , Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Anemia, Sickle Cell/diagnosis , Anemia, Sickle Cell/epidemiology , Cameroon/epidemiology , Disease Management , Female , Fetal Hemoglobin/genetics , Gene Deletion , Gene Frequency , Genetic Counseling , Genetic Testing/ethics , Genetics, Medical , Genome, Human/genetics , Genomics , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice , Health Policy , Hemoglobin A/genetics , Humans , Phenotype , Pregnancy , Prenatal Diagnosis/ethics , Secondary Prevention/methods , Socioeconomic Factors , Thalassemia/genetics , alpha-Globins/genetics
13.
J Genet Couns ; 24(6): 952-60, 2015 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25828421

ABSTRACT

With the rapidly evolving field of prenatal testing, there is a growing need to provide support for women pursuing termination of pregnancy following the discovery of a fetal anomaly. Previous studies have documented that women in this situation often feel unsupported, but the type of resources desired by this population remains undetermined. We studied the awareness and utilization of support resources in 51 women at the time of the procedure, at 6 weeks, and at 3 months following the event. Though largely knowledgeable of existing resources at the time of the procedure, only 50 % admitted contemplating their individualized need for support. Most expected to rely on the support of family and friends. Additionally, 50 % expressed the desire to commemorate the pregnancy, though none wanted direct contact with their healthcare provider(s). Responses from the 6 weeks and 3 months assessments were consistent with previous literature as many women indicated not coping as expected and were unprepared for the psychological consequences following the procedure. Our findings indicate that women in these situations may not realize what their long-term support needs will be. They further indicate that guidelines for routine follow-up care should be established among healthcare providers that respect this population's initial desires to avoid reminders of the pregnancy and promote a flexible timeframe for support uptake. Additional support resources that promote flexible uptake as well as meet the desires of anonymity and ease of access need to be developed for this population.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Social Support , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/prevention & control , Stress, Psychological/prevention & control , Adaptation, Psychological , Adult , Female , Humans , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Trimester, First , Pregnancy Trimester, Second , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/etiology , Stress, Psychological/etiology , Young Adult
14.
BMC Med Ethics ; 15: 10, 2014 Feb 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24499356

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Approximately one-fourth of all the inhabitants on earth are Muslims. Due to unprecedented migration, physicians are often confronted with cultures other than their own that adhere to different paradigms. DISCUSSION: In Islam, and most religions, abortion is forbidden. Islam is considerably liberal concerning abortion, which is dependent on (i) the threat of harm to mothers, (ii) the status of the pregnancy before or after ensoulment (on the 120th day of gestation), and (iii) the presence of foetal anomalies that are incompatible with life. Considerable variation in religious edicts exists, but most Islamic scholars agree that the termination of a pregnancy for foetal anomalies is allowed before ensoulment, after which abortion becomes totally forbidden, even in the presence of foetal abnormalities; the exception being a risk to the mother's life or confirmed intrauterine death. SUMMARY: The authors urge Muslim law makers to also consider abortion post ensoulment if it is certain that the malformed foetus will decease soon after birth or will be severely malformed and physically and mentally incapacitated after birth to avoid substantial hardship that may continue for years for mothers and family members. The authors recommend that an institutional committee governed and monitored by a national committee make decisions pertaining to abortion to ensure that ethics are preserved and mistakes are prevented. Anomalous foetuses must be detected at the earliest possible time to enable an appropriate medical intervention prior to the 120th day.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Therapeutic/ethics , Beginning of Human Life , Congenital Abnormalities , Islam , Mothers/psychology , Policy Making , Religion and Medicine , Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Attitude to Health , Beginning of Human Life/ethics , Delayed Diagnosis , Female , Fetal Development , Gestational Age , Guidelines as Topic , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Male , Pregnancy , Pregnancy Complications
15.
Nephrology (Carlton) ; 17(4): 398-401, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22239175

ABSTRACT

AIM: Alport syndrome (AS) is a progressive renal disease characterized by hematuria and progressive renal failure. X-linked dominant AS (XLAS) is the predominant inheritance form caused by mutations in COL4A5 gene. Attitudes toward genetic diagnosis and prenatal diagnosis for Chinese AS families were investigated. Attitudes toward genetic diagnosis and prenatal diagnosis in Chinese XLAS families were evaluated in the current study. METHODS: A total of 160 XLAS patients and their 126 healthy family members in China were interviewed. After providing background knowledge counselling and education on AS, their attitudes toward genetic diagnosis and prenatal diagnosis were evaluated by multiple-choice questionnaire. RESULTS: Majority of the respondents cared mostly about the prognosis and treatment effects of AS (89.9% vs 81.1%) since they considered that the worst outcome of XALS was renal insufficiency (92.3%). Of all the interviewees, 99.3% were interested in genetic research for the discovery of better treatments and more appropriate diagnostic tools (positive attitudes) (89.5% vs 73.2%). About 80% of the participants would accept prenatal testing and subsequent termination of pregnancy in cases of affected foetuses (boys: 86.8% and girls: 74.6%, respectively). CONCLUSION: Most Chinese XLAS families show positive attitudes and desire new discoveries in treatment and diagnosis. About 80% of respondents would approve prenatal testing with a desire for selective termination of pregnancy rather than predicting the health of a future child.


Subject(s)
Asian People/psychology , Family/psychology , Genetic Testing , Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice/ethnology , Nephritis, Hereditary/diagnosis , Patient Education as Topic , Prenatal Diagnosis/psychology , Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , China/epidemiology , Collagen Type IV/genetics , Comprehension , Cost of Illness , Family/ethnology , Female , Genetic Counseling/psychology , Genetic Predisposition to Disease , Humans , Male , Mutation , Nephritis, Hereditary/ethnology , Nephritis, Hereditary/genetics , Nephritis, Hereditary/psychology , Nephritis, Hereditary/therapy , Patient Preference , Phenotype , Predictive Value of Tests , Pregnancy , Prognosis , Surveys and Questionnaires
16.
Int J Gynaecol Obstet ; 116(3): 244-8, 2012 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22169044

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To describe how women terminating a pregnancy for fetal or maternal complications decide between surgical (dilation and evacuation [D&E]) and medical abortion. METHODS: A qualitative study was conducted among women who underwent D&E or medical abortion before 24 weeks of gestation for fetal anomalies or pregnancy complications at an academic medical center where both methods are offered. Women were interviewed by phone 1 week after the procedure about their counseling experiences and reasons for choosing a particular method. Data were analyzed by 3 researchers using a grounded theory approach, and interviews were stopped upon thematic saturation. RESULTS: Of the 21 women, 13 (62%) chose D&E and 8 (38%) chose medical abortion. Key themes that emerged from the interviews were valuing the ability to choose the method, and the importance of religious beliefs, abortion attitudes, and emotional coping style. Women's preferences for a method were largely based on their individual emotional coping styles. CONCLUSION: Decisions to undergo D&E or medical abortion are highly personal and could affect how women recover after ending a desired pregnancy. Women should be offered counseling about and access to both methods. Understanding these decision processes may help when counseling women faced with these diagnoses and decisions.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Eugenic/psychology , Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Choice Behavior , Congenital Abnormalities , Pregnancy Complications , Pregnancy Trimester, Second , Abortifacient Agents , Abortion, Eugenic/methods , Abortion, Therapeutic/methods , Adaptation, Psychological , Adult , Counseling , Dilatation and Curettage , Female , Humans , Interviews as Topic , Patient Participation , Patient Preference , Pregnancy , Religion
17.
Article in English | Index Psychology - journals | ID: psi-55044

ABSTRACT

Abortion has long occupied the legal discussions in both Brazilian and international law. It is asubject of immense complexity, which in its interdisciplinarity, generates intense discussions among lawyers, doctors, scientists, philosophers and the civil society. In this environment, the question concerning the possibility or not of the termination of the anencephalic pregnancy occupies the halls of the Brazilian Constitutional Court, which has enabled the clash of ideas and the full participation of all stakeholders. Through the trial of ADPF 54, all the peculiarities of this "type of abortion" are being teased out. However, the issue should be constitutionally interpreted by the hermeneutist. In a moment of contemporary constitutionalism that values the fundamental principles of the citizenship, dignity, freedom and health of the mother should be placed in prominence, even making use of instruments of constitutional hermeneutics, as the consistent interpretation and reflection. Thus, the legal treatment of anencephalic pregnancy must face the interruption as a therapeutic guarantor of human dignity for women, and never as abortion.(AU)


Há tempos o aborto vem ocupando as discussões jurídicas, tanto no ordenamento pátrio como internacional. É tema de imensa complexidade, que, por sua interdisciplinaridade, gera intensas discussões entre juristas, médicos, cientistas, filósofos e a própria sociedade civil. Nesse ambiente, a questão referente à possibilidade, ou não, da interrupção da gestação do feto anencefálico vem ocupando os salões da Corte Constitucional Brasileira, que tem possibilitado o embate de ideias e a participação ampla de todos os interessados. Por meio do julgamento da ADPF 54, todas as particularidades dessa "modalidade de aborto" vêm sendo esmiuçadas. Porém, é por meio de uma interpretação constitucional que os hermeneutas devem compreender a questão. Em um momento de constitucionalismo contemporâneo valorizador dos princípios fundamentais do cidadão, a dignidade, a liberdade e a saúde da mãe devem ser colocadas em proeminência, lançando-se mão, inclusive, de instrumentos da hermenêutica constitucional, como a interpretação conforme e a ponderação. Assim, o tratamento jurídico da gravidez anencefálica deve entender a interrupção desta gestação como medida terapêutica garantidora da dignidade humana da mulher, e jamais como aborto.(AU)


Subject(s)
Anencephaly/psychology , Abortion, Induced/legislation & jurisprudence , Abortion, Induced/psychology , Jurisprudence , Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology
18.
J Pastoral Care Counsel ; 65(1-2): 4.1-10, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21928497

ABSTRACT

The spiritual needs of couples (9 mothers and 5 fathers) who were planning to terminate wanted second trimester pregnancies because of serious fetal anomalies were surveyed. Their greatest needs were for a "guidance from a higher power" and for "someone to pray for them." Unlike other reported groups of patients, they did not want or expect their healthcare team to discuss their faith, or to pray with them. Most would prefer support from their own pastors, but their religious community was involved to only a small extent. They would welcome support from hospital chaplains, who could play a substantive and unique pastoral role in this clinical context.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Counseling/methods , Health Services Needs and Demand , Marriage/psychology , Pastoral Care/methods , Spirituality , Adult , Attitude to Death , Congenital Abnormalities , Female , Humans , Male , Pregnancy , Prenatal Care/methods , Professional-Patient Relations , Social Support , Young Adult
19.
J Relig Health ; 50(4): 901-10, 2011 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21861239

ABSTRACT

Women (n = 15) who were pregnant after a traumatic late pregnancy loss (termination because of fetal death or serious anomalies) completed psychometric screening tests and scales, including the Perinatal Grief Scale (PGS), the Impact of Event Scale (IES), the Duke Depression Inventory (DDI), the Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD), and the Hoge Scale for Intrinsic Religiosity (IR). Despite a mean elapsed time since the prior loss of 27 (range, 7-47) months, half (7/15, 47%) of the combined groups had high levels of grief on the PGS. Multiple positive scores on psychometric tests were frequent: Sixty percent (9/15) had high scores on the PGS Active Grief subscale or on the IES. Forty percent (6/15) had a high score on the DDI, and 17% (3/15) on the GAD. IR scores significantly and negatively correlated with scores on the Despair subscale of the PGS. The results from this pilot study suggest that high levels of grief and PTS symptoms are significant problems for pregnant women who have suffered late loss of a wanted pregnancy. Religiosity may play an important part in maternal coping during these stressful pregnancies.


Subject(s)
Abortion, Spontaneous/psychology , Congenital Abnormalities/psychology , Grief , Pregnancy Trimester, Second/psychology , Religion and Psychology , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/diagnosis , Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Adaptation, Psychological , Adult , Female , Fetal Death , Humans , Life Change Events , Pilot Projects , Pregnancy , Pregnant Women/psychology , Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic/psychology , Young Adult
20.
Cuad Bioet ; 20(70): 441-50, 2009.
Article in Spanish | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19799483

ABSTRACT

Prenatal diagnosis universalization allows knowing the prognostic possibilities in a situation of limited therapeutical resources. Therefore, besides permitting the peace of a normal fetal development, in other circumstances it can provoke parent's requirement to interrupt pregnancy in cases of malformation or chromosomal alteration, situations that parents may conceive as difficult for child's life and family environment. Diagnostic tests reliability and risks, information given to the parents, conversion in an eugenic practice of prenatal diagnosis and OMS recommendations in relation to the optional and voluntary character that this diagnosis should have are analysed.


Subject(s)
Neonatology/ethics , Obstetrics/ethics , Parents/psychology , Prenatal Diagnosis/ethics , Abortion, Eugenic/ethics , Abortion, Eugenic/psychology , Abortion, Therapeutic/ethics , Abortion, Therapeutic/psychology , Adult , Choice Behavior/ethics , Chromosome Disorders/diagnosis , Chromosome Disorders/embryology , Female , Fetal Diseases/diagnosis , Genetic Counseling/ethics , Genetic Diseases, Inborn/diagnosis , Genetic Diseases, Inborn/embryology , Humans , Infant, Newborn , Informed Consent/ethics , Male , Pregnancy , Pregnancy, High-Risk , Pregnancy, Multiple , Prenatal Diagnosis/psychology , World Health Organization
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