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- Carol Roehrs, Anne Masterson, Ruth Alles, Catherine Witt, and Phillis Rutt.
- School of Nursing, University of Northern Colorado, Greeley, CO 80639, USA. carol.roehrs@unco.edu
- J Obstet Gynecol Neonatal Nurs. 2008 Nov 1;37(6):631-9.
ObjectiveTo describe support needs and comfort level of labor nurses caring for families experiencing perinatal loss.DesignQualitative descriptive study.SettingA western hospital birthing unit.ParticipantsTen labor nurses.MethodParticipants completed online surveys and follow-up interviews; data saturation was reached. Content analysis produced themes and recommendations related to providing perinatal bereavement care. Participants reviewed and confirmed accuracy of the results.ResultsNurses are generally comfortable but find it difficult to provide perinatal bereavement care. Strategies for coping include focusing on needed care, talking to nursing peers, and spending time with their own family members. Nurses take turns providing care depending on "who is best able to handle it that day" and prefer not to be assigned a laboring patient in addition to the grieving parents. Developing clinical expertise is necessary to gain the comfort level and the skills necessary to care for these vulnerable families. Orientation experiences and nursing staff debriefing would help. Needed education includes grief training, communication techniques, and guidelines for the extensive paperwork.ConclusionsInitial and ongoing education of nurses about perinatal bereavement care is needed. Effective strategies for coping during and after providing care would support nurses in meeting the emotional challenge of providing high quality perinatal bereavement care.
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