Midwives' descriptions of the postnatal experiences of women who use illicit substances: A descriptive study

Objectives. To describe midwives’ perceptions of the early mothering experiences of 20 Australian illicit-drug-using mothers. Design. A qualitative retrospective study using an explorative descriptive design. Twenty client records, completed by research midwives over 6 months (with follow-up visits...

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Main Authors: Dowdell, Julie, Fenwick, Jennifer, Bartu, Anne, Sharp, Jennifer
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/33136
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author Dowdell, Julie
Fenwick, Jennifer
Bartu, Anne
Sharp, Jennifer
author_facet Dowdell, Julie
Fenwick, Jennifer
Bartu, Anne
Sharp, Jennifer
author_sort Dowdell, Julie
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Objectives. To describe midwives’ perceptions of the early mothering experiences of 20 Australian illicit-drug-using mothers. Design. A qualitative retrospective study using an explorative descriptive design. Twenty client records, completed by research midwives over 6 months (with follow-up visits at 12 and 18 months), formed the data set. Thematic analysis and the techniques associated with constant comparison were used to analyse the data. Setting. Perth, Western Australia. Participants. Twenty postpartum women with a history of using illicit drugs. Findings. Seven major themes were identified that described how childbearing women with drug problems strive to be ‘normal mums’ although living on the fringe of society. The first three major themes were labelled; Baby as the priority; Hating the body: and Life sucks. Theme four represents the level of family and community support available, which had the potential to facilitate and/or hinder the experience. The analysis suggested that women who had good support, particularly at 4 months postpartum and beyond, were more likely to move towards the fifth theme Hanging in there: striving to be a normal mum. Women with minimal support, living in hostile and often abusive environments, gravitated towards the theme of Beyond caring with the eventual consequence being chaos and a return to heavy drug use, labelled Emotional fibrillation.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-331362017-09-13T16:08:23Z Midwives' descriptions of the postnatal experiences of women who use illicit substances: A descriptive study Dowdell, Julie Fenwick, Jennifer Bartu, Anne Sharp, Jennifer Postpartum Social support Women Illicit drug use Midwifery Objectives. To describe midwives’ perceptions of the early mothering experiences of 20 Australian illicit-drug-using mothers. Design. A qualitative retrospective study using an explorative descriptive design. Twenty client records, completed by research midwives over 6 months (with follow-up visits at 12 and 18 months), formed the data set. Thematic analysis and the techniques associated with constant comparison were used to analyse the data. Setting. Perth, Western Australia. Participants. Twenty postpartum women with a history of using illicit drugs. Findings. Seven major themes were identified that described how childbearing women with drug problems strive to be ‘normal mums’ although living on the fringe of society. The first three major themes were labelled; Baby as the priority; Hating the body: and Life sucks. Theme four represents the level of family and community support available, which had the potential to facilitate and/or hinder the experience. The analysis suggested that women who had good support, particularly at 4 months postpartum and beyond, were more likely to move towards the fifth theme Hanging in there: striving to be a normal mum. Women with minimal support, living in hostile and often abusive environments, gravitated towards the theme of Beyond caring with the eventual consequence being chaos and a return to heavy drug use, labelled Emotional fibrillation. 2009 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/33136 10.1016/j.midw.2007.03.008 Elsevier restricted
spellingShingle Postpartum
Social support
Women
Illicit drug use
Midwifery
Dowdell, Julie
Fenwick, Jennifer
Bartu, Anne
Sharp, Jennifer
Midwives' descriptions of the postnatal experiences of women who use illicit substances: A descriptive study
title Midwives' descriptions of the postnatal experiences of women who use illicit substances: A descriptive study
title_full Midwives' descriptions of the postnatal experiences of women who use illicit substances: A descriptive study
title_fullStr Midwives' descriptions of the postnatal experiences of women who use illicit substances: A descriptive study
title_full_unstemmed Midwives' descriptions of the postnatal experiences of women who use illicit substances: A descriptive study
title_short Midwives' descriptions of the postnatal experiences of women who use illicit substances: A descriptive study
title_sort midwives' descriptions of the postnatal experiences of women who use illicit substances: a descriptive study
topic Postpartum
Social support
Women
Illicit drug use
Midwifery
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/33136