Impact of a multiple birth on maternal mental health and early mother-infant interactions: implications for information provision in IVF treatment

One in four IVF pregnancies is a twin birth. This research explored the impact of a multiple IVF birth on maternal mental health and examined whether twin status conferred additional risk for poor mother-infant interaction and parenting stress following a premature birth. It further surveyed factor...

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Main Author: Beer, Charlotte Emma
Format: Thesis (University of Nottingham only)
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10546/
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author Beer, Charlotte Emma
author_facet Beer, Charlotte Emma
author_sort Beer, Charlotte Emma
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description One in four IVF pregnancies is a twin birth. This research explored the impact of a multiple IVF birth on maternal mental health and examined whether twin status conferred additional risk for poor mother-infant interaction and parenting stress following a premature birth. It further surveyed factors which had influenced couples' decisions regarding embryo transfer. A prospective study of 175 mothers conceiving after IVF found mothers of multiples (n=56) had a three-fold risk of scoring above the threshold for depression in the postpartum period. Unsettled and irregular infant behaviour was another independent risk factor. Theme analysis revealed mothers of multiples were more likely to express negative themes such as 'tiredness'. More mothers of singletons described 'feeling wonderful'. Mothers of premature twins (n=17) were closely matched with mothers of premature singletons and compared using the Nursing Child Assessment Teaching Scale (NCATS), Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment (HOME) Responsivity subscale and the Parenting Stress Index. There were no differences in maternal NCATS scores but twin infants were less responsive and provided less clear cues. Mothers of twins were less responsive in an everyday setting and 25% (versus 0%) reported extreme levels of parenting stress. Singleton mothers had significantly lower scores for the parent child dysfunctional interaction subscale. None of the couples surveyed (n=68) had chosen to transfer a single embryo (eSET). Only 19.1% rated desire for twins as an important factor in their decision. Most important was desire to increase the chance of pregnancy (92.6%). Couples perceived eSET as reducing the chance of pregnancy. Most couples found the decision about number of embryos to transfer easy and rated medical advice as very important suggesting a need for more support for this complex decision. This thesis established that a single birth offers important psychosocial advantages for both mother and baby, findings which could promote informed decisions regarding embryo transfer.
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spelling nottingham-105462025-02-28T11:08:43Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10546/ Impact of a multiple birth on maternal mental health and early mother-infant interactions: implications for information provision in IVF treatment Beer, Charlotte Emma One in four IVF pregnancies is a twin birth. This research explored the impact of a multiple IVF birth on maternal mental health and examined whether twin status conferred additional risk for poor mother-infant interaction and parenting stress following a premature birth. It further surveyed factors which had influenced couples' decisions regarding embryo transfer. A prospective study of 175 mothers conceiving after IVF found mothers of multiples (n=56) had a three-fold risk of scoring above the threshold for depression in the postpartum period. Unsettled and irregular infant behaviour was another independent risk factor. Theme analysis revealed mothers of multiples were more likely to express negative themes such as 'tiredness'. More mothers of singletons described 'feeling wonderful'. Mothers of premature twins (n=17) were closely matched with mothers of premature singletons and compared using the Nursing Child Assessment Teaching Scale (NCATS), Home Observation for Measurement of the Environment (HOME) Responsivity subscale and the Parenting Stress Index. There were no differences in maternal NCATS scores but twin infants were less responsive and provided less clear cues. Mothers of twins were less responsive in an everyday setting and 25% (versus 0%) reported extreme levels of parenting stress. Singleton mothers had significantly lower scores for the parent child dysfunctional interaction subscale. None of the couples surveyed (n=68) had chosen to transfer a single embryo (eSET). Only 19.1% rated desire for twins as an important factor in their decision. Most important was desire to increase the chance of pregnancy (92.6%). Couples perceived eSET as reducing the chance of pregnancy. Most couples found the decision about number of embryos to transfer easy and rated medical advice as very important suggesting a need for more support for this complex decision. This thesis established that a single birth offers important psychosocial advantages for both mother and baby, findings which could promote informed decisions regarding embryo transfer. 2008 Thesis (University of Nottingham only) NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en arr https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10546/1/phd_thesis.pdf Beer, Charlotte Emma (2008) Impact of a multiple birth on maternal mental health and early mother-infant interactions: implications for information provision in IVF treatment. PhD thesis, University of Nottingham. multiple birth IVF twins single embryo transfer theme analysis emotional well-being mother-infant interaction patient decision making
spellingShingle multiple birth
IVF
twins
single embryo transfer
theme analysis
emotional well-being
mother-infant interaction
patient decision making
Beer, Charlotte Emma
Impact of a multiple birth on maternal mental health and early mother-infant interactions: implications for information provision in IVF treatment
title Impact of a multiple birth on maternal mental health and early mother-infant interactions: implications for information provision in IVF treatment
title_full Impact of a multiple birth on maternal mental health and early mother-infant interactions: implications for information provision in IVF treatment
title_fullStr Impact of a multiple birth on maternal mental health and early mother-infant interactions: implications for information provision in IVF treatment
title_full_unstemmed Impact of a multiple birth on maternal mental health and early mother-infant interactions: implications for information provision in IVF treatment
title_short Impact of a multiple birth on maternal mental health and early mother-infant interactions: implications for information provision in IVF treatment
title_sort impact of a multiple birth on maternal mental health and early mother-infant interactions: implications for information provision in ivf treatment
topic multiple birth
IVF
twins
single embryo transfer
theme analysis
emotional well-being
mother-infant interaction
patient decision making
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/10546/