叙述的
感觉
悲伤
焦虑
大流行
心理学
代理(哲学)
2019年冠状病毒病(COVID-19)
发展心理学
医学
社会心理学
社会学
愤怒
精神科
文学类
疾病
艺术
社会科学
病理
传染病(医学专业)
作者
Maria Brann,Jennifer J. Bute,Susanna Foxworthy Scott,Nicole L. Johnson
标识
DOI:10.1080/10410236.2023.2179714
摘要
Women who gave birth in the spring and summer of 2020 contended with a host of challenging factors. In addition to facing pregnancy, labor, and delivery during an emerging global pandemic, women grappled with health care restrictions that altered their birth experience. To explore how women made sense of their birth during COVID-19, we analyzed written narratives from 71 women who gave birth in the United States from March to July 2020. Based on tenets of communicated narrative sense-making, the themes that emerged from our data suggest that women framed the role of the pandemic as either completely overshadowing their birth experience or as an inconvenience. Women also wrote about threats to their agency as patients, mothers, and caregivers, as well as the evolving emotional toll of the pandemic that often prompted feelings of fear and sadness, along with self-identified anxiety and depression. We discuss these findings in light of the literature on birth stories as essential sites of narrative sense-making for women and their families.
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