Nurses’ Experiences of Grieving When There Is a Perinatal Death

Many nurses grieve when patients die; however, nurses’ grief is not often acknowledged or discussed. Also, little attention is given to preparing nurses for this experience in schools of nursing and in orientations to health care organizations. The purpose of this research was to explore obstetrical...

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Main Authors: Christine Jonas-Simpson, F. Beryl Pilkington, Cynthia MacDonald, Eileen McMahon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2013-04-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244013486116
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spelling doaj-714909f1f91b49198b02508ef01d59ac2020-11-25T03:10:04ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402013-04-01310.1177/215824401348611610.1177_2158244013486116Nurses’ Experiences of Grieving When There Is a Perinatal DeathChristine Jonas-Simpson0F. Beryl Pilkington1Cynthia MacDonald2Eileen McMahon3 York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada York University, Toronto, Ontario, Canada Halton Healthcare Services, Oakville, Ontario, Canada Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, CanadaMany nurses grieve when patients die; however, nurses’ grief is not often acknowledged or discussed. Also, little attention is given to preparing nurses for this experience in schools of nursing and in orientations to health care organizations. The purpose of this research was to explore obstetrical and neonatal nurses’ experiences of grieving when caring for families who experience loss after perinatal death. A visual arts-informed research method through the medium of digital video was used, informed by human science nursing, grief concepts, and interpretive phenomenology. Five obstetrical nurses and one neonatal intensive care nurse who cared for bereaved families voluntarily participated in this study. Nurses shared their experiences of grieving during in-depth interviews that were professionally audio- and videotaped. Data were analyzed using an iterative process of analysis-synthesis to identify themes and patterns that were then used to guide the editing of the documentary. Thematic patterns identified throughout the data were growth and transformation amid the anguish of grief, professional and personal impact, and giving–receiving meaningful help. The thematic pattern of giving–receiving meaningful help was made up of three thematic threads: support from colleagues; providing authentic, compassionate, quality care; and education and mentorship. Nurses’ grief is significant. Nurses who grieve require acknowledgment, support, and education. Supporting staff through their grief may ultimately have a positive impact on quality of work life and home life for nurses and quality of care for bereaved families.https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244013486116
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christine Jonas-Simpson
F. Beryl Pilkington
Cynthia MacDonald
Eileen McMahon
spellingShingle Christine Jonas-Simpson
F. Beryl Pilkington
Cynthia MacDonald
Eileen McMahon
Nurses’ Experiences of Grieving When There Is a Perinatal Death
SAGE Open
author_facet Christine Jonas-Simpson
F. Beryl Pilkington
Cynthia MacDonald
Eileen McMahon
author_sort Christine Jonas-Simpson
title Nurses’ Experiences of Grieving When There Is a Perinatal Death
title_short Nurses’ Experiences of Grieving When There Is a Perinatal Death
title_full Nurses’ Experiences of Grieving When There Is a Perinatal Death
title_fullStr Nurses’ Experiences of Grieving When There Is a Perinatal Death
title_full_unstemmed Nurses’ Experiences of Grieving When There Is a Perinatal Death
title_sort nurses’ experiences of grieving when there is a perinatal death
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2013-04-01
description Many nurses grieve when patients die; however, nurses’ grief is not often acknowledged or discussed. Also, little attention is given to preparing nurses for this experience in schools of nursing and in orientations to health care organizations. The purpose of this research was to explore obstetrical and neonatal nurses’ experiences of grieving when caring for families who experience loss after perinatal death. A visual arts-informed research method through the medium of digital video was used, informed by human science nursing, grief concepts, and interpretive phenomenology. Five obstetrical nurses and one neonatal intensive care nurse who cared for bereaved families voluntarily participated in this study. Nurses shared their experiences of grieving during in-depth interviews that were professionally audio- and videotaped. Data were analyzed using an iterative process of analysis-synthesis to identify themes and patterns that were then used to guide the editing of the documentary. Thematic patterns identified throughout the data were growth and transformation amid the anguish of grief, professional and personal impact, and giving–receiving meaningful help. The thematic pattern of giving–receiving meaningful help was made up of three thematic threads: support from colleagues; providing authentic, compassionate, quality care; and education and mentorship. Nurses’ grief is significant. Nurses who grieve require acknowledgment, support, and education. Supporting staff through their grief may ultimately have a positive impact on quality of work life and home life for nurses and quality of care for bereaved families.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2158244013486116
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