Neonatal loss: grieving and recovery
The question of whether women and their partners should wait
a year to conceive after the loss of a pregnancy is a complicated
one. Dr. Hughes and his colleagues study suggests there
may be some benefit to waiting a year, but each family needs to
consider their individual situation and talk with their caregivers
about what makes the most sense for them.
My experience has been that many families may choose to wait
a year or more to get pregnant after delivering a stillborn child.
Each pregnancy is accompanied by hopes, dreams and wishes that
end with the loss of a child. Families may need time to deal with
the fear and anxiety that accompany such a loss and to mourn the
death of that child. Grieving is not easy, it is often long, unpredictable
and requires a lot of energy. Parents and family members need
time to work through this pain toward healing.
Families may need time to deal with
the fear and anxiety that accompany loss and to mourn the death
of a child.
Conversely, some families are anxious to begin another pregnancy
quickly. We are seeing more women beginning their families at
a later age, and those families must weigh the need to wait with
the potential diminishing of fertility. And many of my patients
who have a miscarriage early in their pregnancy decide to wait
a couple of months and then begin trying to conceive again.
These decisions are personal ones and are best made on an individual
basis. The Hughes study recognizes that fact and acknowledges
that many families have considerations that outweigh the possible
higher risk of psychological symptoms.
Grieving process
Although the optimal timing of a subsequent pregnancy varies with
each family, the importance of grieving for a pregnancy loss is
unequivocal whether that loss occurs a few weeks after conception
or at term.
As recently as the early 1980s, it was common practice to whisk
away a stillborn child before the parents saw the child or had
a chance to hold it in an effort to spare them pain. Stillborn
babies were often quickly buried in unmarked graves, and parents
had few ways to express their feelings of loss and grief.
It is not unusual for women to be
depressed after a pregnancy loss.
We now have a better understanding of how important it is for
everyone to acknowledge the loss. When a woman delivers a stillborn
child today, it is likely she and her family will have an opportunity
to see and hold the child. They may be encouraged to have a memorial
service or funeral for the child. At Yale-New Haven Hospital,
clergy are available and specially trained bereavement nurses
counsel the family and prepare memory boxes with the childs
bracelet, blanket, photos and footprints.
It is not unusual for women to be depressed after a pregnancy
loss. My experience has been symptoms are more severe with full-term
losses, but recognition of grief must be acknowledged in even
the earliest of pregnancy losses. The symptoms of depression may
range from severe postpartum depression and suicidal thoughts,
to sleep disturbances, to withdrawal from family and friends,
eating disorders and feelings of hopelessness. She and her family
need time to express their fears, share their grief and come to
terms with their loss. Taking time to go through this process
may take some families longer than others, and I often suggest
counseling to my patients or participation in bereavement support
groups.
Hygeia, a sharing site for families
In 1995, I launched a web site (www.hygeia.org)
to provide a place for grieving families to express their pain
and share the stories of their losses. Since that time, more than
70,000 families have visited the site, which includes poetry and
stories about neonatal loss as well as medical information written
by caregivers. More than 4,000 families have registered so they
might share their stories with others.
Parents and family members will not forget about the child they
lost after a month or a year, but encouraging them to express
their feelings and concerns can help them work through this painful
experience and may help prepare them for a less stressful subsequent
pregnancy.
Dr. Berman is an attending obstetrician/gynecologist at Yale-New
Haven Hospital and a clinical professor of obstetrics and gynecology
at the Yale School of Medicine. He is president of the County
Obstetrics and Gynecology Group with offices in New Haven, Branford,
Clinton and Wallingford and founder of the Hygeia® Foundation
for Perinatal Loss and Bereavement.