Adverse psychological impact of operative
obstetric interventions: a prospective longitudinal study.
Fisher J,
Astbury J,
Smith A.
Key Centre for Women's Health, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health
Sciences, University of Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
Objectives:
This paper reports the findings of a prospective longitudinal
study of 272 nulliparous pregnant women, which investigated as one of
its objectives the psychological sequelae of obstetric procedures.
METHOD: Participants completed structured interviews and standardised,
published psychometric questionnaires, including the Rosenberg
Self-Esteem Scale and the Profile of Mood States late in pregnancy and
again early in the postpartum period.
Results:
Little evidence was found
to support the notion that the total number of obstetric interventions
was linked to a deterioration in postpartum mood. Significant adverse
psychological effects were associated with the mode of delivery. Those
women who had spontaneous vaginal deliveries were most likely to
experience a marked improvement in mood and an elevation in self-esteem
across the late pregnancy to early postpartum interval. In contrast,
women who had Caesarean deliveries were significantly more likely to
experience a deterioration in mood and a diminution in self-esteem. The
group who experienced instrumental intervention in vaginal deliveries
fell midway between the other two groups, reporting neither an
improvement nor a deterioration in mood and self-esteem.
Conclusions:
The findings of this study suggest that operative intervention in first
childbirth carries significant psychological risks rendering those who
experience these procedures vulnerable to a grief reaction or to
posttraumatic distress and depression.