Abstract
Background: The reported prevalence of posttraumatic stress disorder after childbirth ranges from 1.5% to 6%.
Objective: To describe the meaning of women's birth trauma experiences.
Methods: Descriptive phenomenology was the qualitative research design used to investigate mothers' experiences of traumatic births. Women were recruited through the Internet, primarily through Trauma and Birth Stress (TABS), a charitable trust located in New Zealand. The purposive sample consisted of 40 mothers: 23 in New Zealand, 8 in the United States, 6 in Australia, and 3 in the United Kingdom. Each woman was asked to describe the experience of her traumatic birth and to send it over the Internet to the researcher. Colaizzi's method was used to analyze the 40 mothers' stories.
Results: Four themes emerged that described the essence of women's experiences of birth trauma: To care for me: Was that too much too ask? To communicate with me: Why was this neglected? To provide safe care: You betrayed my trust and I felt powerless, and The end justifies the means: At whose expense? At what price?
Conclusions: Birth trauma lies in the eye of the beholder. Mothers perceived that their traumatic births often were viewed as routine by clinicians.
In her 1878 novel Molly Bawn, Margaret Wolfe Hungerford, an Irish-born 19th century romance novelist, first penned the phrase "beauty is in the eye of the beholder." Beauty is not the only quality or phenomenon that lies in the eye of the beholder; birth trauma also does. What a mother perceives as birth trauma may be seen quite differently through the eyes of obstetric care providers, who may view it as a routine delivery and just another day at the hospital. The reported prevalence of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) after childbirth ranges from 1.5% (Ayers & Pickering, 2001) to 5.6% (Creedy, Shochet, & Horsfall, 2000). Although there is a reported prevalence of PTSD after childbirth, little research has aimed at an understanding of this phenomenon from the women's experience. This phenomenologic study investigated the meaning of women's birth trauma experiences.