Experiences of attending prenatal ultrasounds during the COVID‐19 pandemic in Australia: A cross‐sectional survey

Author:

Nightingale Helen J.1ORCID,Watts Christina2,Pham Kim3

Affiliation:

1. Rural Department of Nursing & Midwifery La Trobe University Bendigo Victoria Australia

2. Faculty of Medicine and Health The University of Sydney Sydney Australia

3. Department of Women's & Children's Services Bendigo Health Bendigo Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundPrenatal ultrasounds form an important part of routine maternity care in Australia and indeed internationally. The COVID‐19 pandemic necessitated rapid changes in society and healthcare to curb transmission, with evidence demonstrating detrimental impacts on childbearing women associated with these restrictions. However, experiences with pandemic restrictions for prenatal ultrasounds in relation to distress, patient expectations, and satisfaction are largely unknown. This study aimed to explore the experiences of pregnant women attending prenatal ultrasound during the pandemic in Australia.MethodsA cross‐sectional online survey of people in Australia who had undergone at least one prenatal ultrasound during the period of maternity care restrictions was performed. The survey included validated tools for assessing post‐traumatic stress, satisfaction, and expectations with maternity care.ResultsA total of 1280 responses were obtained. Almost 37% of respondents returned a PCL‐C score consistent with probable post‐traumatic stress disorder. Unexpected ultrasound findings or a high PCL‐C score were more likely to have higher expectations and lower levels of satisfaction with their maternity care experience. Having an ultrasound for pregnancy loss, fetal abnormality, and/or a prior post‐traumatic stress disorder diagnosis were the strongest factors correlating with a high PCL‐C score.DiscussionThe prevalence of post‐traumatic stress symptoms in the study population is concerning and elucidates the distress experienced in association with prenatal ultrasounds during pandemic restrictions in Australia. Maternity services should acknowledge the high levels of service consumers with post‐trauma symptoms and consider trauma‐responsive maternity care adaptations in response to adverse perinatal outcomes for those afflicted with post‐trauma and distress‐related symptoms.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference49 articles.

1. Clinical Practice Guidelines: Pregnancy Care (Australian Government Department of Health).2020.

2. WHO antenatal care recommendations for a positive pregnancy experience. Maternal and fetal assessment update: imaging ultrasound before 24 weeks of pregnancy (World Health Organization).2022.

3. The impact of antenatal imaging on parent experience and prenatal attachment: a systematic review

4. Seeing baby: women's experience of prenatal ultrasound examination and unexpected fetal diagnosis

5. Women's response to fetal choroid plexus cysts detected by prenatal ultrasound

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