Molar pregnancy: a qualitative study of personal experiences and societal narratives of loss

Author:

Ross Emily1,Ireson Jane2,Singh Kam3,Winter Matthew C4

Affiliation:

1. Research Fellow, Department of Sociological Studies, University of Sheffield

2. Researcher in Residence, Cancer Experience, Weston Park Cancer Centre, Sheffield

3. Nurse Consultant, Sheffield Trophoblastic Disease Centre, Weston Park Hospital

4. Consultant Medical Oncologist and Honorary Professor of Medical Oncology, Division of Clinical Medicine, School of Medicine and Population Health, University of Sheffield; Director, Sheffield Gestational Trophoblastic Centre, Weston Park Hospital

Abstract

Background/Aims Molar pregnancy is a rare complication of pregnancy. Patients face surgery, human chorionic gonadotropin monitoring and potentially systemic treatment, resulting in unique support needs. This study's aim was to explore the impacts of gestational trophoblastic disease on embodied and emotional experience. Methods This qualitative study considered stories of molar pregnancy from 20 women in the UK, US, Canada and Australia. These were drawn from 18 publicly available online blogs and eight semi-structured interviews, and analysed thematically. Results Three themes were developed: ‘loss’, describing women's responses to their pregnancy ending; ‘isolation’, comprising ‘rarity’, ‘lack of awareness’ and support seeking; and ‘alienation’, capturing the unfamiliarity of diagnosis, ‘failure’ and barriers to ‘moving forward’. Conclusions Experiences are shaped by wider narratives of ‘typical’ pregnancy. Patient care requires an individualised and responsive approach, and non-specialist practitioners should feel confident in discussing molar pregnancy and have access to up-to-date guidance.

Publisher

Mark Allen Group

Reference26 articles.

1. The psychological impact of gestational trophoblastic disease: a prospective observational multicentre cohort study

2. Using thematic analysis in psychology

3. Pregnancy Without Birth

4. Cecil R. The anthropology of pregnancy loss: comparative studies in miscarriage, stillbirth and neonatal death. Oxford: Berg; 1996

5. Changing the miscarriage story

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