Author:
Lissmann Rebecca,Lokot Michelle,Marston Cicely
Abstract
Abstract
Background
One in five women in the UK are survivors of rape and sexual assault, and four in five women will give birth. This implies that a substantial number of women experience rape and sexual assault before pregnancy. We highlight and explore the voices and lived experiences of survivors during pregnancy and birth, to better understand the relationship between sexual violence, biomedicine, and pregnancy and to inform maternity care practice.
Methods
This qualitative research took an intersectional feminist approach. We conducted in-depth individual interviews in England with fourteen women who self-identified as survivors of rape or sexual assault, and who had experienced pregnancy and birth after the assault. We conducted open line-by-line coding of the interview transcripts, and identified key themes and sub-themes inductively.
Results
Three themes help summarise the narratives: control, safety and trauma. Maintaining a sense of control was important to survivors but they often reported objectification by healthcare staff and lack of consent or choice about healthcare decisions. Participants’ preferences for giving birth were often motivated by their desire to feel in control and avoid triggering traumatic memories of the sexual assault. Survivors felt safer when they trusted staff. Many participants said it was important for staff to know they were survivors but none were asked about this. Pregnancy and birth experiences were triggering when they mirrored the assault, for instance if the woman was prevented from moving. Many of our participants reported having unmet mental health care needs before, during or after pregnancy.
Conclusions
Survivors of sexual violence have specific maternity care needs. For our participants, these needs were often not met, leading to negative or traumatic experiences of pregnancy and birth. Systemic biases and poor birth experience jeopardise both psychological and physical safety. Funding for maternity and mental health services must be improved, so that they meet minimum staffing and care standards. Maternity services should urgently introduce trauma-informed models of care.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Obstetrics and Gynecology
Reference47 articles.
1. Office for National Statistics. : Sexual offences in England and Wales: year ending March 2017. 2018.
2. Taylor J, Shrive J. I thought it was just a part of life: understanding the Scale of Violence Committed against Women in the UK since Birth. Victimfocus; 2021.
3. Office for National Statistics. : Childbearing for women born in different years, England and Wales: 2019. 2020.
4. Montgomery E, Pope C, Rogers J. The re-enactment of childhood Sexual Abuse in maternity care: a qualitative study. BMC Pregnancy Childbirth 2015, 15(1).
5. Roberts C, Montgomery E, Richens Y, Silverio SA. (re)activation of survival strategies during pregnancy and Childbirth following experiences of childhood Sexual Abuse. J Reproductive Infant Psychol 2021:1–13.