Affiliation:
1. School of Nursing, University of Connecticut, Storrs, CT, USA
Abstract
Background Reported in quantitative studies is the negative impact that postpartum depression can have on mother–infant bonding. Metaphors can enhance mothers’ communication with their health-care providers that cannot be captured by medical terminology and provide mothers a different voice to explain their experiences interacting with their infants. Purpose The aim of the study was to identify the metaphorical expressions used by women to describe their interactions with their infants during postpartum depression. Methods Secondary qualitative data analysis of three primary qualitative data sets of postpartum depression was conducted. The specific type of secondary qualitative analysis used was cross validation where multiple data sets from different studies are compared to expand the results of each individual study to make a more general claim. Data analysis involved using the Metaphor Identification Procedure. Results Identified were eight metaphors used by mothers to describe their interactions with their infants during their postpartum depression: a thief, a robot, enveloping fogginess, being at the races, an actor, an erupting volcano, skin crawling, and a wall. Conclusions Being attentive to metaphors mothers use can provide a unique approach to helping nurses identify vulnerable mother–infant dyads during postpartum depression.
Cited by
11 articles.
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