Abstract

BackgroundIt is well documented that pregnant women experience increased worry and uncertainty following a high-risk prenatal screening result. While waiting for diagnostic results this worry continues to linger. It has been suggested that high-risk women put the pregnancy mentally ‘on hold’ during this period, however, not enough is known about how high-risk women and their partners cope while waiting for diagnostic results. The aim of this study was to identify the strategies employed to cope with worry and uncertainty.MethodsQualitative, semi-structured interviews with 16 high-risk couples who underwent diagnostic testing. The couples were recruited at a university hospital fetal medicine unit in Denmark. Data were analysed using thematic analysis.ResultsAll couples reported feeling worried and sad upon receiving a high-risk screening result. While waiting for diagnostic results, the couples focused on coming to their own understanding of the situation and employed both social withdrawal and social engagement as strategies to prevent worry from escalating. Additionally, couples used gratitude, reassuring reasoning and selective memory as means to maintain hopes for a good outcome. Discussions about what to do in case of an abnormal test result were notably absent in the accounts of waiting. This bracketing of the potential abnormal result allowed the couples to hold on to a ‘normal’ pregnancy and to employ an ‘innocent-till-proven-guilty’ approach to their worries about the fetus’s health. None of the interviewed couples regretted having prenatal screening and all of them expected to have prenatal screening in a future pregnancy.ConclusionsThe couples in this study did not put the pregnancy mentally ‘on hold’. Worry and uncertainty must be understood as managed through a diverse range of practical and emotional strategies that change and overlap in the process of waiting. Clinicians may support appropriate ways of coping with worry and waiting through empathetic and empowering clinical communication. In addition to providing adequate information and presenting options available, clinicians may support high-risk women/couples by encouraging them to seek their own personal understandings and management strategies as a way to gain some control in an uncertain situation.

Highlights

  • It is well documented that pregnant women experience increased worry and uncertainty following a high-risk prenatal screening result

  • Quantitative studies have found a significant increase in anxiety following a positive screening result [2], and qualitative studies have investigated the complex information and burdensome decision-making that high-risk women face [3,4,5]

  • The present study shows that high-risk screening results generated both worry and uncertainty

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Summary

Introduction

It is well documented that pregnant women experience increased worry and uncertainty following a high-risk prenatal screening result. The ever-advancing technologies in prenatal screening continue to provide more detailed and complex information about the fetus. This allows for early interventions and individualised care, but it has the potential to generate acute worry in pregnant women and couples concerned about the health of their baby. Quantitative studies have found a significant increase in anxiety following a positive screening result [2], and qualitative studies have investigated the complex information and burdensome decision-making that high-risk women face [3,4,5]. Invasive diagnostics (chorionic villus sampling (CVS) or amniocentesis) will provide a definite answer, but carry a small procedure-related risk of miscarriage

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