Abstract
The emotional reactions of women (N = 29) after perinatal loss were evaluated over a four-year period by means of standardized questionnaires and a semi-structured interview. Eleven women (38 per cent) displayed a level of general psychological distress which is clinically significant. Grief reactions declined significantly during this period, except for difficulties with coping and despair concerning the loss, and a quarter of the women still showed a clinically significant high level of distress for intrusive images. The disposition for feelings of inadequacy (i.e. feeling anxious, insufficient, depressed and having low self-esteem) was strongly and positively related to the intensity of stress, grief and general psychological distress after four years. Our findings emphasize the importance of psychosocial screening of those women identified as showing signs of inadequacy in the face of (threatened) pregnancy loss with the objective to offer them additional psychological support.
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