Abstract
This qualitative study explores the ways in which disadvantaged women benefit from social support from a trained volunteer during pregnancy and the postnatal period, using the theoretical frameworks of stress and coping and a multi-dimensional model of social support. Forty-seven mothers took part in semi-structured interviews. The mothers, who had received social support through nine volunteer projects in England, faced many potentially stressful challenges besides having a baby (such as poverty, poor housing, histories of abuse, motherhood at a young age, living with physical or mental health difficulties, migration and insecure immigration status). Analysis was in two distinct stages: first, an inductive thematic analysis of mothers' experiences, and second, mapping of the results onto the theoretical frameworks chosen. Volunteers built relationships of trust with mothers and gave skilled emotional support, positive appraisal support, informational support and practical support according to mothers’ individual needs, thereby assisting mothers exposed to multiple stressors with problem-focused, emotion-focused and perception-focused coping. This helped to reduce social isolation, increase effective access to services and community resources, and build mothers' confidence, self-esteem and self-efficacy. Volunteer social support may have particular salience for mothers who lack structural support and need skilled functional support.This article is part of the theme issue ‘Multidisciplinary perspectives on social support and maternal–child health’.
Highlights
There are significant health inequalities for disadvantaged mothers and their babies in the UK
Volunteers built relationships of trust with mothers and gave skilled emotional support, positive appraisal support, informational support and practical support according to mothers’ individual needs, thereby assisting mothers exposed to multiple stressors with problem-focused, emotion-focused and perception-focused coping
The volunteer projects in this study offered support for women during pregnancy and afterwards, having a baby was just one of a range of stressors affecting the disadvantaged mothers from a range of cultural backgrounds
Summary
There are significant health inequalities for disadvantaged mothers and their babies in the UK They are both at increased risk of poor physical and mental health outcomes if the mothers are poor, migrants, from Black, Asian and minority ethnic communities, single or young [1,2,3,4,5,6,7]. Psychosocial stress can be understood as the interaction between the existence of an objective stressor, a person’s subjective cognitive appraisal of the stressor and their reaction in the light of this appraisal [11] In this model, the experience of stress involves a mismatch, which is the perception that the demands imposed by the stressor exceed the available resources for coping. Social support may improve emotional wellbeing by offering companionship, a sense of belonging and mattering to other people [14]
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More From: Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
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