Abstract

Minimizing the risk of women experiencing a subsequent birth as another traumatic event needs to be a priority for psychiatric-mental health nurses. One approach to identifying women struggling with a subsequent pregnancy is to be attentive to metaphors women use to describe what they are experiencing. The purpose of this secondary qualitative data analysis was to identity the metaphorical expressions women use to describe a subsequent birth after a prior birth trauma. The following five metaphors identified paint a vivid picture of what women experienced: a head buried in the sand, mental baggage, emotional torture, waves of panic, and a back and forth battle. Being knowledgeable about metaphors childbearing women use during a pregnancy following a previous birth trauma can help clinicians to recognize struggling mother-infant dyads and to initiate appropriate interventions. Necessary referrals can be made to psychiatric-mental health nurse practitioners.

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