Parents experiences of having an infant with early onset group B streptococcus infection.

2021 
OBJECTIVES The study explores parents lived experience of having an infant with early onset group B streptococcus (GBS). DESIGN The study adopts a qualitative approach and a phenomenological framework with written autobiographical accounts as the method of data collection. METHODS Twenty-seven parents wrote first-hand accounts of their experience of having an infant with early onset GBS. Participants documented their experiences in their own way, reporting their thoughts and feelings, experiences, and events that were meaningful to them. RESULTS Four themes were developed from data analysis: 'bonding'; 'grief'; 'communication and information provision'; and 'future family'. CONCLUSIONS The study findings demonstrate the complexity of emotions within parent's experiences and highlight grief and loss as a core component of these experiences. Medical intervention, while acknowledged as being vital and in many cases lifesaving, was viewed as a disruption to early bonding experiences resulting in sadness and guilt. Variation in information provision, communication about this infection, and feeling that their infant's illness and/or death were preventable added to the sense of loss. Breakdowns in interpersonal communications with partners and family were commonly described and experiences of early onset GBS had implications for decision-making around future pregnancies.
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