| Title: | Love or Protection? Defining and measuring maternal-fetal attachment from the woman’s perspective |
| Authors: | Sandbrook, Sandra |
| Advisors: | Adamson-Macedo, Elvidina N. |
| Publisher: | University of Wolverhampton |
| Issue date: | 2009 |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/2436/90893 |
| Abstract: | Existing commonly used maternal-fetal attachment instruments have not
been thoroughly tested for reliability and validity; criticism can be levelled for a
variety of problems ranging from lack of reliability due to an inadequate
underpinning framework to facilitate objective interpretation to limited
generalizability due to the sample.
The aim of this study is to acknowledge the centrality of the mother, to
use the experiences of pregnant women to generate a definition of maternalfetal
attachment and ultimately create a tool that will act as a reliable, valid and
simple measurement.
A mixed method framework utilising a sequential exploratory strategy has
allowed qualitative exploration of the phenomenon under investigation followed
by quantitative testing of the emerging theory on a much larger and different
sample. Phase 1 involved face to face open structured interviews on an
opportunity sample of 10 (5 primigravid; 5 multiparous) women in the final
trimester of pregnancy followed by 3 focus groups targeting specific groups –
primigravid women (6 participants); multiparous women (7 participants) and
teenagers (4 participants). Data analysis was through constant comparative
methodology. A multidimensional, psycho-biological definition of attachment was
generated from the women’s own perception of their attachment to their fetus.
This was used as a framework to design a questionnaire for the measurement of
maternal-fetal attachment. Phase 2 involved the validation of the questionnaire
and further testing of the definition. Cohort 1 tested for reliability with 200
participants within their second or third trimester of pregnancy. Following
modification of the questionnaire, Cohort 2 a sample of 150 women within the
final trimester of pregnancy tested the tool for internal reliability and validity.
The generated Maternal-Fetal Attachment Tool (MFAT) following rigorous
testing proved both reliable and valid.
Maternal fetal attachment is founded in psycho-biological theory and is a
complex multi-dimensional construct. Central to the definition is the woman’s
need to protect her fetus, attachment develops as the fetus becomes more
tangible, it is facilitated through the woman’s intergenerational experience of
attachment and through appropriate social support. Maternal-fetal attachment
facilitates behavioural change to ensure a favourable intra-uterine environment. |
| Type: | Thesis or dissertation |
| Language: | en |
| Description: | A thesis submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the University of
Wolverhampton for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy |
| Keywords: | Defining maternal-fetal attachment Measuring tool Mixed methods – qualitative / quantitative |
| Appears in collections: | E-Theses
|
| Files in this item: | | File |
Description |
Size | Format | View/Open |
| Sandbrook_ PhD thesis.pdf | | 1472Kb | Adobe PDF | View/Open | | Appendix.pdf | | 7753Kb | Adobe PDF | View/Open |
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