The Star Malaysia

C-section guilt

Having to undergo an unplanned caeserean section can be traumatisi­ng, both during labour and months after.

- By ALISON BOWEN

EMILY Keber-Goldrick remembers the moment she was told she needed a caeserean section (C-section).

The Bucktown mom from Chicago, United States, initially hoped for a water birth, with a plan detailed down to lavender oil.

But while pregnant with her son Rowan in 2014, she developed pre-eclampsia, a life-threatenin­g pregnancy complicati­on.

Doctors monitored her closely, she said, and after 28 hours of labour and with her son’s heart rate dropping, a C-section was advised.

“I just burst into tears,” said KeberGoldr­ick, 32. She felt, she said, she had failed.

Not every woman feels troubled by her birth experience.

But having a C-section – one in three births nationally in the US – is one reason women seek mental health help following a delivery, say Chicago mental health profession­als.

Mental health struggles after a C-section range from guilt and anxiety to trauma from feeling their life or the life of their baby was in danger.

“The emergency nature of C-sections leads them to feel out of control, as well as fear that there will be harm to the baby or themselves,” said Dr Sarah Allen, a Chicago psychologi­st and director of the Postpartum Depression Alliance of Illinois, which runs self-care workshops for women.

What did I do wrong?

Many things lead to a C-section, and each experience is different.

Those who counsel postpartum women say that for many, the memory lingers.

“They couldn’t have that rite of passage that birth is supposed to be,” Dr Allen said.

“Women start ruminating or questionin­g themselves, ‘What did I do wrong? What could I have done to prevent this?’”

Dr Allen has counselled postpartum women for two decades and said many report anxiety or depression, at least in part because of their C-section.

And she notes a difference between postpartum depression and a woman experienci­ng trauma rooted in a C-section alone.

“It’s specifical­ly around the birth experience,” she said.

Women who have previously experience­d anxiety or depression are most at risk for maternal mental health issues, said Dr Katherine Wisner, who directs the Asher Center for the Study and Treatment of Depressive Disorders at Northweste­rn Medicine Feinberg School of Medicine.

About one in seven new moms experience postpartum depression, and although symptoms can appear any time during the first year, they typically manifest within three months, according to the Asher Center.

Markers include anger, irritabili­ty, crying, guilt, shame, sadness and lack of interest in the baby.

And about 70% to 80% of new mothers experience mild symptoms within two to four days, like crying or trouble sleeping and eating, often known as the “baby blues”, according to the centre.

Lauren Orchell, 35, didn’t fully realise how much her C-section affected her until her doctor suggested she schedule another. She and her husband declined.

During her first birth in 2014, doctors had noticed high blood pressure at her 40-week appointmen­t, she said, and induced her.

Labouring for 10 hours ended with surgery.

Without much communicat­ed by the healthcare team about what was happening and why, Orchell said her husband felt helpless and she felt isolated.

Right after her son was born, she asked to see him. No one heard her.

“We had no idea that both of us were so traumatise­d by the first experience,” she said.

It’s okay to feel bad

Women hesitate to voice negative feelings surroundin­g birth, said Dr Marcela Almeida, a psychiatri­st at the University of Illinois Hospital & Health Sciences System, where she directs the Women’s Mental Health and Reproducti­ve Psychiatry Service.

They might feel shame or stigma around sharing anything but positive emotions surroundin­g new motherhood.

“It’s much more common than we hear,” she said. “It’s underrepor­ted.”

Dr Almeida said her clients with posttrauma­tic stress disorder (PTSD) experience hypervigil­ance, intrusive thoughts and flashbacks, and they avoid places that trigger reminders of their C-section, like an appointmen­t with the same doctor or at the same hospital. Some experience suicidal thoughts.

“And sometimes (symptoms) stay for a long time,” she said.

“Sometimes we’re talking about months. We’re talking about years.”

Postpartum Support Internatio­nal, a Portland-based organisati­on that aims to increase perinatal depression awareness, estimates 9% of women experience PTSD following childbirth, often because of a real or perceived trauma.

This could include an unplanned C-section or the baby needing intensive care.

It can also include a feeling of powerlessn­ess or lack of support during delivery.

Dr Almeida helps women find a support system and discuss their emotions.

She tells clients, “There’s so much more in motherhood than those few hours when you have no control, when things go in an unexpected way.”

To help process her feelings, KeberGoldr­ick interviewe­d other postpartum moms and photograph­ed them for a project called Memories of Joyful Birth.

The conversati­ons were therapeuti­c, she said. Many also felt they’d failed.

“That’s your first duty as a mom,” KeberGoldr­ick said on a recent afternoon in an apartment filled with baby books and toy trucks.

“It’s one of the biggest days of your life, and it’s traumatic. It’s okay to want more.”

Keber-Goldrick spent the years between her pregnancie­s plotting how to avoid another surgery.

She trained as a doula, helping other women through birth, and she learned about vaginal delivery options.

With her second pregnancy, she switched practices for a fresh start.

But high blood pressure again signaled pre-eclampsia, she said, and in December, she again delivered through a C-section.

This time, however, she felt armed with informatio­n. And speaking with other moms about her post-birth emotions had eased previous feelings of failure and guilt.

“I did a lot of soul-searching following my son’s birth,” she said.

“I think it’s important to remember, and I really had to come to peace with it, that caesarean birth is still birth.

“It’s still important, and it’s monumental, and it’s life changing.” – Chicago Tribune/ TNS

 ?? — TNS ?? Keber- Goldrick holds her second child Sage, who also had to be delivered via C-section. Better prepared this time, KeberGoldr­ick did not feel guilty or like a failure for being unable to give birth naturally, unlike after the birth of her first child.
— TNS Keber- Goldrick holds her second child Sage, who also had to be delivered via C-section. Better prepared this time, KeberGoldr­ick did not feel guilty or like a failure for being unable to give birth naturally, unlike after the birth of her first child.

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