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Chapter 21 - Pregnancy Loss Counseling

from Part V - Special Topics in Fertility Counseling

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 November 2022

Sharon N. Covington
Affiliation:
Shady Grove Fertility, Rockville, MD
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Summary

I am a clinical psychologist who has been in practice for 40 years and an Adjunct Associate Professor at University of Michigan Medical Center for 20 years. While my training was in traditional psychodynamic therapy, my current approach is more eclectic and Rogerian in its emphasis on empathic engagement with the client as the primary vehicle of change.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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References

Lasker, JN, Toedter, LJ. Predicting outcomes after pregnancy loss: results from studies using the Perinatal Grief Scale. Illness, Crisis Loss 2000;8:350372.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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Sandelowski, M, Barraso, J. The travesty of choosing after positive prenatal diagnosis. J Obstet Gyn Neon Nurs 2005;34:307318.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bardos, J, Hercz, D, Friedenthal, J, et al. A national study on public perceptions of miscarriage. Obstet Gyn 2015;125:13131320.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Solnit A, Stark M. Mourning and the birth of the defective child. In Eissler RS, Freud A, Greenacre P, et al. Eds. The Psychoanalytic Study of the Child (vol. 16). New York, NY: International Universities Press, 1961, pp. 523–537.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCoyd, JL. Women in no man’s land: the abortion debate in the USA and women terminating desired pregnancies due to foetal anomaly. Br J Soc Wrk 2010;40:133153.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McCoyd, JL. “I’m not a saint”: burden assessment as an unrecognized factor in prenatal decision making. Qual Hlth Res 2008;18:489500.Google ScholarPubMed
Koronromp, MJ, Page-Christiaens, G, van Den Bout, J, et al. Maternal decision to terminate pregnancy after a diagnosis of Down Syndrome. Am J Obstet Gyn 2007;196:149.e1–149.e11.Google Scholar

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