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  1. The Trauma of Birth (German: Das Trauma der Geburt) is a 1924 book by the psychoanalyst Otto Rank. It was first published in English translation in 1929. Especially with its focus on the connection between microcosm and macrocosm, it foreshadows Rank's most popular book, Art and Artist, published in 1932 and considered a masterpiece ...

    • Otto Rank
    • 1924
  2. 8 de dic. de 2023 · Pre-existing PTSD may be exacerbated by events of birth and new symptoms or re-traumatisation may occur, but the index trauma was prior to childbirth. Whilst trauma responses are individual, a substantial body of research highlights the fact that negative interactions with caregivers during birth are associated with suboptimal outcomes.

  3. 13 de ene. de 2023 · Psychological birth trauma refers to the womans subjective feeling caused by events directly or indirectly related to childbirth, which is manifested as intertwined painful emotional experiences that originate in the birth process and last until postpartum. It has a wide range of negative and, in some cases, positive effects on women.

    • 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.1065612
    • 2022
    • Front Psychol. 2022; 13: 1065612.
  4. Stress, Psychological. The trauma of birth is an international concern for all childbearing women globally. Since changes in 1994 to the Diagnostic Statistical Manual that included childbirth as a potentially traumatic event, several clusters of researchers, particularly representing the Scandinavian countries, the United ….

    • Cheryl Ann Anderson
    • 2017
  5. 24 de abr. de 2019 · “Women with trauma may feel fear, helplessness or horror about their experience and suffer recurrent, overwhelming memories, flashbacks, thoughts and nightmares about the birth, feel...

  6. Traumatic childbirth is an international public health problem. Examples from various countries reporting birth trauma include Japan ( Takegata et al., 2017 ), Turkey ( Gökçe İsbİr et al., 2016 ), and the United Kingdom ( Thomson & Downe, 2016 ).

  7. BTA is the only charity in the UK solely dedicated to supporting women and families who have experienced traumatic birth. We work to support parents and families, improve parents’ experience of birth, and engage with health professionals and research.