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Article on Miscarriage (LR, obviously)

Somehow we all missed this! My friend was in her PCP's office reading an old copy of Time and called me about this article. It's not available online without a subscription, so I went into the databases our school accesses and pulled it up for y'all. I love that they included someone who had gone through IVF and then had a miscarriage. I think it really speaks to how devastating that loss is.


Someone I Loved Was Never Born 

Section:Features

Society: Miscarriage

Keywords: Babies; Birth; Health & medicine; Family; Liz Abele; Parenting

Miscarriage has long been shrouded in shame and secrecy. That's changing

By the time Liz Abele, a real estate agent from Bethesda, Md., climbed onto an examination table for her 12-week ultrasound one June morning in 2011, she and her husband had already seen the grainy images of their growing fetus three times. They had admired its big head and tiny arms and legs. They had heard the swoosh of the heartbeat. But at this appointment, unlike the earlier ones, Abele, then nearly 40, felt unusually relaxed.

For any woman who has worried about her ability to carry a pregnancy to term, a 12-week ultrasound is a big victory. For Abele, it meant she had made it to the end of the first trimester, during which about 80% of miscarriages occur. It also meant that after spending the previous five years trying unsuccessfully to get pregnant before hitting the jackpot with in vitro fertilization (IVF), Abele could let herself believe she was finally going to be a mom. She was due a week before Christmas, and Abele imagined introducing her baby in red velvet outfits to relatives over the holidays.

Abele and her husband kept their eyes glued to the screen as the technician slid the wand across her belly. She held her breath as she waited for the familiar swoosh sound to fill the room. The technician stopped suddenly and set down the wand. "I'll be right back," she said. Abele reached for her husband's hand and started to cry. The technician returned with the doctor, who said, "I'm so sorry. There's no heartbeat."

For the next few weeks, Abele couldn't stop crying. "We had waited so long for this pregnancy," she says. "It felt so much worse than I ever could have imagined."

For generations past, when families were larger and medicine less advanced, miscarriages, defined as the death of a fetus before 20 weeks, were a difficult fact of life. Today, in an age of technology that boosts fertility and allows for ever earlier images of a fetus—as well as changing wisdom about how expecting parents can best handle a lost pregnancy—the 15% to 20% of pregnancies that end in miscarriage may exact a greater impact.

Doctors and researchers are increasingly recognizing the toll miscarriage can take on some women's mental health and emotional well-being. The result is a major transformation in the script for how to deal with the loss of a wanted pregnancy, with no agreement on what's healthier: a private and possibly quick form of grief or the growing movement to actively and publicly mourn with mementos and rituals, often over an extended period of time. And because these things are as personal as just about anything can be, a consensus isn't likely, either.

The Modern Miscarriage

Women are having babies later in life than ever before. Of the almost 4 million births in the U.S. in 2013, nearly 15% involved women ages 35 to 44—up from 9% in 1990. And an increasing number of women in that age group, like Abele, are seeking fertility treatment, in which the financial and emotional stakes are high.

"The physical gestation might have been eight weeks at the time of miscarriage," says Irving Leon, a psychologist who specializes in reproductive loss and an adjunct associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Michigan. "But if a couple struggled to get pregnant, the psychological gestation could have been eight years."

Also, it is increasingly likely that a woman who miscarries will have already seen ultra-detailed images of the fetus in utero via a vaginal or abdominal ultrasound during the first trimester. No matter where you stand on the question of when a fetus becomes an unborn child or a baby, these early technology-enabled encounters can result in an ever stronger emotional attachment for a parent hopeful about a successful pregnancy. "When you can hear the heartbeat and see the image of the body, it's extremely powerful psychologically," explains Leon. "You're more likely to experience the fetus as a baby." Which means the loss can be especially hard to take.

Studies show that the severity of what happens next, the emotional fallout from a desired pregnancy resulting in miscarriage—which can include sadness, shame, anger, guilt and depression—falls along a spectrum. A large study published in the British Journal of Psychiatry in 2011 found that about 15% of women who had had a miscarriage experienced depression or anxiety, and for some, those feelings lasted years.

Not surprisingly, according to numerous studies, women who have a weak support network or rocky marriage tend to fare the worst. Research indicates that the loss can be difficult for men too.

Some New Rituals

There's a revolution under way in the understanding of how patients and physicians should best deal with the aftermath of a miscarriage. Hospitals, fertility clinics and patient organizations are creating support groups and holding memorial services, as well as Walks to Remember and candlelight vigils across the country on Oct. 15, which Congress has designated Pregnancy and Infant Loss Remembrance Day.

Medical students are also being trained in how to approach patients after miscarriages. Pregnancy-loss-related message boards and support groups are proliferating online too, like the March of Dimes' Share Your Story.

Some of the new rituals take cues from ones that were once reserved for parents of stillborn babies, defined as fetuses who die after 20 weeks. These can include everything from naming the unborn child, planting a tree, donating to a special charity and holding a memorial to the more controversial practices of holding and being photographed with the fetus' body. There's even a burgeoning cottage industry selling miscarriage-remembrance jewelry and memory boxes.

In the weeks and months after Abele's miscarriage, she was surprised that she couldn't stop crying. Her husband Chris Kepferle, a television-commercial producer who was 50 at the time, tried to make her feel better by cracking jokes. While she wanted to talk about it, he wanted to move on. Her friends' cheery comments—"Don't worry. You'll get pregnant again"—just made her cringe.

Abele and Kepferle ended up taking the advice of their case nurse at Shady Grove Fertility Center in Rockville, Md., to see a counselor. Sharon Covington, the clinic's director of psychological support services, urged them to create a ritual to acknowledge their grief and honor their unborn child. An autopsy indicated the presence of female tissue, and doctors said the child was likely to have been a girl. They decided on the name Christina.

One evening that fall, the couple stood on the white sands of their favorite beach in Indian Shores, Fla., with her parents while Abele read a letter: "This child's life was short, yet her death left a huge void in our hearts and lives. Let us remember the tiny baby who will never reach childhood or adulthood but will remain our tiny baby forever."

After reciting some prayers and psalms, they threw a dozen white roses into the Gulf of Mexico and watched the sun set as waves slowly pushed some to shore and took the rest out to sea.

"I felt like we had done something to move through the grief," says Abele, now 43. Still, the next year was agony. Seeing kids trick-or-treat on Halloween. Receiving holiday cards with photos of smiling families. Passing moms pushing jogging strollers in their neighborhood. Sometimes, she felt so overwhelmed with sorrow that she declined invitations to baby showers, and she decided to take a break from Facebook. At about the time she would have given birth, Abele put on a brave face to welcome the arrival of her older brother's first child. "I had imagined the cousins growing up together, since they would have been so close in age, and how fun it would be to see them playing on the beach," she says.

The clincher was Mother's Day at church. When the pastor asked all the mothers in the congregation to stand up, Abele stayed in her pew and quietly wept. "All Icould think was, Am I ever going to be a mother?" she says.

"It's Been a Month"

If Abele is typical of the new way of mourning a miscarriage, Rose Carlson of St. Charles, Mo., exemplifies the old way.

Carlson was 22 when she had her first miscarriage, at 11 weeks, in 1986. Over the next seven years, she had three more—one at five weeks, one at 12 weeks and then one at 10 weeks. After each, doctors discharged her with instructions: Call if she had a fever or excessive bleeding. "No one asked, 'How are you doing emotionally?'" she says.

Carlson gave birth to a son after the second miscarriage. Shortly after giving birth, she experienced two more miscarriages within three months of each other, causing her to fall into a deep depression. Her husband tried to joke with her: "Well, we'll just have fun trying to make more." A friend commented, "You need to get over this. It's been a month."

"People were surprised I should be sad," says Carlson, now 51. "I kept thinking, 'Why am I making such a big deal of this? No one else is.' I felt like a freak." Six months after her last miscarriage, when she was 29, she became pregnant again. She eventually gave birth to three more children.

Ten years ago, Carlson, who was formerly a stay-at-home mom, started volunteering at the national headquarters of Share Pregnancy & Infant Loss Support in St. Charles, and she now works as its program director. Founded in the late 1970s, Share holds seminars for emergency-room staff and hospital social workers and chaplains to teach them to be more sensitive to miscarriage patients, since not all hospitals have separate labor and delivery units. The nonprofit organization runs more than 80 support groups across North America and donates memory boxes and books, crocheted blankets and hats, among other things.

A Smaller Corner

So how does one best move on from a lost pregnancy? Despite the evolution in care, there's still no agreement about what is the most effective way to heal, says Leon.

When Octavia Monroe, a 21-year-old college student from Willingboro, N.J., doubled over in excruciating pain while watching television with her fiancé last summer, she never imagined she would end up at the emergency room in labor at just 21 weeks. It was a stillbirth. "I had held him in my body for five months and felt him move. Then one day he was gone," she says.

Monroe tried a hodgepodge of so-called best practices to deal with stillbirths and miscarriages. She named him Aidan Rodney Bell and was photographed holding his body. She attended a weekly pregnancy-loss support group in which she was inspired by one woman's story of planting a tree in memory of her miscarried baby. Monroe and her mom had Aidan's body cremated, and they placed the urn on a stand in their living room.

But when asked what helped her survive the hardest months, Monroe credits the little things that staff members at Virtua Memorial Hospital in Mount Holly, N.J., did—making the case that when it comes to losing a pregnancy at any stage, simple kindness might matter most. They gave her a teddy bear in memory of her son. They gave her a baby blanket and a cap and a white gown knitted by local volunteers. They sent flowers to her home with a personal note from her nurse and information about grief rituals. "It just made me feel cared for," says Monroe, who has since given birth to a baby girl. "Your family has to be supportive, but there was something about these strangers giving me hope."

Leon says the overwhelming symptoms of grief usually lessen within nine months to a year. "Initially, it may feel like a tsunami, and waves of grief come one right after the other," he says. "But after a while, they are less intense and less frequent. Women will start to feel like they're getting back to normal."

Whenever Abele talks about Christina, the daughter she lost after the 12th week of pregnancy three years ago, she still gets choked up. But the sorrow occupies a smaller corner of her heart now. It helped that she finally became a mother. After another miscarriage and three more IVF tries, the couple welcomed Andrew Ryan Kepferle into their lives in June last year.

TTC #1 since Feb. '12. dx: "unexplained" IF
After 2 shitty IVF cycles and 1 loss at 6+2 (EDD 11/7/14), DH and I are pursuing DIA.
11/17/2014 - ACTIVE AND WAITING!
image
Pregnancy was never the end goal; being a mom was.
I've been holding out on GP: I got drunk once and started a blog: Here it is (11/7 update)
3T<3

Re: Article on Miscarriage (LR, obviously)

  • Flamingo86Flamingo86 member
    Seventh Anniversary 2500 Comments 500 Love Its Name Dropper
    edited January 2015
    Thank you so much for sharing this Poppies.

    Married August 2009

    3 years. 5 losses.

    Our rainbow baby boy born 11.16.15

  • Wow. Seriously, thank you for sharing this. It is so well written and well said. <3
    image
    TTC 24 months, IUI #3 BFP 6/4/14 Beta 6/5 58, 6/9 508, 6/11 1227 TWINS! EDD 2/15/15
    With heavy hearts, we said goodbye to our precious angels on 8/12 at 13 weeks 2 days.
    image
    IVF #1 Lup/Brav/Meno, ER 11/28 10R/10F, ET "Rudolph" 4AA embryo 12/3, 7 frosties.
    BFP! Betas: 12/12 225, 12/15 706, 12/17 1512. EDD 8.21.15
    12/29 hb 120. 1/5 perfect, GRAD DAY! 1/15 perfect at OB. NT 2/6 PERFECT, HB 158!

    Baby Girl born 8.9.15 at 38.2 due to IUGR 4lb7.8oz 17" 
    Our princess is being watched over by her older siblings every day <3
    Anniversary 

  • Thank you, Poppies. 


    TTC since 3/2012 
    DH - 36; nml swimmers; Me - 36; almost no AMH (last 0.081), low AFC, nml FSH/LH
    Clomid + IUI #1 (6/2013) - BFN; #2 (7/2013) - BFFN
    IVF 1.0 5R/5F/2T (ET 6/11/2014) - no frosties, but BFP 8dp5dt (EDD 3/1/2015) 
    Lost our sweet baby boy, Lincoln Alexander 10/3/2014 (19w)
    IVF 2.0 - ER 3/25/2015 - 3R ZERO mature.
    Ovaries are done...
    DE IVF ER - 12/2/2016 (17R/10F = 8 frosties); FET 1.0 (1/27/2017) - BFP 6dp5dt (EDD 10/16/2017)
  • Thanks for sharing this.

    I was diagnosed with PTSD after our second tri loss. While things eventually got better, I'm now having flashbacks and horrible anxiety. It's interesting/sad how the devastation of pregnancy loss can be so deep... But it's rarely acknowledged as a real loss. I don't get it.
    IUI - BFP! Baby boy born still - August 2012
    IVF - BFP - miscarriage June 2013
    FET - BFN
    FET - BFN
    Switched clinics
    IVF with PGD - three embryos created, all healthy - July 2014
    FET - transferred two embryos (boy and girl) - Nov 2014 - BFP!
    Baby Boy born July 2015

  • Married August 2009

    3 years. 5 losses.

    Our rainbow baby boy born 11.16.15

  • edited January 2015
    Whew- I really couldn't read past that first story because it was exactly the same as our experience.

    All the feelings.
                                       image              image
    "I DO NOT love that you think so many things revolve around you.  I know you're bitter.  I get it.  But I'm over your feelings." The best person on the internet ever!
  • Thanks for sharing. I'm feeling all the feels this morning.

    image
    My new bff Gayle Forman!

    “You can have your wishes, your plans, but at the end of the day, it's out of your control"
    - Gayle Forman
    "People talk about escapism as if it's a bad thing... Once you've escaped, once you come back, the world is not the same as when you left it. You come back to it with skills, weapons, knowledge you didn't have before. Then you are better equipped to deal with your current reality."
    - Neil Gaiman

    Married Bio

    Lizzie's book recommendations, liked quotes, book clubs, book trivia, book lists (read shelf)

  • This is honestly the first article I've read on miscarriage where I didn't want to through my computer out the window part of the way through. 

    We just passed our first due date for the first IVF that worked last Spring and I had a lot of feels that I was the only one that remembered. Like, I was some sort of freak for knowing/remembering, even though we've gotten "lucky" on a subsequent round. 

    <3 for all the ladies who have lived this. Know this. And feel this every day of their lives. 

    image
    Baby Boy born 5.3.15


  • Love to you ladies.

    I've never had a loss myself, but I want you to know that other people remember and mourn your babies.  My sister had an early loss a few years ago.  That baby would be three at the end of February; I always think about her and miss her on her due date. 


    Anniversary image

    Created by MyFitnessPal - Free Calorie Counter

    TTC Since January 2011 - We have bad sperm 
    February 2013: IUI #1 = BFN 
    October 2013: We made the decision to stop TTC and live without children.

    Nestie Besties with Xan921 
  • Thank you so much for sharing this.

    My losses weren't as traumatic as many others, but like ILRV I ended up being diagnosed with PTSD after our miscarriage last November.  Thankfully my doctor was amazing about it and gave me materials on how to handle the emotional side of it, before even discussing the physical side.  Had she not given me that information, I would have kept trying to go on and just "deal" instead of getting help.

    TTC since 1/13  DX:PCOS 5/13 (long, anovulatory cycles)
    Clomid 50mg 9/13 = BFP! EDD 6/7/14 M/C 5w6d Found 11/4/13
    1/14 PCOS / Gluten Free Diet to hopefully regulate my system. 
    Chemical Pregnancy 03/14
    Surprise BFP 6/14, Beta #1: 126 Beta #2: 340  Stick baby, stick! EDD 2/17/15
    Riley Elaine born 2/16/15

    TTC 2.0   6/15 
    Chemical Pregnancy 9/15 
    Chemical Pregnancy 6/16
    BFP 9/16  EDD 6/3/17
    Beta #1: 145 Beta #2: 376 Beta #3: 2,225 Beta #4: 4,548
    www.5yearstonever.blogspot.com 
                        Image and video hosting by TinyPic

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