12.07.2015 Views

Women with Disabilities: Barriers and Facilitators to Accessing ...

Women with Disabilities: Barriers and Facilitators to Accessing ...

Women with Disabilities: Barriers and Facilitators to Accessing ...

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

WOMEN WITH DISABILITIES: BARRIERS AND FACILITATORS TO ACCESSING SERVICES DURING PREGNANCY,CHILDBIRTH AND EARLY MOTHERHOODSchool of Nursing <strong>and</strong> Midwifery, Trinity College DublinWhile mental health services are now addressing needs for housing, work <strong>and</strong>education among people <strong>with</strong> enduring mental health difficulties (Government ofIrel<strong>and</strong>, 2006), they are far behind in responding <strong>to</strong> the needs of women asmothers (Mowbray et al, 1998; O'Shea et al, 2004). It is evident from theliterature that many women routinely seen by the mental health services are notidentified as parents <strong>and</strong> the parent role function is ignored in care <strong>and</strong>treatment planning (Zemencuk et al, 1995). Nicholson et al (1993) found thatfew American Mental Health Services routinely collected data on whetherwomen attending services had children <strong>and</strong> most neglected <strong>to</strong> ask about familyroles <strong>and</strong> responsibilities. Dipple et al’s (2002) study in the United Kingdom alsohighlighted the inadequacy of women’s case notes, regarding their role asmother. This included records <strong>with</strong> no mention of children, the incorrect numberof children, inadequate information <strong>to</strong> enable mother or staff <strong>to</strong> contact childreneasily, <strong>and</strong> incidents where a major event such as the death of a child was notrecorded. This is indicative of the tendency of services <strong>to</strong> neglect the community<strong>and</strong> family context of women’s lives <strong>and</strong> the specific psychosocial needs ofmothers. It is also indicative of the biomedical paradigm <strong>and</strong> its focus on thewoman as ‘patient’ as opposed <strong>to</strong> mother <strong>with</strong>, consequently, the identity of thewoman as ‘mentally ill’ becoming primary, supplanting all other identities(Oyserman et al, 2000; Montgomery et al, 2006).2.6.4. Positive aspects of mothering for women <strong>with</strong> mental healthdifficultiesThe literature on motherhood <strong>and</strong> mental illness is largely dominated by aprofessional discourse that portrays mothers <strong>with</strong> enduring mental healthdifficulties as ‘risky,’ incompetent mothers. However, there is a small emergingbody of literature that gives voice <strong>to</strong> these women <strong>and</strong> recognises that they arecapable of effective parenting <strong>with</strong> support from innovative services <strong>and</strong>resources. Mothers <strong>with</strong> severe mental health problems say that motherhoodhelps provide them <strong>with</strong> an identity, other than that of being ‘mentally ill’(Chernomas et al, 2000; Oyserman et al, 2004; Montgomery et al, 2006), <strong>and</strong>34

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!