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008 250214b ph ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
022 _a0361-929X
040 _cOCT
100 _aDindinger Rebeccah
240 _aThe american journal of maternal/child nursing
_hSeptember - October 2024
245 _aPerinatal care for persons with dissociative disorders /
_cRebeccah Dindinger, Laura Manzo, Susannah Manupule, Solene Lehuede
300 _aVol. 49 (5) pages 254-260
_bIllustrations:
_c27 cm
500 _aCaring for persons with mental health diagnoses can be daunting. especially when the conditions are rare, and there is little evidence to guide nursing practice. There is minimal information about caring for persons with dissociative disorders beyond the behavioral health literature, much less as in obstetric context. Women are more likely to experience dissociative disorders and post-traumatic stress disorders than men. Severe maternal morbidity is significantly more common in women with a history of stress and trauma-related conditions, highlighting the importance of providing guidance for clinicians caring for them. It is imperative that nurses caring for women who may dissociate understand the complexities of the disorders and advocate for early, interdisciplinary care. Dissociative disorders, including dissociative identity disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder with dissociation, dissociative amnesia, depersonalization-derealization disorder, other specified dissociative disorders, and the care of pregnant persons with these conditions are presented
650 _aDepersonalization, dissociative disorders, perinatal care, pregnancy.
700 _aManzo Laura, Manupule Susannah, Lehuede Solene
942 _2ddc
_cCR
_n0
999 _c10216
_d10216