posted on 2016-10-10, 09:22authored byFiona A. Murphy, Allyson Lipp, Diane L Powles
Background
Miscarriage is the premature expulsion of an embryo or fetus from the uterus up to 23 weeks of pregnancy and weighing up to 500
grams. International studies using diagnostic tools have identified that some women suffer from anxiety, depression and grief after
miscarriage. Psychological follow-up might detect those women who are at risk of psychological complications following miscarriage.
This review is necessary as the evidence is equivocal on the benefits of psychological follow-up after miscarriage.
Objectives
Whether follow-up affects the psychological well being of women following miscarriage.
Search methods
We searched the Cochrane Pregnancy and Childbirth Group’s Trials Register (31 December 2011), reference lists of all retrieved papers
and contacted professional and lay organisations to obtain any ongoing trials or unpublished data.
Selection criteria
Randomised controlled trials only.
Data collection and analysis
All potential trials for eligibility according to the criteria specified in the protocol by screening the titles and abstracts, retrieving full
reports of potentially relevant trials for assessment. All review authors extracted data and checked for accuracy.No studies were published
in duplicate. When data were missing and only the abstract was available, we attempted to contact the trial authors. We resolved any
disagreement through discussion.
Main results
Six studies involving 1001 women were included. Three trials compared one counselling session with no counselling. There was no
significant difference in psychological well being including anxiety, grief, depression avoidance and self-blame. One trial compared
three one-hour counselling sessions with no counselling at four and 12 months. Some subscales showed statistical significance in favour
of counselling and some in favour of no counselling. The results for two trials were given in narrative form as data were unavailable
for meta-analyses. One trial compared multiple interventions. The other trial compared two counselling sessions with no counselling.
Neither study favoured counselling.
Authors’ conclusions
Evidence is insufficient to demonstrate that psychological support such as counselling is effective post-miscarriage. Further trials should
be good quality, adequately-powered using standardised interventions and outcome measures at specific time points. The economic
implications and women’s satisfaction with psychological follow-up should also be explored in any future study.
History
Publication
Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews (Online);3