Obstetric gaslighting and the denial of mothers' realities

Social Science & Medicine (1982), 301, 114938

DOI 10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.114938

Abstract

Gaslighting is a type of abuse aimed at making victims question their sanity as well as the veracity and legitimacy of their own perspectives and feelings. In this article, we show how gaslighting can operate as a key, yet underexamined strategy of obstetric violence, or the institutional and interpersonal violation of women's rights during pregnancy, childbirth, and postpartum. We draw on forty-six in-depth, semi-structured interviews with mothers who experienced a traumatic childbirth to examine how obstetric providers gaslight mothers before, during and after childbirth when they deny - and thereby destabilize - mothers' realities. We identify and examine four core types of denials: denials of 1) mothers' humanity, 2) mothers' knowledge as valid, 3) mothers' judgements as rational and 4) mothers' feelings as legitimate. All four denials work to render mothers noncredible and their claims illegible within clinical encounters. In explicitly naming, theorizing, and examining obstetric gaslighting, our aims are threefold: 1) to uncover and theorize an underexamined mechanism of obstetric violence through a sociological lens, 2) to offer a typology of obstetric gaslighting's manifestations to aid scholars and practitioners in recognizing when obstetric gaslighting is occurring and 3) to advance a growing research program on gaslighting in medicine.

Topics

obstetric violence patient rights, gaslighting during childbirth, provider dismissal maternity care, traumatic birth experience, maternal autonomy childbirth, obstetric gaslighting qualitative, dismissing mothers concerns labor, patient credibility obstetrics, informed consent childbirth violations, obstetric provider communication, maternal voice labor delivery

Cite this article

Fielding-Singh, P., & Dmowska, A. (2022). Obstetric gaslighting and the denial of mothers' realities. *Social science & medicine (1982)*, *301*, 114938. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2022.114938

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