C
Carol Henshaw
Researcher at Keele University
Publications - 28
Citations - 1453
Carol Henshaw is an academic researcher from Keele University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Depression (differential diagnoses) & Postpartum depression. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 27 publications receiving 1343 citations. Previous affiliations of Carol Henshaw include University of Liverpool & Staffordshire University.
Papers
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Supermum, superwife, supereverything : performing femininity in the transition to motherhood
TL;DR: In this article, a qualitative study was conducted to understand how mothers understood and accounted for their experiences in relation to the ideology of motherhood which has been socially constructed as a critical aspect of femininity.
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Maternal attachment style and depression associated with childbirth: preliminary results from a European and US cross-cultural study.
Antonia Bifulco,Bárbara Figueiredo,Nicole Guedeney,Laura L. Gorman,Sandra Hayes,Maria Muzik,E. Glatigny-Dallay,Vania Valoriani,Martin H. Kammerer,Carol Henshaw +9 more
TL;DR: The Attachment Style Interview can be used reliably in European and US centres as a measure for risk associated with childbirth and its use will contribute to theoretically underpinned preventive action for disordersassociated with childbirth.
Dataset
'I Felt as though I'd been in Jail': Women's Experiences of Maternity Care during Labour, Delivery and the Immediate Postpartum - Feminism & Psychology - Vol. 15, 3 - ISBN: 0959-3535, 1461-7161 - p.315-342
TL;DR: In this article, the impact of soignants on the vecu des femmes lors de l'accouchement et du post partum was analyzed with 24 femmes.
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‘I Felt as though I’d been in Jail’: Women’s Experiences of Maternity Care during Labour, Delivery and the Immediate Postpartum:
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors explored the impact of maternity care staff on women's experiences, and feelings associated with the childbirth process, and three main themes emerged from women's accounts: perceptions of control, staff attitudes and behaviours, and resource issues.
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A systematic review, evidence synthesis and meta-analysis of quantitative and qualitative studies evaluating the clinical effectiveness, the cost-effectiveness, safety and acceptability of interventions to prevent postnatal depression
C Jane Morrell,Paul Sutcliffe,Andrew Booth,John Stevens,Alison Scope,Mark Stevenson,Rebecca Harvey,Alice Bessey,Anna Cantrell,Cindy-Lee Dennis,Shijie Ren,Margherita Ragonesi,Michael Barkham,Dick Churchill,Carol Henshaw,Jo Newstead,Pauline Slade,Helen Spiby,Sarah Stewart-Brown +18 more
TL;DR: Interventions warrant replication within randomised controlled trials (RCTs), and the most cost-effective interventions were estimated to be midwifery redesigned postnatal care, PCA-based and IPT-based intervention in the sensitivity analysis, although there was considerable uncertainty.