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. 2019 Dec 20;15(1):1704484. doi: 10.1080/17482631.2019.1704484

Table I.

Characteristics of included studies and quality assessment

Reference, Author, year, country Study aims Methodology and theoretical perspective Sample Quality assessment
Fenwick, Staff, Gamble, Creedy, & Bayes, (2010)
Australia
To describe Australian women’s request for CS in the absence of medical indicators in their first pregnancy Interviews
Thematic analysis
8 primiparous and 6 multiparous women who requested CS without any known medical indication, all had experienced CS within the past 5 years M:35
Fisher, Hauck, & Fenwick, (2006)
Australia
To explore in detail the childbirth experiences of women identified as fearful of birth Interviews
Constant comparison
8 primiparous and 14 multiparous women who expressed fear, 19 woman were interviewed after childbirth and 3 women before M:32
Melender, (2002)
Finland
To describe the causes of fear associated with preg-nancy and childbirth and to describe coping stra-tegies of preg-nant woman who have fears Interviews
Content analysis
10 primiparous and 10 multiparous women interviewed 2–3 days after childbirth M:31
Faisal, Matinnia, Hejar, & Khodakarami, (2014)
Iran
To gain a deeper understanding of why Iranian primigravidae request CS without any medical indication Interviews
Thematic analysis
14 nulliparous women who requested CS without any medical indication, interviewed in the third trimester M:38
Lyberg & Severinsson, (2010)
Norway
To illuminate mothers’ fear of childbirth and their experiences of the team-midwifery care model during pregnancy, child-birth and the postnatal period Interviews
Hermeneutical analysis
4 primiparous and 9 multiparous women interviewed 1–1,5 year after childbirth M:33
Ramvi & Tangerud, (2011)
Norway
To investigate women requesting CS, but gave vaginal birth in spite of fear of childbirth Interview Narrative approach 2 primiparous and 3 multiparous women interviewed 1 year after the childbirth M:35
Eriksson, Jansson, & Hamberg, (2006)
Sweden
To investigate and describe how intense fear related to childbirth is experienced, dealt with and communicated from the perspective of the women themselves Interviews Grounded theory 6 primiparous and 14 multiparous women with experiences of intense fear, interviewed after childbirth M:36
Nilsson, Bondas, & Lundgren, (2010)
Sweden
To describe the meaning of previous experiences of childbirth in pregnant woman who have exhibited intense fear of childbirth such that it has an impact on their daily lives Interviews
Phenomeno-logical analysis
9 pregnant multiparous women who sought help for fear of childbirth M:32
Nilsson & Lundgren, (2009)
Sweden
To describe woman’s lived experience of fear of childbirth. Interviews
Phenomeno-logical analysis
2 pregnant primiparous and 6 pregnant multiparous women who sought help for fear M:33
Nilsson, Robertson, & Lundgren, (2012)
Sweden
To describe the meaning of fear of childbirth and of birth in women who earlier had experienced intense fear of childbirth after a previous negative childbirth experience Interviews
Phenomeno-logical analysis
6 multiparous women who sought help for fear of childbirth about 10 years earlier M:34
Ryding, Wijma, & Wijma, (1998)
Sweden
To describe women’s thoughts and feelings during the delivery process ending in ECS. Interviews
Phenomeno-logical analysis
29 primiparous and 24 multiparous women interviewed 1–5 days after elective CS M:37
Salomonsson, Bertero, & Alehagen, (2013)
Sweden
To apply and test the concept of self-efficacy to expectations of the up-coming birth in the context of severe fear of childbirth Interviews
Content analysis
17 pregnant primiparous women with fear at 25–26 gestational week, interviews between 32–38 gestation week M:31
Wahlbeck, Kvist, & Landgren, (2018)
Sweden
To describe women’s experience of undergoing art therapy with severe fear of childbirth. Interviews
Phenomeno-logical hermeneutical analysis
19 women who had undergone art therapy for severe fear of childbirth
10 multiparous and 10 primiparous, interviews 3 months after childbirth
M:36
Roosevelt & Kane Low, (2016)
USA
To explore woman’s experiences while completing the W-DEQ, an instrument used to measure fear of childbirth. Focus groups Interviews
Content analysis
22 women who were pregnant or had given birth in the last 5 years, have self-identified fear of childbirth M:31

Assessment for quality using the COREQ 32-items checklist, M = Moderate quality, 31–38 scores.