2 research outputs found
Teen mothers who are daughters of teen mothers: Psychological intergenerational dimensions of early motherhood
Introduction: Researchers have shown that being a daughter of a teenage mother is a risk factor regarding the
possibility of having early, unprotected sexual intercourse and of falling pregnant. The experiences of young
mothers in such situations and the aspects of intergenerational transmission in the mother–daughter relationship
have not been well investigated.
Objectives: This study analyses the experience of motherhood in young mothers (18–20 years at the time of the
interview/15–16 at the time of their pregnancy) who are daughters of teen mothers themselves from the psychodynamic
perspective of intergenerational transmission.
Methods: Six young mothers from Southern Italy were selected and interviewed. A semi-structured interview was
used to explore the early experience of pregnancy and motherhood and their relationship with their own mothers.
The interviews were analysed through Interpretative Phenomenological Analysis (IPA).
Results: Five superordinate themes emerged: I didn't want, I didn't see and I didn't feel; Adolescence? I suddenly
became a mother; History repeats itself again and again; Confused Spaces and How difficult is coming into the world?
Conclusion: Adolescent mothers, who themselves are daughters of teen mothers, seem to have difficulty in representing
the meanings associated with their experience of pregnancy and motherhood. A lack of narrative
transmission of the experience of pregnancy from mothers to daughters emerged. The implications for research
and social policies will be discussed