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MATERNAL ROLE
 ATTAINMENT
   THEORY



  RAMONA T. MERCER,
    Ph.D, RN, FAAN
CREDENTIALS AND
       BACKGROUND

Born in 1929
Mercer    began     her
nursing career in 1950
and she graduated from
St. Margaret’s school of
nursing, Montgomery, ala
bama.
For the next 10 years
she worked as a nurse
and      instructor      in
pediatric and obstetrical
nursing in addition to the
field    of     contagious
diseases (Meighan, 2010).
Her early nursing experience
molded her interests toward
pediatric and obstetrics.
returned to school in 1960 and
earned her master’s degree
specializing in maternal-child
nursing at the University of
New Mexico in 1964 (Meighan,
2010).
She continued pursuing
her passion for maternity
nursing and completed
her    Ph.D.    at   the
University of Pittsburgh
in 1973.
Dr. Mercer then moved to
California and worked as a
nursing professor at the
University of California until
she retired in 1987. Even in
her    retirement,  she    still
continues to revise and clarify
her work because she believes
that “theory building is a
continual            process”
(Mercer, 2004, p.226).
Ramona Mercer’s early work
in the 1970’s was focused on
the

1.needs of breastfeeding
  mothers
2.teenage mothers
3.postpartum illness
4.mothers          bearing
  children with defects.
She had also a       deep
interest     in       the
development of the

1.maternal role
2.self-esteem
3.self-concept of
  mothers
         (Meighan, 2010)
During    the   span  of
Mercer’s career, her work
expanded further in the
area of maternal-child
nursing.
She authored books such
as:

1. Perspectives on
   Adolescent Health Care
2. Transitions in a
   Woman’s Life
3. Parents at Risk

   (Ramona Mercer, 2011)
She has written a total of six
books, published six book
chapters and numerous journal
articles.

Throughout her career Dr.
Mercer has received a great
deal of awards and is a member
of      several     professional
organizations   and     national
committees (Meighan, 2010).
Maternal Role Attainment
          Theory

Defined as an interaction and
developmental process occurring
over time, in which the mother
becomes      attached      to  her
infant, acquires competence in
the care-taking tasks involved in
the role, and expresses pleasure
and gratification in the role.
Maternal Role Attainment
is also as defined a process
of binding in or being
attached to the child and
Maternal Role Identity or
seeing oneself in the role
and having a sense of
comfort about it. (Rubin)
FACTORS THAT DIRECTLY OR
 INDIRECTLY INFLUENCE ON THE
        MATERNAL ROLE

The maternal factors included:

•age at first birth
•birth experience
•early separation from the infant
•social stress
•social support personality
 traits,self-concept
•child-rearing attitudes
•health
FACTORS THAT DIRECTLY OR
 INDIRECTLY INFLUENCE ON THE
        MATERNAL ROLE


She also included the infant
variables:

•temperament
•appearance
•responsiveness
•health status, and ability to give
cues
FACTORS THAT DIRECTLY OR
 INDIRECTLY INFLUENCE ON THE
        MATERNAL ROLE


She also noted the importance
    of the father's role, the
mother-father relationship.
She also noted the importance
of the father's role and applied
many of her previous findings
    in studying the paternal
   response to parenthood.
CONCEPTS
MATERNAL IDENTITY
  Maternal identity is defined as
having an internalized view of the
self as a mother (Mercer, 1995).

PERCEPTION OF BIRTH
EXPERIENCE
   A woman’s perception of her
performance during labor and
birth is her perception of the birth
experience (Mercer, 1990)
CONCEPTS
SELF-ESTEEM
   Mercer, May, Ferketich and DeJoseph
(1986) describe self-esteem as “an
individual’s perception of how others view
one and self-acceptance of the perception
“.
SELF-CONCEPT (SELF-REGARD)
   Mercer (1986) outlines self-concept, or
self-regard, as “The overall perception of
self that includes self-satisfaction, self-
acceptance, self-esteem, and congruence
or discrepancy between self and ideal self
“.
CONCEPTS
FLEXIBILITY
   Roles are not rigidly fixed; therefore,
who fills the roles is not important
(Mercer, 1990). “Flexibility of children
attitudes increases with increased
development …., Older mothers have
infants and to view each situation in
respect to the unique nuances”.

CHILDREARING ATTITUDES
   Childrearing attitudes are material
attitudes or beliefs about childrearing.
CONCEPTS

HEALTH STATUS
   Health status is defined as “ The
mother’s and father’s perception
of their prior heath, current
health, health outlook, resistance-
susceptibility to illness, health
worry        concern,       sickness
orientation, and rejection of the
sick role” .
CONCEPTS

ANXIETY
   Mercer     and    colleagues     (1986)
describe anxiety as “ a trait in which
there is specific proneness to perceive
stressful situation-specific state” .

DEPRESSION
  According to Mercer and colleagues
(1986), depression is “having a group
of depression symptoms and in
particular the effective component of
the depressed mood”.
CONCEPTS
ROLE STRAIN-ROLE CONFLICT
   Role strain is the conflict and
difficulty felt by the woman in fulfilling
the maternal role obligation.

GRATIFICATION-SATISFACTION
   Mercer describes gratification as “the
satisfaction, enjoyment, reward, or
pleasure that a woman experiences in
interacting with her infant and in
fulfilling the usual tasks inherent in
mothering.”
CONCEPTS

ATTACHMENT
   Attachment      versus  a    difficult
temperament is related to whether the
infant sends hard-to-read cues, leading
to feelings of incompetence and
frustration in the mother.

INFANT HEALTH STATUS
  Infant health status is illness causing
maternal infant separation, interfering
with the attachment process.
CONCEPTS

INFANT CHARACTERISTICS
  Characteristics include infant
temperament, appearance, and
health status.

INFANT CUES
  Infant cues are infant behaviors
that elicit a response from the
mother .
CONCEPTS

FAMILY
  Mercer and colleagues define
family as “a dynamic system
which includes subsystems-in-
individuals     (mother,   father,
fetus/infant) and dyads (mother-
father, mother-fetus/infant, and
father fetus/infant) within the
overall family system.
CONCEPTS

FATHER OR INTIMATE
PARTNER
   The father or intimate partner
contributes to the process of
maternal role attainment in a way
that cannot be duplicated by any
other     person.   The    father’s
interactions help diffuse tension
and    facilitate  maternal    role
attainment
CONCEPTS

FAMILY FUNCTIONING
   Family functioning is the individual’s
view of the activities and relationships
between the family and its subsystems
and broader social units.

STRESS
Stress is made up of positively and
negatively perceived life events and
environmental variables.
CONCEPTS

MOTHER-FATHER
RELATIONSHIP
  The mother-father relationship
is the perception of the mate
relationship that includes intended
and actual values, goals, and
agreement between the two. The
maternal attachment to the infant
develops within the emotional held
of the parent’s relationship.
CONCEPTS
SOCIAL SUPPORT
According to Mercer and colleagues,
social support is “the amount of help
actually received, satisfaction with that
help, and the persons (network)
providing that help”.

Four areas of social support area as
follows:

•Emotional support; “Feeling loved,
cared for, trusted, and understood”
•Informational support: “Helps the
individual help herself by providing
information that is useful in dealing
with the problem and/or situation”

•Physical support: A direct kind of
help

•Appraisal support: “ A support that
tells the role taker how she is
performing in the role; it enables the
individual to evaluate herself in
relationship to others “ performance in
the role”
ASSUMPTIONS

•A relatively, stable core
self, acquired through lifelong
socialization, determines how
a mother defines and perceive
events; her perceptions of her
infant’s and others responses
to her mothering, with her life
situation, are real world to
which she responds.
ASSUMPTIONS

•In addition to the mother’s
socialization, her developmental
level    and   innate   personality
characteristics also influence her
behavioral responses.

•The mother’s role partner, her
infant, will reflect the mother’s
competence in the mothering role
through growth and development.
ASSUMPTIONS

•The infant is considered an active
partner in maternal role-taking
process, affecting and being
affected by the role enactment.

•The father or mother’s intimate
partner    contributes to    role
attainment in a way that cannot
be duplicated by any other
supportive person.
ASSUMPTIONS



•Maternal identity develops
concurrently with maternal
attachment and each depends
on the other.
ASSERTIONS

•Mercer’s original Theory and
Model of Maternal Role Attainment
were first introduced in 1991. It
was refined and was presented
more clearly in her 1995 book,
Becoming a Mother: Research on
Maternal Identity
ASSERTIONS


•From Rubin to Present. Her
recent    revision   focuses  on
woman’s transition in becoming a
mother. It involves an extensive
change in her life space that
requires her ongoing development.

.
ASSERTIONS


•According to Mercer, becoming a
mother is more extensive than just
assuming the role. It is unending
and      continuously     evolving
therefore she recommends that
the Maternal role attainment be
retired.
PARADIGMS

NURSING
Mercer stated that, “Nurses are the
health professionals having the most
sustained and intense interaction with
women in the maternity cycle. She
emphasizes that the kind of help of a
woman receives during pregnancy and
over the first year following birth can
have a lifelong term effects for her and
her child.
PARADIGMS

PERSON
She refers the person as self or
core self, view the self as separate
from the roles that are played.
The mother interacts with her
infant and with the father or her
significant other; influential and is
influenced by both of them.
PARADIGMS
HEALTH
She defines health status as the
mothers and father’s perception of
their prior health, current health,
health        outlook,       resistance,
susceptibility to illness, worry or
concern and rejection of sick role.
Health status of newborn is the extent
of disease present and infant health
status by parental rating of overall
health.    She    also   stresses    the
importance     of   healthcare    during
childbearing and childrearing process.
PARADIGMS

ENVIRONMENT
She conceptualized the environment
from Bronfenbrenner’s definition of the
ecological environment. Development
of a role/ person cannot be considered
apart from the environment; there is a
mutual      accommodation      between
developing person and the changing
properties of the immediate settings,
and the larger context in which the
settings are embedded.
Proposed Model of Maternal
     Role Attainment
Proposed Model of Maternal
       Role Attainment
1.)          The microsystem is the
immediate        environment       where
maternal role attainment occurs.This
indicates the family and factors such as
family     functioning,   mother-father
relationships, social support and stress.
The infant is an individual embedded
within the family system. This system
is the most influencial on maternal role
attainment and attainment is achieved
within the microsystem through the
interactions of father, mother and
infant.
Proposed Model of Maternal
       Role Attainment

2.)    The mesosystem encompasses,
influences,    and     delimits    the
microsystem. The mother-infant unit is
not contained within the mesosystem,
but the     mesosystem may determine
in    part  what   happens     to  the
developing       maternal role and the
child. It includes extended family,
school, work church and other entities
within the mother's more immediate
community.
Proposed Model of Maternal
      Role Attainment


The exosystem, the previously
used term, is an extension of the
mesosystem.        It    is    the
interrelationships of two or more
settings or subsystems that more
directly influences the mother
such as interactions between
works setting, daycare,local laws
and rules, community and church.
Proposed Model of Maternal
       Role Attainment

3.)     The macrosystem refers to the
general prototypes existing in a
particular    culture   or   transmitted
cultural consistencies which include the
social, political and cultural influences
on other two systems. It is in the
macrosystem where the health care
environment and the impact of current
health care system on maternal role
attainment originate.
Proposed Model of Maternal
      Role Attainment

 Maternal role attainment is a
process that follows four stages
of role acquisition;these stages
have been adapted from Thornton
and Nardi's 1975 research. These
four stages are indicated as
microsystem within the evolving
model     of     Maternal    Role
Attainment.
Proposed Model of Maternal
       Role Attainment


a.    Anticipatory Stage: Begins
ion the pregnancy and includes
the           initial         social
and psychological adjustments to
pregnancy. The mother learns the
expectations          of        the
role,    fantasizes    about    the
role, related to the fetus in the
uterus, and begins role play.
Proposed Model of Maternal
       Role Attainment


b.     Formal Stage: Begins with
the birth of the infant and includes
learning and taking of the role of
the mother. Role behaviors are
guided by formal, consensual
expectations and others in the
mother's social system.
Proposed Model of Maternal
       Role Attainment

c.     Informal Stage: Begins as
the mother develops unique way
of dealing with the role not
conveyed by the social system.
The woman makes her new role fit
within her existing lifestyle based
on past experiences and future
goals.
Proposed Model of Maternal
       Role Attainment

d.        Personal Stage: Role
Identity Stage occurs as the
woman internalizes her role. The
mother                  experiences
harmony,       confidence       and
competence in the way she
performs    the    role   and   the
maternal role is achieved.
Proposed Model of Maternal
       Role Attainment

   These four stages of role
acquisition overlap and are altered
as the infant grows as and
develops. The final stage of
maternal role identity may be
achieved in many period of time.
The stages are influenced by social
support,        stress,      family
functioning,and the relationship
between the mother and father or
significant others.
Proposed Model of Maternal
       Role Attainment

   Traits and behaviors of both the
mother and the infant may influence
maternal role identity and child
outcome. Maternal traits and behaviors
included Mercer's model are empathy,
sensitivity to infant cues, self-esteem
and self-concept,parenting received as
a child, maturity and flexibility, attitude,
pregnancy and birth experience, health,
depression and role conflict.
Proposed Model of Maternal
       Role Attainment


Infant traits having an impact on
maternal role identity include
temperament, ability to send cues,
appearance,                general
characteristics,    responsiveness
and stress.
Proposed Model of Maternal
       Role Attainment


   According to Mercer, the maternal
role is attained when the mother feels
internal harmony with the role and its
expectations and described three major
components of the role:
    1. attachment to the infant
    2. gaining competence in mothering
      behaviors
    3.    expressing   gratification in
maternal-infant interactions.
Proposed Model of Maternal
      Role Attainment



Outcome for the child includes
cognitive, mental development
attachment, health, and other
social competence.
Refer to the given
    diagram.
Theoretical Underpinnings

•Mercer believes that nurses can
play a vital role in promoting
health of families and children.
Mercer stated      in   her book
Becoming a Mother: Research on
Maternal Identity from Rubin to
the Present that “nurses are the
health professionals having the
most     sustained    and   intense
interaction with women in the
maternity cycle” (1995, p. xii).
Theoretical Underpinnings


Mercer’s theory is practice
oriented and has consistently
evolved over time because of
her commitment to connect
research to practice (Meighan,
2010).
Theoretical Underpinnings

•In addition to the renaming of
maternal role attainment stages,
the model has undergone ongoing
revision    since    its   original
publication. The work of Walker,
Crain, and Thompson indicated
that a change was needed because
the term role attainment indicated
an end to the process as a final
goal.
Theoretical Underpinnings



Mercer began to reexamine her
theory and felt the need to revise
the model’s title to “Becoming a
Mother” in order to connote a
continued growth in mothering
throughout the lifespan (Mercer,
2004).
Stages of Becoming a Mother

•The concepts of Mercer’s theory center
on the bond between mother and child
which fosters competency, confidence
and joy in the motherhood role (Role
Attainment, 2005).

• Mercer’s    original maternal   role
attainment theory follows a process
that has four stages. In 2004 Mercer
revised the terms of these stages
although the stages themselves remain
basically the same.
Stages of Becoming a Mother

• “Commitment, attachment, and
preparation” stage during pregnancy
when the mother makes psychological
adjusts   and     prepares    for the
expectations of her new role.

•“Acquaintance,        learning,     and
physical restoration” stage which
begins with the infant’s birth when the
role of mother is assumed and learned
in the contexts of her social system.
Stages of Becoming a Mother


• “Moving toward a new
normal” stage in the first few
months of the infant’s life where
the mother makes her new role fit
her lifestyle in a personal way
instead of in context with a social
system.
Stages of Becoming a Mother


 “Achievement     of   maternal
identity” stage when the mother
internalizes  her    role   and
experiences a sense of harmony,
competence and confidence which
usually occurs about 4 months
after birth.
Stages of Becoming a Mother



These stages can overlap and the
timing is highly variable however
the stages usually progress in a
sequential, predictable manner
(Mercer, 2004).
Thank you
      for
  listening!



ABDUL AZIZ JAJA AHID, RN

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Maternal role attainment theory

  • 1. MATERNAL ROLE ATTAINMENT THEORY RAMONA T. MERCER, Ph.D, RN, FAAN
  • 2. CREDENTIALS AND BACKGROUND Born in 1929 Mercer began her nursing career in 1950 and she graduated from St. Margaret’s school of nursing, Montgomery, ala bama.
  • 3. For the next 10 years she worked as a nurse and instructor in pediatric and obstetrical nursing in addition to the field of contagious diseases (Meighan, 2010).
  • 4. Her early nursing experience molded her interests toward pediatric and obstetrics. returned to school in 1960 and earned her master’s degree specializing in maternal-child nursing at the University of New Mexico in 1964 (Meighan, 2010).
  • 5. She continued pursuing her passion for maternity nursing and completed her Ph.D. at the University of Pittsburgh in 1973.
  • 6. Dr. Mercer then moved to California and worked as a nursing professor at the University of California until she retired in 1987. Even in her retirement, she still continues to revise and clarify her work because she believes that “theory building is a continual process” (Mercer, 2004, p.226).
  • 7. Ramona Mercer’s early work in the 1970’s was focused on the 1.needs of breastfeeding mothers 2.teenage mothers 3.postpartum illness 4.mothers bearing children with defects.
  • 8. She had also a deep interest in the development of the 1.maternal role 2.self-esteem 3.self-concept of mothers (Meighan, 2010)
  • 9. During the span of Mercer’s career, her work expanded further in the area of maternal-child nursing.
  • 10. She authored books such as: 1. Perspectives on Adolescent Health Care 2. Transitions in a Woman’s Life 3. Parents at Risk (Ramona Mercer, 2011)
  • 11. She has written a total of six books, published six book chapters and numerous journal articles. Throughout her career Dr. Mercer has received a great deal of awards and is a member of several professional organizations and national committees (Meighan, 2010).
  • 12. Maternal Role Attainment Theory Defined as an interaction and developmental process occurring over time, in which the mother becomes attached to her infant, acquires competence in the care-taking tasks involved in the role, and expresses pleasure and gratification in the role.
  • 13. Maternal Role Attainment is also as defined a process of binding in or being attached to the child and Maternal Role Identity or seeing oneself in the role and having a sense of comfort about it. (Rubin)
  • 14. FACTORS THAT DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY INFLUENCE ON THE MATERNAL ROLE The maternal factors included: •age at first birth •birth experience •early separation from the infant •social stress •social support personality traits,self-concept •child-rearing attitudes •health
  • 15. FACTORS THAT DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY INFLUENCE ON THE MATERNAL ROLE She also included the infant variables: •temperament •appearance •responsiveness •health status, and ability to give cues
  • 16. FACTORS THAT DIRECTLY OR INDIRECTLY INFLUENCE ON THE MATERNAL ROLE She also noted the importance of the father's role, the mother-father relationship. She also noted the importance of the father's role and applied many of her previous findings in studying the paternal response to parenthood.
  • 17. CONCEPTS MATERNAL IDENTITY Maternal identity is defined as having an internalized view of the self as a mother (Mercer, 1995). PERCEPTION OF BIRTH EXPERIENCE A woman’s perception of her performance during labor and birth is her perception of the birth experience (Mercer, 1990)
  • 18. CONCEPTS SELF-ESTEEM Mercer, May, Ferketich and DeJoseph (1986) describe self-esteem as “an individual’s perception of how others view one and self-acceptance of the perception “. SELF-CONCEPT (SELF-REGARD) Mercer (1986) outlines self-concept, or self-regard, as “The overall perception of self that includes self-satisfaction, self- acceptance, self-esteem, and congruence or discrepancy between self and ideal self “.
  • 19. CONCEPTS FLEXIBILITY Roles are not rigidly fixed; therefore, who fills the roles is not important (Mercer, 1990). “Flexibility of children attitudes increases with increased development …., Older mothers have infants and to view each situation in respect to the unique nuances”. CHILDREARING ATTITUDES Childrearing attitudes are material attitudes or beliefs about childrearing.
  • 20. CONCEPTS HEALTH STATUS Health status is defined as “ The mother’s and father’s perception of their prior heath, current health, health outlook, resistance- susceptibility to illness, health worry concern, sickness orientation, and rejection of the sick role” .
  • 21. CONCEPTS ANXIETY Mercer and colleagues (1986) describe anxiety as “ a trait in which there is specific proneness to perceive stressful situation-specific state” . DEPRESSION According to Mercer and colleagues (1986), depression is “having a group of depression symptoms and in particular the effective component of the depressed mood”.
  • 22. CONCEPTS ROLE STRAIN-ROLE CONFLICT Role strain is the conflict and difficulty felt by the woman in fulfilling the maternal role obligation. GRATIFICATION-SATISFACTION Mercer describes gratification as “the satisfaction, enjoyment, reward, or pleasure that a woman experiences in interacting with her infant and in fulfilling the usual tasks inherent in mothering.”
  • 23. CONCEPTS ATTACHMENT Attachment versus a difficult temperament is related to whether the infant sends hard-to-read cues, leading to feelings of incompetence and frustration in the mother. INFANT HEALTH STATUS Infant health status is illness causing maternal infant separation, interfering with the attachment process.
  • 24. CONCEPTS INFANT CHARACTERISTICS Characteristics include infant temperament, appearance, and health status. INFANT CUES Infant cues are infant behaviors that elicit a response from the mother .
  • 25. CONCEPTS FAMILY Mercer and colleagues define family as “a dynamic system which includes subsystems-in- individuals (mother, father, fetus/infant) and dyads (mother- father, mother-fetus/infant, and father fetus/infant) within the overall family system.
  • 26. CONCEPTS FATHER OR INTIMATE PARTNER The father or intimate partner contributes to the process of maternal role attainment in a way that cannot be duplicated by any other person. The father’s interactions help diffuse tension and facilitate maternal role attainment
  • 27. CONCEPTS FAMILY FUNCTIONING Family functioning is the individual’s view of the activities and relationships between the family and its subsystems and broader social units. STRESS Stress is made up of positively and negatively perceived life events and environmental variables.
  • 28. CONCEPTS MOTHER-FATHER RELATIONSHIP The mother-father relationship is the perception of the mate relationship that includes intended and actual values, goals, and agreement between the two. The maternal attachment to the infant develops within the emotional held of the parent’s relationship.
  • 29. CONCEPTS SOCIAL SUPPORT According to Mercer and colleagues, social support is “the amount of help actually received, satisfaction with that help, and the persons (network) providing that help”. Four areas of social support area as follows: •Emotional support; “Feeling loved, cared for, trusted, and understood”
  • 30. •Informational support: “Helps the individual help herself by providing information that is useful in dealing with the problem and/or situation” •Physical support: A direct kind of help •Appraisal support: “ A support that tells the role taker how she is performing in the role; it enables the individual to evaluate herself in relationship to others “ performance in the role”
  • 31. ASSUMPTIONS •A relatively, stable core self, acquired through lifelong socialization, determines how a mother defines and perceive events; her perceptions of her infant’s and others responses to her mothering, with her life situation, are real world to which she responds.
  • 32. ASSUMPTIONS •In addition to the mother’s socialization, her developmental level and innate personality characteristics also influence her behavioral responses. •The mother’s role partner, her infant, will reflect the mother’s competence in the mothering role through growth and development.
  • 33. ASSUMPTIONS •The infant is considered an active partner in maternal role-taking process, affecting and being affected by the role enactment. •The father or mother’s intimate partner contributes to role attainment in a way that cannot be duplicated by any other supportive person.
  • 34. ASSUMPTIONS •Maternal identity develops concurrently with maternal attachment and each depends on the other.
  • 35. ASSERTIONS •Mercer’s original Theory and Model of Maternal Role Attainment were first introduced in 1991. It was refined and was presented more clearly in her 1995 book, Becoming a Mother: Research on Maternal Identity
  • 36. ASSERTIONS •From Rubin to Present. Her recent revision focuses on woman’s transition in becoming a mother. It involves an extensive change in her life space that requires her ongoing development. .
  • 37. ASSERTIONS •According to Mercer, becoming a mother is more extensive than just assuming the role. It is unending and continuously evolving therefore she recommends that the Maternal role attainment be retired.
  • 38. PARADIGMS NURSING Mercer stated that, “Nurses are the health professionals having the most sustained and intense interaction with women in the maternity cycle. She emphasizes that the kind of help of a woman receives during pregnancy and over the first year following birth can have a lifelong term effects for her and her child.
  • 39. PARADIGMS PERSON She refers the person as self or core self, view the self as separate from the roles that are played. The mother interacts with her infant and with the father or her significant other; influential and is influenced by both of them.
  • 40. PARADIGMS HEALTH She defines health status as the mothers and father’s perception of their prior health, current health, health outlook, resistance, susceptibility to illness, worry or concern and rejection of sick role. Health status of newborn is the extent of disease present and infant health status by parental rating of overall health. She also stresses the importance of healthcare during childbearing and childrearing process.
  • 41. PARADIGMS ENVIRONMENT She conceptualized the environment from Bronfenbrenner’s definition of the ecological environment. Development of a role/ person cannot be considered apart from the environment; there is a mutual accommodation between developing person and the changing properties of the immediate settings, and the larger context in which the settings are embedded.
  • 42. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment
  • 43.
  • 44. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment 1.) The microsystem is the immediate environment where maternal role attainment occurs.This indicates the family and factors such as family functioning, mother-father relationships, social support and stress. The infant is an individual embedded within the family system. This system is the most influencial on maternal role attainment and attainment is achieved within the microsystem through the interactions of father, mother and infant.
  • 45. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment 2.) The mesosystem encompasses, influences, and delimits the microsystem. The mother-infant unit is not contained within the mesosystem, but the mesosystem may determine in part what happens to the developing maternal role and the child. It includes extended family, school, work church and other entities within the mother's more immediate community.
  • 46. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment The exosystem, the previously used term, is an extension of the mesosystem. It is the interrelationships of two or more settings or subsystems that more directly influences the mother such as interactions between works setting, daycare,local laws and rules, community and church.
  • 47. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment 3.) The macrosystem refers to the general prototypes existing in a particular culture or transmitted cultural consistencies which include the social, political and cultural influences on other two systems. It is in the macrosystem where the health care environment and the impact of current health care system on maternal role attainment originate.
  • 48. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment Maternal role attainment is a process that follows four stages of role acquisition;these stages have been adapted from Thornton and Nardi's 1975 research. These four stages are indicated as microsystem within the evolving model of Maternal Role Attainment.
  • 49.
  • 50. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment a. Anticipatory Stage: Begins ion the pregnancy and includes the initial social and psychological adjustments to pregnancy. The mother learns the expectations of the role, fantasizes about the role, related to the fetus in the uterus, and begins role play.
  • 51. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment b. Formal Stage: Begins with the birth of the infant and includes learning and taking of the role of the mother. Role behaviors are guided by formal, consensual expectations and others in the mother's social system.
  • 52. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment c. Informal Stage: Begins as the mother develops unique way of dealing with the role not conveyed by the social system. The woman makes her new role fit within her existing lifestyle based on past experiences and future goals.
  • 53. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment d. Personal Stage: Role Identity Stage occurs as the woman internalizes her role. The mother experiences harmony, confidence and competence in the way she performs the role and the maternal role is achieved.
  • 54. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment These four stages of role acquisition overlap and are altered as the infant grows as and develops. The final stage of maternal role identity may be achieved in many period of time. The stages are influenced by social support, stress, family functioning,and the relationship between the mother and father or significant others.
  • 55. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment Traits and behaviors of both the mother and the infant may influence maternal role identity and child outcome. Maternal traits and behaviors included Mercer's model are empathy, sensitivity to infant cues, self-esteem and self-concept,parenting received as a child, maturity and flexibility, attitude, pregnancy and birth experience, health, depression and role conflict.
  • 56. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment Infant traits having an impact on maternal role identity include temperament, ability to send cues, appearance, general characteristics, responsiveness and stress.
  • 57. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment According to Mercer, the maternal role is attained when the mother feels internal harmony with the role and its expectations and described three major components of the role: 1. attachment to the infant 2. gaining competence in mothering behaviors 3. expressing gratification in maternal-infant interactions.
  • 58. Proposed Model of Maternal Role Attainment Outcome for the child includes cognitive, mental development attachment, health, and other social competence.
  • 59. Refer to the given diagram.
  • 60. Theoretical Underpinnings •Mercer believes that nurses can play a vital role in promoting health of families and children. Mercer stated in her book Becoming a Mother: Research on Maternal Identity from Rubin to the Present that “nurses are the health professionals having the most sustained and intense interaction with women in the maternity cycle” (1995, p. xii).
  • 61. Theoretical Underpinnings Mercer’s theory is practice oriented and has consistently evolved over time because of her commitment to connect research to practice (Meighan, 2010).
  • 62. Theoretical Underpinnings •In addition to the renaming of maternal role attainment stages, the model has undergone ongoing revision since its original publication. The work of Walker, Crain, and Thompson indicated that a change was needed because the term role attainment indicated an end to the process as a final goal.
  • 63. Theoretical Underpinnings Mercer began to reexamine her theory and felt the need to revise the model’s title to “Becoming a Mother” in order to connote a continued growth in mothering throughout the lifespan (Mercer, 2004).
  • 64. Stages of Becoming a Mother •The concepts of Mercer’s theory center on the bond between mother and child which fosters competency, confidence and joy in the motherhood role (Role Attainment, 2005). • Mercer’s original maternal role attainment theory follows a process that has four stages. In 2004 Mercer revised the terms of these stages although the stages themselves remain basically the same.
  • 65. Stages of Becoming a Mother • “Commitment, attachment, and preparation” stage during pregnancy when the mother makes psychological adjusts and prepares for the expectations of her new role. •“Acquaintance, learning, and physical restoration” stage which begins with the infant’s birth when the role of mother is assumed and learned in the contexts of her social system.
  • 66. Stages of Becoming a Mother • “Moving toward a new normal” stage in the first few months of the infant’s life where the mother makes her new role fit her lifestyle in a personal way instead of in context with a social system.
  • 67. Stages of Becoming a Mother “Achievement of maternal identity” stage when the mother internalizes her role and experiences a sense of harmony, competence and confidence which usually occurs about 4 months after birth.
  • 68. Stages of Becoming a Mother These stages can overlap and the timing is highly variable however the stages usually progress in a sequential, predictable manner (Mercer, 2004).
  • 69. Thank you for listening! ABDUL AZIZ JAJA AHID, RN