perinatal grief intensity scale – UofL News Mon, 20 Apr 2026 15:43:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 UofL professor named American Academy of Nursing fellow /post/uofltoday/uofl-professor-named-american-academy-of-nursing-fellow/ /post/uofltoday/uofl-professor-named-american-academy-of-nursing-fellow/#respond Fri, 06 Jul 2018 18:51:51 +0000 http://uoflnews.com/?p=42916 Marianne Hutti, a leader in women’s health care and professor at the University of Louisville School of Nursing, has received one of the highest honors in the nursing profession.

Hutti is among 195 nurses worldwide selected for the 2018 class of the  fellows, which recognizes distinguished nurse leaders who work in education, management, practice, policy and research. Hutti and the other inductees will be honored at a ceremony during the academy’s annual policy conference Nov. 1-3 in Washington, D.C.

“Being a fellow will give me an opportunity to be a significant voice for women and their families at the national level,” said Hutti, PhD, WHNP-BC, FAANP. “I am excited to be able to advocate for my patients in such an important forum.”

Hutti, who maintains an independent practice in women’s health, is internationally known for her research on perinatal loss and has received national awards as a nursing educator and researcher. She created the Perinatal Grief Intensity Scale, developed for clinical use to predict intense grief and identify need for professional follow-up after perinatal loss, which includes miscarriage, stillbirth and death of an infant within 28 days after birth.

Her most recent study included development of a free app of the Perinatal Grief Intensity Scale, available to health care providers at Ěý˛ą˛Ô»ĺĚý.

In 1993, Hutti started the women’s health nurse practitioner program at UofL, the first of its kind in Kentucky, and helped develop the women’s health nurse practitioner scope and standards of practice.

Lisa Carter-Harris, an alumna of the UofL School of Nursing’s Ph.D. and master’s degree programs, also was chosen for the 2018 class of academy fellows. Carter-Harris is a faculty member at Indiana University School of Nursing where she researches improving patient-provider communication and the shared decision making process in cancer screening decisions.

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Free app helps providers treat patients grieving pregnancy loss, newborn death /section/science-and-tech/free-app-helps-providers-treat-patients-grieving-pregnancy-loss-newborn-death/ /section/science-and-tech/free-app-helps-providers-treat-patients-grieving-pregnancy-loss-newborn-death/#respond Wed, 14 Jun 2017 15:03:03 +0000 http://uoflnews.com/?p=37204 A group of University of Louisville researchers and engineers has developed a free mobile app designed to help health care providers easily assess and identify women in need of mental health care for intense grief after a pregnancy loss or death of a newborn.

Marianne Hutti, PhD, APRN, UofL School of Nursing professor, led research and development of the app, which makes scoring of the Perinatal Grief Intensity Scale (PGIS) easier, predicting patients at greatest risk for intense grief after perinatal loss, which includes miscarriage, stillbirth or the death of an infant within 28 days after birth.

The project was funded by a $10,000 grant through the Kimberly-Clark Nursing Research Award from the .

Health care providers use the app to ask a short series of questions related to how a woman perceives her perinatal loss. Based on responses, the app calculates a patient’s score on the PGIS and gives providers theoretically based suggestions for care.

The app predicts patients most likely to have clinical-level anxiety, depression and continuing intense grief three to five months after a perinatal loss. Providers are encouraged to use the PGIS as a post-hospitalization screening tool to identify women who should be referred for additional mental health evaluation.

Knowing how patients perceived their pregnancy and a subsequent loss is crucial. Responses to perinatal loss vary among women and the point during pregnancy when a loss occurs does not determine a patient’s grief response, Hutti said.

“Women with early losses can have very intense grief, just like women with later losses,” Hutti said. “The app ensures that health care providers are creating treatment plans that are congruent with how a woman is seeing her loss because some women grieve and other women don’t grieve, or will have a significantly less intense grief response than others.”

Patients can choose to have their results anonymously submitted to a database, allowing for further research.

The app is available to clinicians free at and .

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