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Investigation of Digital Technology Use in the Transition to Parenting: Qualitative Study.

Lorie DonelleJodi HallBradley HiebertKimberley Teresa JacksonEwelina StoyanovichJessica LaChanceDanica Facca
Published in: JMIR pediatrics and parenting (2021)
Digital technologies were used by mothers to track menstrual cycles during preconception; monitor, document, and announce a pregnancy during the prenatal stage; prepare for delivery during labor/birth stage; and to help babies sleep, document/announce their birth, and connect to parenting resources during the postpartum stage. Mothers used digital technologies to reassure themselves that their experiences were normal or to seek help when they were abnormal. Digital technologies provided mothers with convenient means to access health information from a range of sources, yet mothers were apprehensive about the credibility and trustworthiness of the information they retrieved. Further research should seek to understand how men and fathers use digital technologies during their transition to parenting. Additionally, further research should critically examine how constant access to information affects mothers' perceived need to self-monitor and further understand the unintended health consequences of constant surveillance on new parents.
Keyphrases
  • health information
  • social media
  • public health
  • mental health
  • healthcare
  • gestational age
  • physical activity
  • pregnant women
  • preterm birth
  • social support
  • pregnancy outcomes