How can we best use opportunities provided by routine maternity care to engage women in improving their diets and health?
Wendy LawrenceTina Kovacs VogelSofia StrömmerTaylor MorrisBethan TreadgoldDaniella WatsonKate HartKaren McGillJulia HammondNicholas C HarveyCyrus CooperHazel InskipJanis BairdMary BarkerPublished in: Maternal & child nutrition (2019)
Pregnancy provides motivation for women to improve their diets and increase their physical activity. Opportunistic brief interventions delivered as part of routine primary care have produced improvements in patients' health behaviour. Consequently, there have been calls for midwives to use contacts during pregnancy in this way. This study explored the experiences of pregnant women and research midwives/nurses of a brief intervention called Healthy Conversation Skills (HCS) being delivered as part of a randomised control trial, assessing the acceptability and feasibility of including this intervention in routine maternity care. Three research questions were addressed using mixed methods to produce four datasets: face-to-face interviews with participants, a focus group with the HCS-trained midwives/nurses, case reports of participants receiving HCS and audio-recordings of mid-pregnancy telephone calls to the women which produced midwife/nurse HCS competency scores. Midwives/nurses used their HCS to support women to make plans for change and set goals. Women welcomed the opportunity to address their own health and well-being as distinct from that of their baby. Midwives/nurses were competent in using the skills and saw healthy conversations as an effective means of raising issues of diet and physical activity. Recent extension of maternity appointment times provides ideal opportunities to incorporate a brief intervention to support behaviour change. Incorporating HCS training into midwifery education and continuing professional development would facilitate this. HCS is a scalable, brief intervention with the potential to improve the diets and physical activity levels of women during pregnancy, and hence the health of themselves and their babies.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- physical activity
- pregnancy outcomes
- mental health
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- primary care
- randomized controlled trial
- pregnant women
- public health
- cervical cancer screening
- weight loss
- breast cancer risk
- end stage renal disease
- study protocol
- body mass index
- quality improvement
- health information
- clinical trial
- chronic kidney disease
- insulin resistance
- ejection fraction
- skeletal muscle
- clinical practice
- open label
- human health
- case report
- metabolic syndrome
- newly diagnosed
- adipose tissue
- high intensity
- chronic pain
- prognostic factors
- sleep quality
- gestational age
- patient reported