Exploring women's self-reported health problems in pregnancy in the UK and Norway.
Anne Britt Vika NilsenTine Schauer EriSoo DowneEva Haukeland FredriksenPublished in: Health care for women international (2022)
Women usually conceptualize pregnancy as a normal physiological state. In contrast, formal maternity care provision tends to be focused on pathology and risk. The authors aim to explore the extent to which childbearing women apply a sickness lens to pregnancy. We have therefore examined antenatal problems spontaneously reported by 4,000 UK and Norwegian women who responded to the international social media-based Babies Born Better survey. We coded and classified the free-text comments of the respondents as either complaint or disease. We found striking differences in the rates and types of problems reported by the women. We discuss our findings by applying different perspectives of medicalization and of lay and biomedical knowledge.
Keyphrases
- pregnancy outcomes
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- social media
- mental health
- healthcare
- pregnant women
- preterm birth
- cervical cancer screening
- breast cancer risk
- public health
- magnetic resonance
- cross sectional
- type diabetes
- insulin resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- risk assessment
- skeletal muscle
- preterm infants
- climate change
- contrast enhanced
- cataract surgery