| Literature DB >> 25664183 |
Denise Charron-Prochownik1, Andrea Rodgers Fischl1, Jessica Choi1, Patricia L Schmitt1, Neil H White2, Dorothy Becker3, Julie Downs4, Margaret Hannan1, Jennifer Thurheimer1, Susan M Sereika5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Preconception counseling (PC) significantly and inexpensively reduces risks of reproductive-health complications for women with diabetes. Our validated technology-based preconception counseling intervention, READY-Girls, is tailored for female teens with type 1 (T1D) and type 2 (T2D) diabetes and targets decision-making regarding effective family planning and seeking PC. Our teen-focused research was instrumental in changing the American Diabetes Association's Practice Recommendations to specify that preconception counseling should "Start at puberty…". This directive requires support from well-informed mothers of teens. Our goal is to provide both teen girls and their mothers with preconception counseling knowledge, and provide mothers with sex-communication training. Evaluation should focus on mother-daughter dyads.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes mellitus; adolescence; family planning; mother-child relation; reproductive health
Year: 2014 PMID: 25664183 PMCID: PMC4316737 DOI: 10.7243/2054-9865-1-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Res J Womens Health ISSN: 2054-9865
Mother-daughter (M-D) sample characteristics
| Characteristic | Mother Mean±SD/n (%) | Daughter Mean±SD/n (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years) | 48.4±2.8 | 15.3±1.1 |
| Race: White, n (%) | 9 (90) | 10 (100) |
| Diabetes status, n (%) | 2 (20) | 10 (100) |
| Education: At least some college, n (%) | 6 (60) | 0 |
| Marital Status: Husband, n (%) | 7 (70) | 0 |
| Income: <$20,000/year, n (%) | 1 (10) | N/A |
| Religion: Roman Catholic, n (%) | 4 (40) | 5 (50) |
One mother did not provide a response to race
Qualitative results: M-D open-ended responses
| Question #1: What do you know about diabetes and pregnancy? | ||
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Answers | Mother | Daughter |
| Nothing/Not much/Very little | 19% | 24% |
| Blood sugar should be well controlled | 25% | 24% |
| Dangerous/complicate/Risk for both mother and child | 25% | 6% |
|
| ||
|
| ||
| Nothing, Not much | 54% | 58% |
| BC has its own side effects (e.g., high BP and blood clots) | 15% | 0% |
| Important to take BC pill | 0% | 18% |
|
| ||
|
| ||
| Nothing, Not much, never heard of it | 38% | 88% |
| Very important | 23% | 0% |
| Necessary due to possible complications | 15% | 0% |
Quantitative results: within-dyad diferences (N=9)
| Variables | Mother | Daughter | Diference | p |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total knowledge (% correct) | 71.6±4.86 | 67.0±5.9 | 4.6±6.7 | 0.076 |
| 67.4-81.4 | 55.8-74.4 | 4.7-14.0 | -- | |
| Perceived social support (Sum) | 41.8±0.5 | 31.7±7.2 | 10.2±6.8 | 0.002 |
| 42.0 | 33.0 | 9.0 | 0.008 | |
| 40.5-42.0 | 17.0-42.0 | 0-23.5 | -- |
Mean±SD and range of responses reported as minimum–maximum;
Median;
Based on paired-t test;
Based on Wilcoxon signed-rank test with exact estimation of p-values