| Literature DB >> 27994487 |
Rita Forde1, Evridiki E Patelarou1, Angus Forbes1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diabetes is one of the most common medical conditions affecting pregnancy and is associated with a number of adverse fetal, infant, and maternal outcomes. These adverse outcomes can be avoided or minimized with appropriate prepregnancy care (PPC). However, the uptake of PPC is limited in women with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). The reasons for poor uptake are multifactorial, reflecting both women's understanding of pregnancy risks, and limitations in care delivery.Entities:
Keywords: contraception; lived-experience; meta-ethnography; patient education; pre-conception counseling; systematic literature; women’s health
Year: 2016 PMID: 27994487 PMCID: PMC5153267 DOI: 10.2147/IJWH.S115955
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Womens Health ISSN: 1179-1411
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram of database searches: summary of search strategy.
Abbreviations: PRISMA, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses; T1DM, type 1 diabetes mellitus; T2DM, type 2 diabetes mellitus.
Included studies for meta-synthesis
| Study | Country | Aim | Participant characteristics | Data collection | Data analysis | Themes (second-order constructs) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spence et al | Northern Ireland | To determine the knowledge and attitudes of women with T1DM and T2DM of childbearing age toward PPC | 18 women with T1DM | Convenient sample | Content analysis | Knowledge |
| Murphy et al | UK | To explore the views of women with diabetes who did not attend PPC | 21 women with T1DM | Semi-structured interviews | Thematic analysis | Women’s views of preconception counseling |
| Lavender et al | UK | To explore the experiences of White British and South East Asian women with T1DM and T2DM and the perceived impact of diabetes on their reproductive health | 15 women with T1DM | Purposive sample | Hermeneutic phenomenological approach | Relinquishing personal control |
| Letherby et al | UK | To explore the experience of women with pregnancies complicated by diabetes | Eight women with T1DM | In-depth interviews | Grounded theory | Timing of pregnancy |
| Nekuei et al | Iran | To gain insight into experiences of diabetic women and providers about PPC | Five women with T1DM | Purposive sampling | Conventional content analysis | Health centers’ weakness in providing PPC for diabetic women |
| Mersereau et al | USA | To explore the knowledge, attitudes and barriers that pregnant women with DM and their practitioners face with respect to achieving good glycemic control to reduce adverse effects for women and infants | 53 HCPs consisting of physicians, midlevel practitioners, and certified diabetes educators | Convenient sample | Thematic analysis | HCPs consider most pregnancies are unplanned |
| Mortagy et al | UK | To examine the perspectives of GPs and secondary-care HCPs on current and envisaged roles and responsibilities of GPs in delivering PPC to women with DM | Eight GPs | Semi-structured interviews | Thematic analysis | Case load and patient profile |
Abbreviations: DM, diabetes mellitus; GPs, general practitioners; HCPs, health care professionals; PPC, prepregnancy care; T1DM, type 1 DM; T2DM, type 2 DM.
First- and second-order constructs
| Study | First-order constructs (sample of quotations) | Second-order constructs (themes in articles) |
|---|---|---|
| Spence et al | “I’ve only been told the second time I went [for clinic appointment], and they said ‘Oh, by the way, if you’re planning to get pregnant, you know, you have to go on insulin’. So I thought that’s … I could have got pregnant all that time before!” | Knowledge |
| Murphy et al | “I mean we weren’t really thinking about it at that time so I mean it was all like pushed to one side. Yeah, so I probably wouldn’t have taken much notice about it if they would have said anything.” | Women’s views of preconception counseling |
| Lavender et al | “She would have attended preconception care had she known that the service existed.” | Relinquishing personal control |
| Letherby et al | “… from a time perspective that, one – being diabetic and secondly knowing that I was getting older … we finally sort of sat down and said, Look you know, if we’re going to do this, we need to do it new, or forget about it.” | Timing of pregnancy |
| Nekuei et al | “Not much attention was paid to this issue during the training courses, and now that we have only received subtle training; our information is not sufficient.” | Health centers’ weakness in providing PPC for diabetic women |
| Mersereau et al | “They’re more concerned about are they going to have to take insulin … they don’t want to check their sugars.” | HCPs consider most pregnancies are unplanned |
| Mortagy et al | “… part of the problem is, type 2 diabetes for a lot of people is seen as a disease of the elderly. And more of our patients are middle-aged to old people, so I think the kind of, you know, diabetes, think about pregnancy, is not automatic at all …” | Case load and patient profile |
Abbreviations: DM, diabetes mellitus; GPs, general practitioners; HCPs, health care professionals; PPC, prepregnancy care.
Figure 2Integrated model of elements contributing to PPC uptake and potential interventions.
Abbreviations: HCP, health care professional; PPC, prepregnancy care.