| Literature DB >> 28056865 |
Renata Bortolus1, Nadia C Oprandi2, Francesca Rech Morassutti2, Luca Marchetto2, Francesca Filippini2, Eleonora Agricola3, Alberto E Tozzi3, Carlo Castellani4, Faustina Lalatta5, Bruno Rusticali6, Pierpaolo Mastroiacovo7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Preconception care involves health promotion to reduce risk factors that might affect women and couples of childbearing age. The risk factors of adverse reproductive outcomes include recognized genetic diseases in the family or the individual, previous congenital diseases, miscarriage, prematurity, fetal growth restriction, infertility, chronic maternal diseases, lifestyle, and occupational or environmental factors. Effective preconception care involves a range of preventive, therapeutic and behavioural interventions. Although in Italy there are national preconception care recommendations concerning the general population, they are usually encouraged informally and only for single risk factors. At present there is increasing interest in offering a global intervention in this field. The aim of this study was to investigate attitudes and behaviours of Italian women of childbearing age and healthcare professionals regarding preconception health.Entities:
Keywords: Adverse reproductive outcomes; Focus group; Healthcare professionals; Preconception health and care; Risk factors; Women of childbearing age
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28056865 PMCID: PMC5217233 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-016-1198-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Recommendations for preconception counselling and care
| Family planning: ask women of reproductive age about intention to become pregnant. Provide contraceptive counselling tailored to patients’ intentions |
| Nutrition and physical activity: advise adequate fruit and vegetable intake, folic acid supplementation (400 mcg daily) to reduce the risk of neural tube defects, exercise/physical activity |
| Body Mass Index: assess body mass index, and counsel women who are overweight, obese, or underweight about achieving a healthy body weight before becoming pregnant |
| Substance use: |
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| Chronic diseases: counsel women with diabetes mellitus about the importance of glycemic control before conception |
| Medications: assess for the use of teratogenic medications; for women with chronic diseases, switch to safer medications when possible, and use the fewest medications at the lowest dosages needed to control the disease |
| Communicable diseases: screen patients who wish to become pregnant for sexually transmitted infections and other communicable diseases |
| Immunizations: update hepatitis B, influenza, measles, mumps, rubella, tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis, varicella immunizations as needed in patients who wish to become pregnant |
| Family genetic history: screen for personal or family history of congenital anomalies or genetic disorders; refer couples for genetic counselling when risk factors are identified, and provide carrier testing when appropriate to determine risk to future pregnancy |
| Mental health: screen for depression and anxiety disorders; counsel patients about the risks of untreated depression during pregnancy, as well as the risks of treatment |
| Psychosocial factors: screen for intimate partner violence; evaluate the patient’s safety, and provide referral to appropriate resources |
| Infertility-subfertility: promote awareness and understanding of fertility and infertility and their preventable and unpreventable causes; screen couples for infertility-subfertility causes |
| Environmental exposures: |
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| Men’s preconception counselling and care: similar to PC for women, it consists of: a reproductive life plan, nutritional and physical activity, a healthy body weight, tobacco, alcohol, drug use, exposures to teratogens, a complete medical history that includes medications, medical conditions, sexually transmitted infections screening, immunizations, family history for genetic conditions, mental health and environmental exposures |
List of questions for FGs and the corresponding themes
| Womena | HCPs | |
|---|---|---|
| Women’s knowledge and questions about preconception health | What are the things that you are interested in knowing on the topic of motherhood: (conception and pregnancy) | Based on your experience, what is the information that women more frequently ask before pregnancy? |
| What information have you received so far (and from whom)? | And instead, what should they ask and not ask? | |
| Is there something that your physician or other HCPs should have talked to you about and that you think they did not? | Why do you think they do not ask? | |
| Are there questions that you wanted to ask but for some reason did not? Why? | In your opinion, are there any questions that have not been answered? Which ones? | |
| What can a healthy person do to promote a good pregnancy and the health of the expected baby? | What kind of information do they seek on the Internet? | |
| What are the things that could affect the fetus’s development? | ||
| What do you know about folic acid? (When should you start taking it?) | ||
| Attitudes and behaviours of women and HCPs towards preconception health | With whom have you spoken to regarding your intention to have a baby? | What do you think is the attitude of HCPs towards preconception interventions? |
| Why? What did you expect? What did he tell you? | Why are so many women turning to the OB-GYN or services only after they get pregnant? | |
| What was the attitude of the GP and OB-GYN toward your questions/curiosities? | ||
| Why do you think so many women are turning to the OB-GYN or services only after they get pregnant or if they are having trouble getting pregnant, and not before? | ||
| Worries and barriers regarding PC interventions | At this time what are the things that worry you most about motherhood (conception and pregnancy)? | What worries most women who intend to get pregnant? |
| Have you ever thought that the child could be born with problems? This is never spoken, in your opinion, why? | ||
| Are there things/topics that you do not want to hear about? Why? | ||
| Women’s information sources | Who has spoken to her GP of her intention to have a baby? | |
| And to the OB-GYN? | ||
| What did you ask? (Or "why you did not think to talk to him/her?") | ||
| Have you ever sought information on the Internet on conception and pregnancy? What have you searched? | ||
| Are there other sources of information that you have consulted on conception and pregnancy? What kind of information have you obtained from these sources? |
aPlease note that for multiparous women the past tense was used since the questions were referred to their preconception experience in previous pregnancy
Main results of FGs with women and HCPs
| Women’s knowledge and attitudes towards primary PC information | Women | HCPs |
|---|---|---|
| Not all the women understand the purpose and timing of folic acid supplementation | X | X |
| Weight before conception is not mentioned as a concern even by overweight women | X | X |
| Most women give up smoking as soon as they are aware of pregnancy, since they know that smoking is dangerous for the baby | X | X |
| A moderate intake of alcohol is seen as something compatible with pregnancy | X | X |
| Women are afraid to take medications during pregnancy, even when prescribed by a physician | X | X |
| On genetic testing, there is still a lot of misinformation | X | |
| Infectious diseases like Chlamydia or Cytomegalovirus are not known by nulliparae, and very few women report having had the exam for rubella or other infectious diseases before conception | X | X |
| Risks associated with aging are not often investigated or are underevaluated by women | X | X |
| Women rarely keep informed about the possible consequences of their pre-existing condition on pregnancy unless they take medications for it | X | X |
| Barriers to PC | ||
| Pregnancy begins in the minds of women once they receive a positive response in a pregnancy test | X | X |
| There is not a concept of preconception health in the Italian population and HCPs | X | X |
| The main concern of a woman planning a pregnancy is fertility | X | X |
| Women do not know that many conditions are preventable | X | X |
| Women do not look for useful information because they don’t know what to look for | X | X |
| Conception is experienced by a woman as a natural event of life | X | X |
| The attitude of discretion, in some cases a defense against possible disappointments, prevents women from receiving information | X | |
| A lack of a proactive attitude of HCPs emerges | X | X |
| Women and HCPs emphasize an insufficient interest in PC promotion by governal health agencies and the media | X | X |
| Women’s information sources | ||
| The main reference source of information on preconception health for Italian women seems to be the OB-GYN, followed by the GP | X | |
| Peers and close persons, like friends, mothers and sisters, also play some role | X | X |
| Before conception no information about preconception health is collected through the Internet unless there are conceiving problems | X | |
| Information collected through the Internet is mainly considered for support for further consultation, coping with simple everyday problems during pregnancy or sharing experiences | X | X |