| Literature DB >> 28122608 |
Victoria E Salmon1, E Jean C Hay-Smith2, Rachel Jarvie1, Sarah Dean1, Eivor Oborn3, Susan E Bayliss4, Debra Bick5, Clare Davenport4, Khaled M Ismail4, Christine MacArthur4, Mark Pearson6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pregnancy and childbirth are important risk factors for urinary incontinence (UI) in women. Pelvic floor muscle exercises (PFME) are effective for prevention of UI. Guidelines for the management of UI recommend offering pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT) to women during their first pregnancy as a preventive strategy. The objective of this review is to understand the relationships between individual, professional, inter-professional and organisational opportunities, challenges and concerns that could be essential to maximise the impact of PFMT during childbearing years and to effect the required behaviour change.Entities:
Keywords: Antenatal education; Critical interpretive synthesis; Implementation; Maternity services; Midwifery practice; Pelvic floor muscle exercise; Pelvic floor muscle training; Postpartum; Pregnancy; Urinary incontinence
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28122608 PMCID: PMC5267404 DOI: 10.1186/s13643-017-0420-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Syst Rev ISSN: 2046-4053
Glossary of pelvic floor muscle related terminology used in this review
| Pelvic floor muscle contraction (PFMC) | PFMC refers to voluntary activation of the pelvic floor muscle (PFM). Correct contraction involves an inward lift and squeeze around the urethra, vagina and anus [ |
| Pelvic floor muscle exercise (PFME) | This refers to performance of correct repeated PFMCs. A programme of repeated contractions is the basis of pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT) |
| Routine recommendation of PFME | This refers to recommendation of PFME to every pregnant woman as part of regular antenatal clinical practice. This might or might not be accompanied by further PFME education, assessment and/or training |
| PFME education | PFME education is the provision of information with the aim of increasing knowledge or understanding of PFME. This might include information about PFMC, how to perform a correct voluntary PFMC, why PFMT might be important during pregnancy, for example, to prevent or treat pelvic floor problems like urinary incontinence |
| PFMC assessment | This refers to subjective or objective assessment, or measurement, of PFM function, defined as the ability to perform a correct voluntary PFMC, and/or PFME, including the number of repetitions, and the quality and duration of contractions |
| Pelvic floor muscle training (PFMT) | PFMT refers to participation in a planned, progressive, supervised PFME programme to achieve a performance goal. Training involves teaching performance of a correct PFMC, tailored/individualised prescription of sufficient exercise dose (frequency, intensity, duration) to achieve desired changes in muscle physiology (for example, hypertrophy) and support for adherence to the prescribed treatment [ |
| Implementation | In this review, implementation refers to the process of putting PFME education, assessment or PFMT into clinical practice |
| Uptake | An attempt made by a person to initially engage in an activity such as PFMT |
| Adoption | Regular performance of an activity in the short term |
| Maintenance | Sustained performance of an activity over time, including starting again after stopping (relapse or setback management) |
Summary of key processes in critical interpretive synthesis
| Reflexivity | Constant reflexivity on the part of the review authors is essential to the critical interpretive synthesis (CIS) process, to ensure thorough searching and selection processes and generation of theory which is critically informed and credible in light of the evidence available |
| Review question | A review question should be proposed but left open to adjustment over the course of the research |
| Literature searching | The initial search strategy should be broad to identify potentially relevant papers close to the topic of interest. |
| Purposive sampling | Purposive sampling of potentially relevant material is used to identify material which may fall outside of the initial search boundaries |
| Data extraction | Data extraction may be guided by formal data extraction procedures, but this is not essential for the CIS approach |
| Quality appraisal | Appraisal of the evidence aims to prioritise relevance and theoretical contribution to the review objectives, through critical interrogation of the evidence. Formal methodological quality appraisal of individual studies may be appropriate, but papers are not usually excluded on the basis of quality alone |
| Data analysis | Analysis aims to generate a synthesising argument or conceptual framework. This is developed through a critically informed synthesis of evidence included in the review. The framework should illustrate connections and relationships between new (synthetic) and existing constructs identified in the literature. The developing conceptual framework guides further selection of potentially relevant literature |
Criteria used for assessing the conceptual richness of sources
| ‘Conceptually rich’ | Explanatory but not ‘conceptually rich’ | Descriptive |
|---|---|---|
| Theoretical concepts are unambiguous and described in sufficient depth to be useful | Consideration of the context in which the research took place | Limited or no consideration of the context in which the research took place |
| Relationships between and among concepts are clearly articulated | Some attempt to explain anomalous results and findings with reference to context and data | No attempt to explain anomalous results and findings with reference to context and data |
| Concepts sufficiently developed and defined to enable understanding | Correlations and relationships explained, with use of inferential statistics (quantitative studies) | Use of descriptive statistics only (quantitative studies) |
| Concepts grounded strongly in a cited body of literature | ||
| Concepts are parsimonious (i.e. provide the simplest, but not over-simplified, explanation) |