Katie O Washington Cole1, Kimberly A Gudzune2, Sara N Bleich3, Wendy L Bennett2, Lawrence J Cheskin1, Janice L Henderson4, Laura E Caulfield5, Yue Guan1, Debra L Roter1. 1. 1 Department of Health, Behavior and Society, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore, Maryland. 2. 2 Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine , Baltimore, Maryland. 3. 3 Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore, Maryland. 4. 4 Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine , Baltimore, Maryland. 5. 5 Department of International, Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore, Maryland.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Healthy weight gain during pregnancy may improve health outcomes for women and infants. The objective of this study was to examine providers' use of the 5A's (Assess, Advise, Agree, Assist, and Arrange) in discussions of weight, nutrition, and physical activity during prenatal visits and evaluate the effect of this approach on gestational weight gain. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We studied audio recordings of prenatal visits between 22 obstetrics providers and 120 of their patients, coding visits for providers' use of the 5A's. The relationship between the 5A's and gestational weight gain (total weight gain and excess gestational weight gain) was evaluated using multilevel models to account for patient clustering within provider, and adjusted for prepregnancy body mass index, parent study intervention assignment, gestational age at the study visit, and study visit length. RESULTS: Overall, 55% of prenatal visits included any weight-related behavioral counseling. Of these, 59.1% included one of the 5A's and 40.9% included two or more of the 5A's. Counseling conversations most commonly included Assess or Advise (49% and 85% of counseling conversations, respectively). No recorded visits used all 5A's. In adjusted analyses, patients who received counseling with two or more of the 5A's gained an average of 11.8 fewer pounds than patients who received no counseling (p = 0.001). The odds of excess gestational weight gain were lower among women receiving counseling with at least one of the 5A's (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: The 5A's were associated with lower gestational weight gain and may be a promising counseling strategy to promote healthy weight gain during pregnancy.
BACKGROUND: Healthy weight gain during pregnancy may improve health outcomes for women and infants. The objective of this study was to examine providers' use of the 5A's (Assess, Advise, Agree, Assist, and Arrange) in discussions of weight, nutrition, and physical activity during prenatal visits and evaluate the effect of this approach on gestational weight gain. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We studied audio recordings of prenatal visits between 22 obstetrics providers and 120 of their patients, coding visits for providers' use of the 5A's. The relationship between the 5A's and gestational weight gain (total weight gain and excess gestational weight gain) was evaluated using multilevel models to account for patient clustering within provider, and adjusted for prepregnancy body mass index, parent study intervention assignment, gestational age at the study visit, and study visit length. RESULTS: Overall, 55% of prenatal visits included any weight-related behavioral counseling. Of these, 59.1% included one of the 5A's and 40.9% included two or more of the 5A's. Counseling conversations most commonly included Assess or Advise (49% and 85% of counseling conversations, respectively). No recorded visits used all 5A's. In adjusted analyses, patients who received counseling with two or more of the 5A's gained an average of 11.8 fewer pounds than patients who received no counseling (p = 0.001). The odds of excess gestational weight gain were lower among women receiving counseling with at least one of the 5A's (p < 0.05). CONCLUSIONS: The 5A's were associated with lower gestational weight gain and may be a promising counseling strategy to promote healthy weight gain during pregnancy.
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