| Literature DB >> 29258469 |
Lisa Hinton1,2, Katherine L Tucker3, Sheila M Greenfield4, James A Hodgkinson4, Lucy Mackillop5, Christine McCourt6, Trisha Carver3, Carole Crawford3, Margaret Glogowska3, Louise Locock7, Mary Selwood3, Kathryn S Taylor3, Richard J McManus3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hypertensive disorders in pregnancy are a leading cause of maternal and fetal morbidity worldwide. Raised blood pressure (BP) affects 10% of pregnancies worldwide, of which almost half develop pre-eclampsia. The proportion of pregnant women who have risk factors for pre-eclampsia (such as pre-existing hypertension, obesity and advanced maternal age) is increasing. Pre-eclampsia can manifest itself before women experience symptoms and can develop between antenatal visits. Incentives to improve early detection of gestational hypertensive disorders are therefore strong and self-monitoring of blood pressure (SMBP) in pregnancy might be one means to achieve this, whilst improving women's involvement in antenatal care. The Blood Pressure Self-Monitoring in Pregnancy (BuMP) study aimed to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of SMBP in pregnancy.Entities:
Keywords: Blood pressure; Hypertension; Pre-eclampsia; Pregnancy; Qualitative; Self-monitoring; Women’s experiences
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29258469 PMCID: PMC5735874 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-017-1592-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Qualitative interview sample
| Interviewee No | Ethnicity | Age * | Reason/s for inclusion | Diagnosis of Hypertension | IMDa | Highest Qualification |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | White British | 42 | Age, BMI, hypertensive in previous pregnancy, PE in previous pregnancy | No | 1 | First Degree |
| 2 | White British | 29 | First pregnancy, hypertensive before pregnancy | Yes, CH, GH | 7 | GCSE, O Level or CSE |
| 3 | Pakistani | 23 | First pregnancy | No | 2 | First Degree |
| 4 | White Other | 40 | BMI, an inter-pregnancy interval of >10 years previous (previous early miscarriage) | No | 5 | Professional qualification |
| 5 | White British | 33 | Family history of PE, hypertensive in previous pregnancy | No | 9 | Post-graduate or above |
| 6 | White British | 33 | First pregnancy | No | 5 | First degree |
| 7 | White British | 38 | First pregnancy, BMI | No | 7 | First degree |
| 8 | White British | 27 | First pregnancy, multiple pregnancy | No | 8 | First degree |
| 9 | unknown | 31 | First pregnancy, BMI | No | 1 | unknown |
| 10 | African | 35 | BMI | No | 5 | First degree |
| 11 | White British | 36 | Family history of PE, Previous hypertension, hypertensive in previous pregnancy | Yes, CH | 10 | Professional qualification |
| 12 | White British | 30 | First pregnancy | No | 10 | Post-graduate or above |
| 13 | White British | 34 | Hypertension in previous pregnancy | Yes, CH | 4 | First degree |
| 14 | White British | 40 | Age, first pregnancy | No | 7 | Post graduate qualification |
| 15 | White British | 35 | BMI, first pregnancy | No | 10 | Professional qualification |
*Age at the time of interview
aIndex of Multiple Deprivation
IMD – Index of Multiple Deprivation; Department for Communities and Local Government. English indices of deprivation 2015. http://imd-by-postcode.opendatacommunities.org/
CH Chronic hypertension, GH Gestational hypertension, PE Pre-eclampsia