| Literature DB >> 31073266 |
Terin T Sytsma, Kate P Zimmerman, Jennifer B Manning, Sarah M Jenkins, Nancy C Nelson, Matthew M Clark, Kristi Boldt, Kristi S Borowski.
Abstract
Regular physical activity has been shown to improve pregnancy outcomes. We sought to identify barriers to exercise during the first trimester of pregnancy. Five hundred forty-nine pregnant women in their first trimester rated barriers to exercise on a scale of 1 (not a barrier) to 5 (a huge barrier) and recorded physical activity (minutes/week). Women were placed into one of three classifications, nonexercisers (zero exercise), infrequent exercisers (<150 minutes/week), or exercisers (≥150 minutes/week). The greatest barriers (mean) were nausea/fatigue (3.0) and lack of time (2.6). Exercisers reported significantly lower barrier levels. Nausea/fatigue was a greater barrier for nonexercisers compared to exercisers (3.6 vs 2.8, p < .001). Focusing education and interventions on these barriers may help pregnant women achieve healthy exercise levels.Entities:
Keywords: barriers; exercise; physical activity; pregnancy; women
Year: 2018 PMID: 31073266 PMCID: PMC6491162 DOI: 10.1891/1058-1243.27.4.198
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Perinat Educ ISSN: 1058-1243