| Literature DB >> 31215450 |
Julie M McLellan1, Ronan E O'Carroll2, Helen Cheyne3, Stephan U Dombrowski4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In addition to their more traditional clinical role, midwives are expected to perform various health promotion practice behaviours (HePPBes) such as informing pregnant women about the benefits of physical activity during pregnancy and asking women about their alcohol consumption. There is evidence to suggest several barriers exist to performing HePPBes. The aim of the study was to investigate the barriers and facilitators midwives perceive to undertaking HePPBes.Entities:
Keywords: Health promotion; Midwives; Multiple health behaviours; Theoretical domains framework
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31215450 PMCID: PMC6582467 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-019-0913-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Criteria for why TDF domains were identified as key in understanding the barriers and facilitators midwives experience in undertaking multiple HePPBes
| TDF domain | Domain description | (i) High frequency of specific beliefs | (ii) Existence of conflicting beliefs | (iii) Indication of clear beliefs |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Professional role and identity | Views of how HePPBes relate to the professional role of being a midwife | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Beliefs about consequences | Expectations about what would occur if midwives perform HePPBes | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Motivation and goals | Reasons for carrying out or not carrying out HePPBes | ✓ | ||
| Memory/Attention and decision processes | The ability to remember, observe and select in relation to HePPBes | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Environmental context and resources | The effects of the healthcare setting on HePPBes and the impact of what is available to midwives (in terms of physical and psychological resources) on HePPBes | ✓ | ||
| Social influences | The interpersonal processes which influence midwives’ cognitions, emotions and HePPBes | ✓ | ✓ | |
| Emotion | Feelings about performing HePPBes | ✓ | ||
| Behavioural regulation | Midwives’ attempts to influence HePPBes | ✓ | ||
| Nature of the behaviour | Midwives’ descriptions of how they have carried out HePPBes in the past and how HePPBes operate within the NHS | ✓ |
Evidence of midwives’ views identified in study 1 also present in the study 2 responses
| Key TDF domains from study 1 | Study 2 supports or extends study 1 findings (✓ = yes or ✘ = no evidence) | Details of how study 2 responses relate to study 1 barriers and facilitators |
|---|---|---|
| Professional role and identity | ✓ | Study 2 responses support those in study 1 that suggest midwives are expected to address various topics that could be targeted prior to pregnancy (b). However, unlike the study 1 findings which suggested that other health professionals could potentially address some health promotion topics prior to pregnancy, there was a suggestion in the study 2 responses that midwives could be the professional to do this (e.g. by visiting schools). There was also further evidence of the perception that the role of the midwife has evolved to incorporate a wide variety of HePPBes (b). |
| Beliefs about consequences | ✓ | Study 2 responses strengthen the findings of study 1 which suggested that midwives believed HePPBes related to weight management were most likely to have a negative impact on the midwife-woman relationship (b). Study 2 also provides further evidence of the differing beliefs that midwives have regarding how receptive women are to HePPBes (b&f). |
| Motivation and goals | ✓ | Study 2 responses support those of study 1 which demonstrated that midwives are motivated to carry out their health promotion practice (f) but competing clinical demands mean that it was a secondary goal (b). |
| Memory, attention and decision processes | ✘ | No further evidence identified. |
| Environmental context and resources | ✓ | The responses from study 2 support the findings of study 1 which outlined issues including not having enough time to address health promotion meaningfully (b), problems accessing training (b) and a lack of continuity of care (b) in influencing midwives’ HePPBes. Study 2 also identified the need for greater access to online materials which was not reported in study 1. |
| Social influences | ✓ | The findings of study 1 suggested that some midwives believed their own health status, specifically their BMI, could influence their health promotion practice by exerting social pressure. However, the responses generated by study 2 show that there is widely differing regard as to whether midwives feel their own health status has a potential impact on their health promotion practice (b&f). |
| Emotion | ✓ | Study 2 responses supported the study 1 finding that midwives’ HePPBes could potentially be influenced by the exhaustive nature of the midwifery role (b). However, study 1 did not identify the potential impact of burn-out on midwives’ own health as was suggested by the study 2 responses. This is perhaps as study 1 contained purely midwives working in a community setting only. |
| Behavioural regulation | ✘ | No further evidence identified. |
| Nature of the behaviour | ✘ | No further evidence identified. |