| Domain 1: Women’s Beliefs and Attitudes Toward Gestational Weight Gain |
| Intrapersonal Influences |
| Theme 1: Sense of acceptance | “I see my body changing and at times it can be very upsetting … but it’s like I can’t do much about it. I have to accept that gaining weight is part of being pregnant.”(Participant #21, Brazilian, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy).“It’s not that I want to gain a lot of weight, but gaining weight is part of being pregnant. So, I just try not to get too preoccupied and enjoy being pregnant.” (Participant #1, Salvadoran, self-reported as overweight before pregnancy) |
| Theme 2: Uncertainty about how much weight should be gained | “I think I am gaining the right amount because it’s not like the doctor has mentioned she is concerned or anything. She [doctor] never really brought up, so I think I am Ok.” (Participant #15, Brazilian, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy)“I am not really sure if I am gaining the right amount. I think I am because my doctor never really told me that I wasn’t. She always looks at the charts and says that everything looks good. I think she would have mentioned it if it wasn’t right.” (Participant #12, Puerto Rican, self-reported as overweight before pregnancy). |
| Theme 3: Knowledge and information sources about healthy gestational weight gain | “I think it’s about 30 pounds, but I have read that it also depends on your weight prior to pregnancy, and if you have any other health issues.” (Participant #16, Brazilian, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy)“I think it’s between 35–40 pounds. But, I read in a magazine that most of the weight should happen after the first trimester.” (Participant #6, Puerto Rican, self-reported as overweight before pregnancy)“I get a pregnancy magazine every month, and it always has information on weight gain and how to manage weight gain during pregnancy. So, a lot of what I know is from what I have read.” (Participant #8, Colombian, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy)“I get a lot of information on the Internet. At the start of my pregnancy, I signed up for a website called BabyCenter. Every week, I receive messages with lots of information about what to expect and what’s happening with the baby during that stage.” (Participant #17, Brazilian, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy)“I was above a good [healthy] weight when I started my pregnancy, so during one of my first visits my doctor talked to me about weight gain during pregnancy.” (Participant #7, Puerto Rican, self-reported as obese before pregnancy) |
| Theme 4: Women who self-report healthy weight prior to pregnancy appear to be more concerned about GWG | “My body feels so different … I feel so big, but people keep telling me that I am Ok. I was really thin prior to pregnancy, so I feel like I’ve gained a lot [weight]. I hope it’s all baby weight, and that it will come off once the baby is born. I really hope so.” (Participant #4, Dominican, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy)“It’s not that I was skinny before getting pregnant. I was already a good size, so I knew that I would be gaining more weight during pregnancy and I wasn’t really concerned about my weight gain as long as I was feeling well and the baby was fine …” (Participant #7, Puerto Rican, self-reported as obese before pregnancy) |
| Theme 5: Sense of lack of control over and limited concerns about excess gestational weight gain as long as baby is fine | “At the beginning of my third trimester, I start getting concerned that I was gaining too much weight too fast. So, I started to pay more attention to what and how much I ate, but it didn’t really make any big difference. I still kept putting on a lot of weight.” (Participant #11, Guatemalan, self-reported as overweight before pregnancy)“Throughout my pregnancy I have tried as much as possible to watch what and how much I eat, but no matter what I do, I keep gaining a lot of weight … I feel it’s beyond my control.” (Participant #14, Brazilian, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy)“It’s not that I don’t worry about my weight, but like I can’t be constantly obsessing about it. I feel like, I need to focus on the positive, like the baby being fine. So, I am constantly telling myself, as long as everything is fine with the baby I will be fine … and eventually, the weight will come off!” (Participant #6, Puerto Rican, self-reported as overweight before pregnancy) |
| Interpersonal Influences |
| Theme 6: Freedom to eat | “When you are pregnant, you feel like you can eat as much as you want without feeling bad about it … It’s a time that there is no shaming for eating.” (Participant #7, Dominican, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy)“You feel supported about eating more than usual … It’s like people are supportive because you are pregnant, and you are eating for two.” (Participant #3, Colombian, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy)“When I say, “I can’t believe I am hungry again!” my friends and relatives say—you are pregnant! And everyone is like, don’t worry, enjoy it while you can, you are pregnant!” (Participant #14, Brazilian, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy) |
| Theme 7: Sociocultural beliefs about pregnancy and food | “When you are pregnant it’s like there are all these beliefs that pregnant women want to eat all the time and everybody is always thinking and offering you food. I go to my in-laws and my mother-in-law is always making me special dishes, asking me what I feel like eating … It’s like people think pregnant women and they think food.” (Participant #18, Brazilian, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy)“My husband knows I love sweets. So, since I got pregnancy, he is always buying all sorts of sweets, cakes, ice cream … I tell him, please don’t buy all these treats because if we have treats at home, I will be eating them all the time … but he keeps buying and says “Ah, don’t worry too much. Enjoy it, you are pregnant.”(Participant #13, Brazilian, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy)“People believe [Hispanic culture] that an expectant woman’s cravings must be satisfied otherwise all sorts of things may happen to the expectant woman or the baby … there are all sorts of traditional beliefs and people really follow them.” (Participant # 11, Guatemalan, self-reported overweight before pregnancy) |
| Domain 2: Women’s Experiences with Gestational Weight Gain |
| Intrapersonal Influences |
| Theme 1: Weight gain is gradual and not initially noticed | “It was not until I was about 31 weeks pregnant that when I stepped on the scale and the nurse was like, wow, you gained quite a bit since your last visit . . . and told me to make sure I was eating healthy foods, and avoiding junk food. But until that point, no one [health care providers] had said anything about my weight.”(Participant #10, Puerto Rican, self-reported as overweight before pregnancy) |
| Theme 2: Weight gain is a source of concern for some | “My weight and weight gain is something I think about every day, many times. You think about when you are getting dressed, you think about when look yourself in the mirror, and you think about when people look at you. It’s like something you can’t get away from … and it’s even more so when you are pregnant. It’s all about the weight!” (Participant #9, Dominican, self-reported as overweight before pregnancy) |
| Theme 3: Postpartum weight loss has not yet been discussed | “My doctor has not really talked to me about loosing weight after the baby is born. It’s like she [doctor] hasn’t mentioned anything. She [doctor] probably will talk about it after childbirth . . . Like, I think the focus now is on having a safe delivery and a healthy baby … I know that’s all that’s in my mind!” (Participant #1,Salvadoran, self-reported as overweight before pregnancy) |
| Interpersonal Influences |
| Theme 4: Weight worries can wait | “I feel I have gained a lot of weight, especially in the past month. At my last visit I had gained 6 ½ pounds in a month. I asked the doctor and she said that usually pregnant women gain more weight fast at the end of pregnancy. She [doctor] told me all looked fine with me, and the baby. So, I guess like, I have to wait and worry about losing the weight after the baby is born . . . like there isn’t really much I can do now. As long as the baby is healthy, I am happy!” (Participant #9, Dominican, self-reported as overweight before pregnancy)"I was always thin and never really had any weight problems before [pregnancy]. So, I hope I can get back to my body after the baby is born. I think I should not worry too much about it now … that’s what everybody keeps telling me because like, there are days that’s easy to feel down and get depressed about it.” (Participant #21, Brazilian, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy) |
| Theme 5: Shared experience with and support from social networks | “Like my sister, when she was pregnant she really put on a lot of weight. It took her about a year after the baby was born to get back to a good weight, but she worked hard on it and like, she lost all the baby fat. So, I am hoping like I can also lose weight after the baby is born.” (Participant #20, Brazilian, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy) |
| Theme 6: Realization of weight gain | “Like me, I am in my 32 week and like you get towards the end and you just starting to feel huge. And like your body feels so different from before, you just keep wanting to have the baby and get back to the way your body was prior to being pregnant, but you are not really there yet … I just can’t wait to hold my baby and see that he’s healthy… so, you forget about weight and focus on the baby.” (Participant #4, Dominican, self-reported as healthy weight before pregnancy) |