| Literature DB >> 31390996 |
Larisa Ariadne Justine Barnes1, Lesley Barclay2, Kirsten McCaffery3, Parisa Aslani4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The prevalence of complementary medicine product (CMP) use by pregnant or breastfeeding Australian mothers is high, however, there is limited data on factors influencing women's decision-making to use CMPs. This study explored and described the factors influencing women's decisions take a CMP when pregnant or breastfeeding.Entities:
Keywords: Breast feeding; Complementary therapies; Decision making; Dietary supplements; Health literacy; Herbal medicine; Information seeking behaviour; Pregnancy; Qualitative research
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31390996 PMCID: PMC6686446 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-019-2396-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Questions used to guide semi-structured interviews and focus group discussions [33]a
| 1. Why do you use complementary medicine products? | |
| 2. What sort of information do you want when considering taking complementary medicine products? | |
| 3. What sort of information do you feel women who are pregnant or lactating need when considering using complementary medicine products? | |
| 4. Where do you find the information you need when choosing to use complementary medicine products in pregnancy or whilst breastfeeding? What resources do you use? | |
| 5. What do you feel would help pregnant and lactating women get the complementary medicines information they want and need to make safe decisions regarding using complementary medicine products? | |
| 6. How easy is it for you to understand the information about complementary medicines you access? What would help you understand this information better? | |
| 7. Can you please describe the decision-making processes you use when choosing to take complementary medicine products? |
aQuestions used to facilitate the IDIs and FGDs have been previously published in a related paper [33]; this current paper reports on another set of findings from the in-depth interviews and focus group discussions
Demographic profile of the participants [33]a
| Demographic Characteristics | Frequency (n) |
|---|---|
| Education | |
| Year 10 or equivalent | 1 |
| Year 12 or equivalent | 2 |
| Certificate 1–4 levelb | 4 |
| Diplomac | 2 |
| Bachelor’s degree or postgraduate studies | 16 |
| Current employment status | |
| Full time home duties | 3 |
| On maternity leave from paid work | 11 |
| Part time employment | 7 |
| Full time employment | 4 |
| Incomed | |
| Low household income (AUD $475–793 per week) | 4 |
| Medium household income (AUD $793–1814 per week) | 9 |
| Higher income (> AUD $1815 per week) | 11 |
| Prefer not to answer | 1 |
| Relationship status | |
| Married or de facto relationship | 24 |
| Single | 1 |
| Birthplace | |
| Australia | 14 |
| New Zealand or the United Kingdom | 8 |
| South Africa, the Netherlands, Colombia | 1 each |
| Cultural and linguistic diversity | |
| Women who identified as being from non-English speaking backgrounds | 4 |
| Women who identified as being from English speaking backgrounds | 21 |
| Health literacy levels ( | |
| Single item health literacy evaluation question: | |
| Extremely (adequate health literacy) | 16 |
| Quite a bit (adequate health literacy) | 6 |
| Somewhat (at risk of limited health literacy) | 2 |
| Newest Vital Sign | |
| Adequate functional health literacy (score ≥ 4 correct items out of 6) | 23 |
| Limited functional health literacy (score 3/6) | 1 |
aDemographic data from this group of participants has been previously published [33]; this current paper reports on another set of findings from the in-depth interviews and focus group discussions
bCertificate 1–4 courses are provided through the Vocational Education and Training sector in Australia, and cover industry-specific knowledge and skills involving communication, teamwork, literacy and numeracy [47]
cDiplomas are provided through the Vocational Education and Training sector in Australia and provide education for working in industry, enterprise and paraprofessional careers [47]
dAccording to Australian Bureau of Statistics 2015–16 income distribution quintiles [48]
Information sources used by participants to find information on CMPs used in pregnancy and breastfeeding [33]a
| Information source category | Specific information sources within the overall category | Number of participants who reported use of the specific information sourceb |
|---|---|---|
| (1) Information from health care practitioners (HCPs) | Trusted (primary) HCP | 24 |
| Other HCPs: general advice | 20 | |
| CAM / Hospital Medication helplines | 7 | |
| Other HCPs: second opinion sought on specific CMPs | 6 | |
| (2) Own and other pregnant or breastfeeding women’s experiences | Internet (google, blogs, social media) | 22 |
| Own previous experience CMPs/CAM | 21 | |
| Other women’s experiences | 19 | |
| Intuition (used in final stages of the decision-making) | 13 | |
| (3) Published research | Evidence-based quantitative research | 13 |
| Hospital/University Databases | 7 | |
| Traditional Use | 2 | |
| Qualitative studies | 1 |
aInformation sources reported by this group of participants has been previously published [33]; this current paper reports on another set of findings from the in-depth interviews and focus group discussions
bNumbers are not mutually exclusive - participants reported use of multiple information sources
Fig. 1Coding tree illustrating the two major themes with interrelated subthemes
Fig. 2Participants’ reiterative collation and assessment of information during their decision-making processes