| Literature DB >> 31664915 |
Ruth Walker1, Tammie S T Choi2, Karyn Alexander3, Danielle Mazza3, Helen Truby2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Approximately 50% of women gain weight in excess of gestational weight gain (GWG) recommendations during pregnancy leading to adverse maternal and foetal outcomes and the perpetuation of the cycle of obesity. Antenatal care provided by a general practitioner (GP) in the primary care setting is an important model of care, particularly for women in regional areas where rates of overweight and obesity are highest. The aim of this study is to explore GPs' perceptions and experiences of implementing GWG recommendations in GP-led antenatal care.Entities:
Keywords: Antenatal care; Barriers; Enablers; Guidelines; Implementation; Pregnancy; Primary care; Weight
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31664915 PMCID: PMC6819596 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-019-1026-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
National Academies’ recommendations for gestational weight gain in pregnancy [8]
| Pre-pregnancy (BMI) | Recommended weight gain (kg) | Rate of weight gain in second and third trimesters kg/weeka |
|---|---|---|
| Underweight BMI < 18.5 kg/m2 | 12.5–18.0 | 0.5 |
| Healthy weight BMI 18.5–24.9 kg/m2 | 11.5–16.0 | 0.4 |
| Overweight BMI 25–29.9 kg/m2 | 7.0–11.5 | 0.3 |
| Obeseb BMI > 30 kg/m2 | 5.0–9.0 | 0.3 |
BMI Body Mass Index
Twins: Women of a healthy weight should gain 16.8–24.5 kg, overweight 14.1–22.7 kg, and obese 11.3–19.1 kg. There are no recommendations for triplets.
aAssuming 1-2 kg weight gain in 1st trimester
bThe IOM gestational weight gain guidelines does not make any specific recommendations for women with Class II or Class III obesity
Semi-structured interview questions mapped to the 14 domains of the Theoretical Domains Framework
| Domain | Question |
|---|---|
| 1. Knowledge | Can you tell me what is meant by the term Can you describe the guidelines regarding maternal GWG used at your practice? |
| 2. Skills | What training have you completed in order to provide women with advice regarding weight management for pregnancy? How do you address the topic of weight management with women during pregnancy? |
| 3. Social/professional role and identity | According to your guidelines regarding maternal GWG, what is your role in assisting women to manage their weight during pregnancy? What is your personal belief regarding your role in assisting women to manage their weight during pregnancy? |
| 4. Beliefs about capabilities | Do you feel confident to discuss weight management issues with women during pregnancy? What particular abilities do you think health professionals need in order to provide weight management advice during pregnancy? |
| 5. Optimism | When you provide advice about weight management during pregnancy, how do you expect women to respond? Do you believe that women will apply the advice that you give them about weight management during pregnancy? What do women require in order to increase their compliance to your advice? |
| 6. Beliefs about consequences | What are the risks associated with excessive maternal GWG for women and/or infants? |
| 7. Reinforcement | What are the incentives to take time in a consultation to offer women weight management advice during pregnancy? |
| 8. Intentions | Do you intend to continue/make weight management advice a key aspect of your time with women in the future? Why/why not? |
| 9. Goals | What do you consider to be the long-term benefits (for women and/or children) if you provide weight management advice during pregnancy? |
| 10. Memory, attention and decision processes | Under what circumstances would you offer advice regarding weight management during pregnancy? |
| 11. Environmental context and resources | What aspects of your work environment support you to offer weight management advice for women during pregnancy? What aspects of your work environment make it challenging for you to offer weight management advice for women during pregnancy? How likely are you to refer women to other health professionals as part of the care they receive? What resources do you require in order to assist women with weight management during pregnancy? |
| 12. Social influences | Do you believe that weight management during pregnancy is important to women? |
| 13. Emotion | To what extent do you think your emotions affect your capacity to offer advice regarding weight management for pregnancy? |
| 14. Behavioural regulation | What procedures to you believe need to be in place in order to deliver consistent and patient-centred advice to women regarding weight management during pregnancy? |
GWG Gestational weight gain
Themes and sub-themes mapped to the Theoretical Domains Framework. Solutions to address barriers to the implementation of GWG guidelines are mapped to the COM-B system for behaviour change (COM-B = Capability, Opportunity, Motivation - Behaviour)
| Themes and sub-themes | Barrier ✗ | Enabler ✓ | TDF domain | Possible solution |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Knowledge | Capability: Clear GWG guidelines Effective dissemination of guidelines | ||
| Despite low awareness of GWG guidelines, GPs provide many women with advice and support regarding weight management in pregnancy. | ✗ | ✓ | ||
Social/professional role and identity Beliefs about capabilities/ consequences | ||||
| General Practitioners considered it their professional role to support women with weight management in pregnancy. | ✓ | |||
| Providing GWG advice is often deprioritised in busy consultations. | ✗ | |||
| Many GPs said that they would prioritise the provision of advice about this important topic in the future. | ✓ | |||
| Skills Environmental context and resources Behavioural regulation | Capability: Clear guidelines Additional training Opportunity: Access to multidisciplinary team and/or practice nurses | ||
| Barriers to GPs providing women with weight management advice are national health policy and funding-based. | ✗ | |||
| Social influences Reinforcement | Motivation: Public health messages that promote the importance of weight management for pregnancy | ||
| Women’s motivation and perceptions of weight management in pregnancy, and the broader social environment can be barriers and/or enablers for the implementation of GWG guidelines. | ✗ | ✓ | ||
Optimism Environmental context and resources | Motivation: Affirmation in role | |||
| General Practitioners generally believe that primary care is an ideal setting to provide GWG advice and that women respond well to the advice they receive. | ✓ | |||
| On the other hand, women’s capacity to put the advice they receive into practice is challenged by the broader physical and social environment. | ✗ |
Fig. 1Solutions to the enhanced implementation of gestational weight gain guidelines mapped to the COM-B framework for behaviour change