| Literature DB >> 34702206 |
Miguel Rodriguez1, Antoinette A Danvers2,3, Carolina Sanabia4, Siobhan M Dolan5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The objective of the study was to understand how pregnant women learned about Zika infection and to identify what sources of information were likely to influence them during their pregnancy.Entities:
Keywords: Health education; Zika virus infection
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34702206 PMCID: PMC8547288 DOI: 10.1186/s12884-021-04170-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Pregnancy Childbirth ISSN: 1471-2393 Impact factor: 3.007
Baseline characteristics of the participants in the study
| Participant demographic characteristics ( | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variable | N | % | Variable | Median | Range (min, max) |
| Female | |||||
| Latino / Hispanic | |||||
| Non -Latino / Non -Hispanic | |||||
| Black / African American & White | |||||
| White | |||||
| American Indian / Alaskan Native | |||||
| Black / African American & American Indian / Alaskan Native | |||||
| Native Hawaiian / Pacific Islander | |||||
| Other / Did not respond | |||||
| Spanish | |||||
| English | |||||
| Married | |||||
| Cohabiting | |||||
| Single | |||||
| GED | |||||
| Some College | |||||
| College Degree | |||||
| Graduate Degree | |||||
| Less than $25,000 | |||||
| $26,000 - $50,000 | |||||
| $51,000 - $80,000 | |||||
| Greater than $80,000 | |||||
| Refused / other | |||||
| Full Time | |||||
| Part Time | |||||
| Unemployed | |||||
| Medicaid | |||||
| Medicare | |||||
| Commercial | |||||
| Bronx | |||||
| Manhattan | |||||
| Rockland | |||||
| Yes | |||||
| Negative | |||||
Characteristics of main informational sources used
| TV | Internet | Doctors / Clinics | |
|---|---|---|---|
* Wide Reach - All Ages * Trusted * Creates Motivation / Concern | * Immediately Available * Lots of Information | * Personal Support * Trusted * Actionable | |
* Limited Information * Time dependent | * Validity / Trust * Scary - No personal support | * Not immediately available | |
| Exposure | Research | Guidance |
Recommendations by pregnant women for community dissemination of health information in the context of emerging infections
| Consider the full scope of individuals who are getting messages from TV and provide information for everyone | |
| Be sure that information is being disseminated in many languages so that multiple generations of family members can obtain and spread culturally appropriate information within their community and family | |
| Think about what information is available via a Google search and try to assure that it is from a trusted source. Consider providing links to trusted sources on TV and through healthcare resources. | |
| Consider greater use of social media and pregnancy apps to spread trusted reliable information about emerging infectious diseases. Consider the role of nationally prominent as well as locally trusted influences such as famous celebrities as well as family and friends. | |
| Further engage community resources frequently used by pregnant women such as WIC centers and schools in order to spread emerging health information. Investing and utilizing local infrastructure is crucial in settings such as the Bronx, where local messaging may empower community members to educate themselves and others. |