| Literature DB >> 35774471 |
Leila Kianfard1, Shamsaddin Niknami1, Farkhonde Amin SHokravi1, Sakineh Rakhshanderou2.
Abstract
Aims & Backgrounds. Reduced physical activity in pregnant women is highly stemmed from their misconceptions and attitudes during pregnancy. This study is aimed at recognizing the facilitators, barriers, and structural factors that influence activity among pregnant women. Participants & Methods. This qualitative study was conducted from January to June 2020 in nulliparous pregnant women. Forty participants selected randomly from the Pounak Health Center of Tehran City, Iran, answered open-ended questions about the obstacles that deprived them of physical activity during pregnancy. Data were analyzed by MAXQDA 12 software. Findings. 620 primary codes, 42 secondary codes, 11 subthemes, and 6 themes were extracted. These themes were divided into the PEN-3 categories: facilitators, barriers, and structural factors. The nurture factors as facilitators had communication and support from others as subthemes. Barriers consisted of sociocultural (participate in pregnancy class with a companion, social beliefs, and culture of poverty), socioeconomic (financial problems), and individual factors (physical, psychoemotional, and spiritual dimensions), and structural factors consisted of environmental (equipment) and organizational (possibilities in health centers) factors. Conclusion. Lack of awareness and misinformation, accessibility obstacles, and economic problems are the worst physical activity barriers during pregnancy. Being among other pregnant women and the physicians' recommendations are the best facilitators of physical activity during pregnancy.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35774471 PMCID: PMC9239835 DOI: 10.1155/2022/5543684
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Pregnancy ISSN: 2090-2727
Participant characteristics (n = 40).
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| Average age | 30.5 ± 6.0 years (18–38) |
| Average BMI | 29.2 ± 7.7 (25–51) |
| Gestation (wk) | 26.4 ± 3.7 |
| Prepregnancy body mass (kg) | 65.8 ± 12.5 |
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| Secondary school completed | 8 (20%) |
| Technical/secretarial after secondary school | 16 (40%) |
| College/university completed | 15 (37/5%) |
| Postgraduate degree | 1 (2/5%) |
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| High energy demanded | 6 (15%) |
| Intermediate energy demanded | 15 (37/5%) |
| Low energy demanded | 11 (27/5%) |
| Not working | 8 (20%) |
The theme, subthemes, and codes of the facilitators, barriers, and structural factors.
| Themes | Subthemes | Secondary codes | |
|---|---|---|---|
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| Nurture factors | Communication | (i) The role of the physician to advise to do physical activity | |
| Support from others | (i) The role of the husband to motivate to do physical activity during pregnancy | ||
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| Sociocultural factors | Participate in pregnancy class with a companion | (i) Attendance of the spouse as a companion in participating in pregnancy sports classes | |
| Social beliefs | (i) Society believes that exercise is dangerous during pregnancy and harmful to the fetus | ||
| Culture of poverty | (i) Lack of support from the family's motivation to do physical activity during pregnancy | ||
| Socioeconomic factors | Financial problems | (i) Low income to participate in the classes | |
| Individual factors | Physical dimension | Physiological condition | (i) Overweight and heaviness in pregnancy |
| Pathological condition | (i) Difficulty exercising during pregnancy | ||
| Psychoemotional dimension | Attitude | (i) Believing that exercise is not useful during pregnancy | |
| Primary and secondary reactions | (i) Compliance with the disease | ||
| Spiritual dimension | (i) Negative thinking | ||
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| Environmental factors | Equipment | (i) Lack of sports space to participate in classes | |
| Organizational factors | Possibilities in health centers | (i) Lack of professional staff in health-treatment centers | |