‘It's just one step too far’: Negotiating physical activity for perinatal mental health

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q1 NURSING Midwifery Pub Date : 2024-07-09 DOI:10.1016/j.midw.2024.104109
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Abstract

Background

Physical activity is recommended as a self-help strategy for some mild to moderate perinatal mental illnesses. Despite this, we know very little about how women remain active, or take up physical activity, in the context of changing family life and perinatal mental illness. We seek to explore: a) how women negotiate physical activity for their mental health during transitions into parenthood and the early years; and b) the experiences of women with perinatal mental illness in relation to physical activity.

Methods

An anonymous UK-wide qualitative online survey was used to better understand how physical activity may be used for perinatal mental health, barriers to activity and changes over time. 186 women with babies and children up to four years completed the survey. Reflexive thematic analysis was used to analyse the qualitative data and generate themes.

Results

Themes generated from this data were: 1) negotiating being active for perinatal mental health (the benefits and how these women remained active); 2) barriers to PA associated with mental illness (some women were active but still experienced general barriers to further PA, and there were several emotional barriers from mental illness); and 3) PA, guilt and the importance of valuing walking (guilt about not being active enough, guilt and feelings of failure exacerbated by questions about PA levels without support offered; regular walking not valued as PA exacerbating feelings of guilt).

Conclusions and Implications

This study provides new empirical data on the experiences of new mothers’, physical activity and mental health with important implications for physical activity messaging and support for women during this time through maternity care. Individualised conversations are important and the value of walking and incidental activity from activities that mothers and families find enjoyable should be promoted.

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一步之遥":通过体育锻炼促进围产期心理健康
背景建议将体育活动作为一些轻度至中度围产期精神疾病的自助策略。尽管如此,我们对妇女在不断变化的家庭生活和围产期精神疾病的背景下如何保持活跃或参加体育锻炼知之甚少。我们试图探究:a)妇女在为人父母的过渡时期和幼年时期如何通过体育锻炼来促进其心理健康;b)患有围产期精神疾病的妇女在体育锻炼方面的经历。方法我们在全英国范围内开展了一项匿名定性在线调查,以更好地了解如何通过体育锻炼来促进围产期心理健康、体育锻炼的障碍以及随时间推移发生的变化。186 名有 4 岁以下婴幼儿的妇女完成了调查。我们采用了反思性主题分析法来分析定性数据并生成主题:1) 为围产期心理健康进行积极活动的协商(这些妇女保持积极活动的益处和方式);2) 与精神疾病有关的积极活动障碍(一些妇女积极活动,但在进一步积极活动时仍会遇到一般障碍,精神疾病也会带来一些情绪障碍);3) 积极活动、内疚感和重视步行的重要性(对不够积极活动的内疚感、内疚感和失败感会因有关积极活动水平的问题而加剧,但又得不到支持;定期步行不被视为积极活动会加剧内疚感)。结论与启示 本研究提供了有关新妈妈的经历、体育锻炼和心理健康的新经验数据,对通过产科护理为这一时期的妇女提供体育锻炼信息和支持具有重要意义。因人而异的对话非常重要,应推广步行和母亲及家人认为愉快的活动中的偶然活动的价值。
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来源期刊
Midwifery
Midwifery 医学-护理
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
7.40%
发文量
221
审稿时长
13.4 weeks
期刊介绍: Midwifery publishes the latest peer reviewed international research to inform the safety, quality, outcomes and experiences of pregnancy, birth and maternity care for childbearing women, their babies and families. The journal’s publications support midwives and maternity care providers to explore and develop their knowledge, skills and attitudes informed by best available evidence. Midwifery provides an international, interdisciplinary forum for the publication, dissemination and discussion of advances in evidence, controversies and current research, and promotes continuing education through publication of systematic and other scholarly reviews and updates. Midwifery articles cover the cultural, clinical, psycho-social, sociological, epidemiological, education, managerial, workforce, organizational and technological areas of practice in preconception, maternal and infant care. The journal welcomes the highest quality scholarly research that employs rigorous methodology. Midwifery is a leading international journal in midwifery and maternal health with a current impact factor of 1.861 (© Thomson Reuters Journal Citation Reports 2016) and employs a double-blind peer review process.
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