Navigating weight, risk and lifestyle conversations in maternity care: a qualitative study among pregnant women with obesity.

IF 2.8 2区 医学 Q1 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth Pub Date : 2024-08-23 DOI:10.1186/s12884-024-06751-1
Heidi L Sandsaeter, Trine Tetlie Eik-Nes, Linn Okkenhaug Getz, Elisabeth Balstad Magnussen, Janet W Rich-Edwards, Julie Horn
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Abstract

Background: Pregnant women with obesity face heightened focus on weight during pregnancy due to greater risk of medical complications. Closer follow-up in maternety care may contribute to reduce risk and promote health in these women. The aim of this study was to gain a deeper insight in how pregnant women with obesity experience encounters with healthcare providers in maternity care. How is the received maternity care affected by their weight, and how do they describe the way healthcare providers express attitudes towards obesity in pregnancy?

Methods: We conducted in-depth interviews with 14 women in Trøndelag county in Norway with pre-pregnancy BMI of ≥ 30 kg/m2, between 3 and 12 months postpartum. The study sample was strategic regarding age, relationship status, education level, obesity class, and parity. Themes were developed using reflexive thematic analysis. The analysis was informed by contextual information from a prior study, describing the same participants' weight history from childhood to motherhood along with their perceptions of childhood quality.

Results: This study comprised of an overarching theme supported by three main themes. The overarching theme, Being pregnant with a high BMI: a vulnerable condition, reflected the challenge of entering maternity care with obesity, especially for women unprepared to be seen as "outside the norm". Women who had grown up with body criticism and childhood bullying were more prepared to have their weight addressed in maternity care. The first theme, Loaded conversations: a balancing act, emphasizes how pregnant women with a history of body criticism or obesity-related otherness proactively protect their integrity against weight bias, stigma and shame. The women also described how some healthcare providers balance or avoid weight and risk conversations for the same reasons. Dehumanization: an unintended drawback of standardized care makes apparent the pitfalls of prioritizing standardization over person-centered care. Finally, the third theme, The ambivalence of discussing weight and lifestyle, represent women's underlying ambivalence towards current weight practices in maternity care.

Conclusions: Our findings indicate that standardized weight and risk monitoring, along with lifestyle guidance in maternity care, can place the pregnant women with obesity in a vulnerable position, contrasting with the emotionally supportive care that women with obesity report needing. Learning from these women's experiences and their urge for an unloaded communication to protect their integrity highlights the importance of focusing on patient-centered practices instead of standardized care to create a safe space for health promotion.

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在产科护理中引导体重、风险和生活方式对话:一项针对肥胖孕妇的定性研究。
背景:肥胖孕妇在妊娠期间体重会受到更多关注,因为她们面临更高的医疗并发症风险。产科护理中的密切随访可能有助于降低这些妇女的风险并促进其健康。本研究旨在深入了解肥胖症孕妇在产科护理中与医护人员接触的经历。她们接受的产科护理如何受到体重的影响,以及她们如何描述医疗服务提供者对孕期肥胖的态度?我们在产后3至12个月期间对挪威特伦德拉格郡14名孕前体重指数≥30 kg/m2的妇女进行了深入访谈。研究样本在年龄、关系状况、教育程度、肥胖等级和胎次方面均具有战略性。采用反思性主题分析法确定主题。分析还参考了之前一项研究的背景信息,该研究描述了同一参与者从童年到成为母亲的体重历史,以及她们对童年质量的看法:本研究由一个总主题和三个主要主题组成。首要主题 "怀孕时体重指数偏高:一种脆弱的状况 "反映了肥胖妇女在进入产科护理时所面临的挑战,尤其是对于那些没有准备好被视为 "超出常规 "的妇女而言。在身体批评和童年欺凌中长大的妇女更愿意在产科护理中解决体重问题。第一个主题是 "满载的对话:一种平衡的行为",它强调了曾遭受过身体批评或与肥胖相关的 "另类 "经历的孕妇如何积极主动地保护自己的人格不受体重偏见、污名化和羞耻感的影响。这些妇女还描述了一些医疗服务提供者是如何出于同样的原因平衡或避免体重和风险对话的。非人化:标准化护理的意外弊端使标准化护理优先于以人为本的护理的弊端显而易见。最后,第三个主题 "讨论体重和生活方式的矛盾心理 "代表了妇女对当前孕产妇护理中体重做法的潜在矛盾心理:我们的研究结果表明,产科护理中标准化的体重和风险监测以及生活方式指导会使肥胖症孕妇处于弱势地位,这与肥胖症妇女所需要的情感支持性护理形成了鲜明对比。从这些妇女的经历中以及她们为保护自身完整性而要求进行无负担沟通的愿望中汲取的经验,突出了注重以患者为中心的实践而非标准化护理的重要性,从而为促进健康创造了一个安全的空间。
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来源期刊
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth
BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY-
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
6.50%
发文量
845
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Pregnancy & Childbirth is an open access, peer-reviewed journal that considers articles on all aspects of pregnancy and childbirth. The journal welcomes submissions on the biomedical aspects of pregnancy, breastfeeding, labor, maternal health, maternity care, trends and sociological aspects of pregnancy and childbirth.
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