Developing consensus on priorities for preconception care in the general practice setting in the UK: study protocol

Danielle Schoenaker, Elizabeth Lovegrove, Miriam Santer, Karen Matvienko-Sikar, Helen Carr, Nisreen A Alwan, Laura Kubelabo, Nathan Davies, Keith M Godfrey
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Abstract

Background: Preconception medical, behavioural and socioeconomic risk factors are common among people of reproductive age and can impact pregnancy and offspring outcomes. In line with clinical guidance, primary care practitioners are encouraged to support patients to manage and optimise their health prior to pregnancy. Due to barriers, including lack of time and resources, this support is not currently part of routine practice. Aim: As a first step towards the co-development of practical and realistic best practice guidance, this study aims to achieve consensus on a list of priority risk factors that can be used in general practice to guide opportunistic preconception care for patients of reproductive age. Methods: This study protocol was developed with a Public Advisory Group of people of reproductive age, researchers and primary care practitioners. The consensus study will consist of three steps: 1) identifying an initial long-list of candidate risk factors and defining principles for scoring the importance of each risk factor, through a literature review, workshops with people of reproductive age, and interviews with primary care practitioners; 2) stakeholder participant prioritisation of each candidate risk factor for its importance for preconception care through a three-round eDelphi survey; and 3) agreeing on the final priority list through consensus meetings with a selected group of stakeholders. Participants living in the UK will be recruited across two stakeholder groups: people of reproductive age (through the Public Advisory Group and charities) and primary care professionals (through professional organisations). Ethical approval: This study has been approved by the University of Southampton Faculty of Medicine Ethics Committee (ERGO 83699 and 92950). Dissemination: All study findings will be shared through stakeholder participants, peer-reviewed publication, lay summary, meetings and conference presentations, and relevant professional and community organisations. Ongoing research will inform implementation of the priority list in clinical practice.
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就英国全科医生孕前保健的优先事项达成共识:研究方案
背景:孕前医疗、行为和社会经济风险因素在育龄人群中很常见,会影响妊娠和后代的结局。根据临床指南,我们鼓励初级保健医生帮助患者管理和优化孕前健康。由于缺乏时间和资源等障碍,这种支持目前还没有成为常规做法的一部分。目的:作为共同制定切实可行的最佳实践指南的第一步,本研究旨在就优先风险因素清单达成共识,该清单可用于指导全科医生为育龄患者提供机会性孕前保健服务:本研究方案由育龄人群、研究人员和全科医生组成的公众咨询小组共同制定。共识研究将包括三个步骤:1)通过文献综述、与育龄人群的研讨会以及与初级保健从业人员的访谈,确定候选风险因素的初步长清单,并确定对每个风险因素的重要性进行评分的原则;2)通过三轮 eDelphi 调查,由利益相关者参与对每个候选风险因素在孕前保健中的重要性进行优先排序;3)通过与选定的利益相关者群体举行共识会议,就最终的优先排序清单达成一致意见。将在两个利益相关者群体中招募居住在英国的参与者:育龄人群(通过公众咨询小组和慈善机构)和初级保健专业人员(通过专业组织):本研究已获得南安普敦大学医学院伦理委员会的批准(ERGO 83699 和 92950):所有研究结果都将通过利益相关者参与者、同行评审出版物、非专业摘要、会议和大会演讲以及相关专业和社区组织进行分享。正在进行的研究将为在临床实践中实施优先事项清单提供信息。
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