A systematic literature review on how consumer and community involvement have shaped and influenced pre-pregnancy care interventions for women with diabetes.

IF 2.8 2区 医学 Q1 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth Pub Date : 2024-11-13 DOI:10.1186/s12884-024-06951-9
Rachel Hicks, Tinashe Dune, Veronica Gu, David Simmons, Freya MacMillan
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Abstract

Background: Diabetes and pregnancy studies have found better outcomes when interventions were developed with consumer (individuals with lived experience of diabetes) and community involvement. When consumers are central to development and delivery of interventions, study participants have better engagement and outcomes, particularly for individuals from culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) and/or lower socio-economic backgrounds. Our study aims to examine the scope of consumer and community involvement (CCI) in the construction and implementation of pre-pregnancy care (PPC) interventions and discuss a framework for consumer-lead intervention development.

Methods: A systematic literature review was conducted, examining 3 electronic databases. A meta synthesis analysis of tabulated data summarized in a literature matrix was undertaken with a phenomenological approach to develop a Pre-Pregnancy Care CCI-Driven Intervention Framework.

Results: Overall, 4642 papers were identified, with 29 meeting inclusion criteria. The meta-synthesis and literature matrix identified several common themes across previous studies. These were: barriers to accessing (PPC) such as negativity and stigma in care from behaviours, attitudes and perceptions of HCPs; limited appointment availability not aligning with work and family commitments; fear of losing a "normal" pregnancy journey; awareness of risk but unwillingness to discuss if consumers have not established trust with HCPs; inaccessibility to CALD appropriate PPC and contraception; and digitisation of PPC information resources including peer support and social media. From these results, a PPC Consumer-Driven Intervention Framework for Women with Pregestational Diabetes was developed with recommendations.

Conclusion: Consumers have been under-involved in the majority of previous developments and implementation of interventions for women with diabetes and pregnancy, and their representation as stakeholders in interventions is paramount to the longevity of intervention outcomes. To assist community involvement in diabetes pregnancy intervention design and delivery we created a new framework, for improving clinical and social outcomes in healthcare, empowering relationships between HCPs and consumers, and highlighting the value of lived experience and women-centred care for increased community engagement.

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关于消费者和社区参与如何塑造和影响糖尿病妇女孕前护理干预措施的系统性文献综述。
背景:糖尿病和妊娠研究发现,如果干预措施是在消费者(有糖尿病生活经验的人)和社区参与下制定的,则会取得更好的效果。当消费者成为干预措施制定和实施的核心时,研究参与者的参与度和结果都会更好,尤其是来自文化和语言多样性(CALD)和/或社会经济背景较差的个人。我们的研究旨在考察消费者和社区参与(CCI)在孕前保健(PPC)干预措施的构建和实施中的范围,并讨论消费者主导干预措施开发的框架:方法:对 3 个电子数据库进行了系统的文献综述。方法:对 3 个电子数据库进行了系统的文献综述,并采用现象学方法对汇总在文献矩阵中的表格数据进行了元综合分析,以制定孕前护理 CCI 驱动的干预框架:共发现 4642 篇论文,其中 29 篇符合纳入标准。元综合和文献矩阵在以往的研究中发现了几个共同的主题。这些主题是:获得(PPC)的障碍,如保健医生的行为、态度和观念对护理的否定和污名化;预约时间有限,与工作和家庭承诺不一致;害怕失去 "正常 "的怀孕旅程;意识到风险,但如果消费者没有与保健医生建立信任,则不愿意讨论;无法获得 CALD 适宜的 PPC 和避孕方法;以及 PPC 信息资源的数字化,包括同伴支持和社交媒体。根据这些结果,我们为患有妊娠糖尿病的妇女制定了以消费者为导向的 PPC 干预框架,并提出了建议:结论:在以往针对女性糖尿病患者和孕妇的干预措施的开发和实施过程中,消费者的参与度一直较低,而他们作为利益相关者在干预措施中的代表性对于干预措施成果的持久性至关重要。为了帮助社区参与糖尿病妊娠干预措施的设计和实施,我们创建了一个新的框架,以改善医疗保健的临床和社会成果,增强保健医生和消费者之间的关系,并强调生活经验和以妇女为中心的护理对提高社区参与度的价值。
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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.
期刊最新文献
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