Projects per year
Abstract
Background:
Systematic reviews suggest preconception health interventions may be effective in improving maternal and infant outcomes. However, few studies have explored women’s views on the types of support required for preconception health improvement, nor when and to whom this support should be provided.
Methods:
We purposively sampled women aged 18-48 years in the West of England from respondents to a survey, and conducted semi-structured in-depth interviews to explore their views on support needs in the preconception period and target populations for this support. We analyzed the data using a data-driven framework analysis.
Results:
The women we interviewed (N=20) broadly supported promoting greater awareness of preconception health and felt the limited focus on health before pregnancy downplays its importance relative to antenatal health. Some women opposed support services and structural interventions to improve preconception health, due to concerns these are less impactful than encouraging individual responsibility for health. Women who supported structural interventions highlighted broader determinants of health and socioeconomic barriers to preconception health improvement. Men were considered a key target population for preconception support, to help share the burden for preconception health improvement. Women broadly supported ‘age-appropriate’, school-based preconception health education, highlighting young women as an under-served group in need of additional preconception education.
Conclusion:
Our findings indicate a need to deliver early preventive support ahead of first pregnancy through services, interventions and policies co-produced with women and women’s partners. Future research should explore how to increase public understanding of the socioeconomic, environmental and commercial determinants of preconception health.
Systematic reviews suggest preconception health interventions may be effective in improving maternal and infant outcomes. However, few studies have explored women’s views on the types of support required for preconception health improvement, nor when and to whom this support should be provided.
Methods:
We purposively sampled women aged 18-48 years in the West of England from respondents to a survey, and conducted semi-structured in-depth interviews to explore their views on support needs in the preconception period and target populations for this support. We analyzed the data using a data-driven framework analysis.
Results:
The women we interviewed (N=20) broadly supported promoting greater awareness of preconception health and felt the limited focus on health before pregnancy downplays its importance relative to antenatal health. Some women opposed support services and structural interventions to improve preconception health, due to concerns these are less impactful than encouraging individual responsibility for health. Women who supported structural interventions highlighted broader determinants of health and socioeconomic barriers to preconception health improvement. Men were considered a key target population for preconception support, to help share the burden for preconception health improvement. Women broadly supported ‘age-appropriate’, school-based preconception health education, highlighting young women as an under-served group in need of additional preconception education.
Conclusion:
Our findings indicate a need to deliver early preventive support ahead of first pregnancy through services, interventions and policies co-produced with women and women’s partners. Future research should explore how to increase public understanding of the socioeconomic, environmental and commercial determinants of preconception health.
Original language | English |
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Publisher | medRxiv |
Number of pages | 23 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 11 Dec 2024 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:The copyright holder for this preprint is the author/funder, who has granted medRxiv a license to display the preprint in perpetuity. It is made available under a CC-BY 4.0 International license.
Keywords
- Preconception care
- Preconception health
- Women's health
- intervention development
- Qualitative analysis
- Framework analysis
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'What support is needed for preconception health improvement, and by whom? A qualitative study of women’s views'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
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Study of Pregnancy Health in England (SOPHIE Study)
Daly, M. (Principal Investigator)
20/07/20 → 1/07/21
Project: Research
Student theses
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Addressing the key uncertainties of improving preconception health in the UK
Daly, M. (Author), White, J. (Supervisor) & Kipping, R. (Supervisor), 9 May 2023Student thesis: Doctoral Thesis › Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
File
Datasets
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Daly et al. 2022_SOPHIE preconception health
Kipping, R. (Creator) & Daly, M. (Creator), University of Bristol, 27 May 2022
DOI: 10.5523/bris.2g2s2acy46mjg2padsk8ofcpo2, http://data.bris.ac.uk/data/dataset/2g2s2acy46mjg2padsk8ofcpo2
Dataset