Center for Obesity Research and Education, Temple University School of Medicine, Philadelphia 19140, Pennsylvania, USA.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2010 Jan;19(1):65-70. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2008.1343.
Maternal obesity is associated with adverse pregnancy outcomes. To improve outcomes, obstetric providers must effectively evaluate and manage their obese pregnant patients. We sought to determine the knowledge, attitudes, and practice patterns of obstetric providers regarding obesity in pregnancy.
In 2007-2008, we surveyed 58 practicing obstetricians, nurse practitioners, and certified nurse-midwives at a multispecialty practice in Massachusetts. We administered a 26-item questionnaire that included provider self-reported weight, sociodemographic characteristics, knowledge, attitudes, and management practices. We created an 8-point score for adherence to 8 practices recommended by the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG) for the management of obese pregnant women.
Among the respondents, 37% did not correctly report the minimum body mass index (BMI) for diagnosing obesity, and most reported advising gestational weight gains that were discordant with 1990 Institute of Medicine (IOM) guidelines, especially for obese women (71%). The majority of respondents almost always recommended a range of weight gain (74%), advised regular physical activity (74%), or discussed diet (64%) with obese mothers, but few routinely ordered glucose tolerance testing during the first trimester (26%), planned anesthesia referrals (3%), or referred patients to a nutritionist (14%). Mean guideline adherence score was 3.4 (SD 1.9, range 0-8). Provider confidence (beta = 1.0, p = 0.05) and body satisfaction (beta = 1.5, p = 0.02) were independent predictors of higher guideline adherence scores.
Few obstetric providers were fully compliant with clinical practice recommendations, defined obesity correctly, or recommended weight gains concordant with IOM guidelines. Provider personal factors were the strongest correlates of self-reported management practices. Our findings suggest a need for more education around BMI definitions and weight gain guidelines, along with strategies to address provider personal factors, such as confidence and body satisfaction, that may be important predictors of adherence to recommendations for managing obese pregnant women.
母体肥胖与不良妊娠结局相关。为改善结局,产科医生必须有效评估和管理肥胖孕妇。我们旨在确定产科医生对妊娠肥胖的知识、态度和实践模式。
2007-2008 年,我们调查了马萨诸塞州一家多专科实践中的 58 名执业产科医生、执业护士和认证助产士。我们采用了一份包含 26 个项目的问卷,包括提供者自我报告的体重、社会人口统计学特征、知识、态度和管理实践。我们为遵守美国妇产科医师学会(ACOG)推荐的 8 种肥胖孕妇管理实践创建了一个 8 分制得分。
在应答者中,37%的人未能正确报告诊断肥胖的最低体重指数(BMI),且大多数人建议的妊娠期增重与 1990 年医学研究所(IOM)指南不一致,尤其是肥胖女性(71%)。大多数应答者几乎总是建议肥胖母亲的增重范围(74%)、建议定期体育锻炼(74%)或讨论饮食(64%),但很少有人常规在孕早期进行葡萄糖耐量试验(26%)、计划麻醉转诊(3%)或将患者转介给营养师(14%)。平均指南依从性评分 3.4(标准差 1.9,范围 0-8)。提供者信心(β=1.0,p=0.05)和身体满意度(β=1.5,p=0.02)是更高指南依从性评分的独立预测因子。
很少有产科医生完全符合临床实践建议,正确定义肥胖或建议与 IOM 指南一致的增重。提供者的个人因素是自我报告管理实践的最强相关因素。我们的研究结果表明,需要进行更多关于 BMI 定义和增重指南的教育,以及解决提供者个人因素的策略,例如信心和身体满意度,这可能是遵守管理肥胖孕妇建议的重要预测因素。