School of Medicine, University of Glasgow, Glasgow Royal Infirmary, 4th Floor, Walton Building, Glasgow Royal Infirmary, 84 Castle Street, Glasgow G4 0SF, UK.
BMC Pregnancy Childbirth. 2013 Jan 16;13:10. doi: 10.1186/1471-2393-13-10.
Excessive gestational weight gain is associated with adverse infant, childhood and maternal outcomes and research to develop interventions to address this issue is ongoing. The views of women on gestational weight gain and the resources they would consider helpful in addressing this are however largely unknown. This survey aimed to determine the views of newly pregnant women, living in areas of social disadvantage, on 1) their current body weight and potential gestational weight gain and 2) the resources or interventions they would consider helpful in preventing excessive gestational weight gain.
A convenience sample of overweight and obese pregnant women living in Fife, UK, were invited to complete a short anonymised questionnaire at their 12 week booking visit.
428 women, BMI>25 kg/m(2), completed the questionnaire. Fifty-four per cent of respondents were obese (231) and 62% were living in areas of mild to moderate deprivation. Over three-quarters of participants felt dissatisfied with their current weight (81%). The majority of women (60%) expressed some concern about potential weight gain. Thirty-nine percent were unconcerned about weight gain during their pregnancy, including 34 women (19%) who reported having retained weight gained in earlier pregnancies. Amongst those concerned about weight gain advice on physical activity (41%) and access to sports/leisure facilities were favoured resources (36%). Fewer women (12%) felt that group sessions on healthy eating or attending a clinic for individualised advice (14%) would be helpful. "Getting time off work" was the most frequently cited barrier (48%) to uptake of resources other than leaflets.
These data suggest a lack of awareness amongst overweight and obese women regarding excessive gestational weight gain. Monitoring of gestational weight gain, and approaches for its management, should be formally integrated into routine antenatal care. Barriers to the uptake of resources to address weight gain are numerous and must be considered in the design of future interventions and services.
过度的妊娠体重增加与婴儿、儿童和产妇不良结局有关,目前正在研究制定干预措施来解决这一问题。然而,关于孕妇对妊娠体重增加的看法,以及她们认为有助于解决这一问题的资源,在很大程度上是未知的。本调查旨在确定生活在社会劣势地区的初孕妇对以下方面的看法:1)她们目前的体重和潜在的妊娠体重增加,以及 2)她们认为有助于防止妊娠体重过度增加的资源或干预措施。
在英国法夫,邀请了超重和肥胖的孕妇在 12 周预约就诊时填写一份简短的匿名问卷。
428 名 BMI>25kg/m(2)的孕妇完成了问卷。54%的受访者肥胖(231 人),62%生活在轻度至中度贫困地区。超过四分之三的参与者对自己的当前体重感到不满意(81%)。大多数女性(60%)对潜在的体重增加表示有些担忧。39%的人对怀孕期间的体重增加不关心,包括 34 名(19%)报告称在之前的怀孕中保留了体重。在那些对体重增加感到担忧的人中,有 41%的人喜欢关于体育活动的建议,而 36%的人喜欢获得运动/休闲设施的建议。较少的女性(12%)认为参加健康饮食小组或去诊所接受个性化建议(14%)会有帮助。“请假”是接受除传单以外的其他资源的最常被提及的障碍(48%)。
这些数据表明,超重和肥胖的孕妇对过度妊娠体重增加缺乏认识。监测妊娠体重增加,并将其管理方法正式纳入常规产前保健。解决体重增加问题的资源利用率低的原因很多,在设计未来的干预措施和服务时必须加以考虑。